The BioBoundary project has the pungent task of studying
wild dog urine to identify the scents that demarcate territory and send a «no trespassing» message.
Not exact matches
Over the past year, Jackson, a biologist, and his colleagues working on the Northern Tuli
Wild Dog Project, have shown that strategically placed
urine — called Bio-Boundaries — can help restrict the movements of these notorious fence - breakers in order to keep the endangered canines on protected land.
Leptospirosis is a bacterial disease spread in the
urine of
wild and domestic animals and capable of causing illness in humans as well as
dogs.
Dogs can catch Leptospira bacteria from water or soil that is contaminated with infected
urine from rodents and other
wild animals.
Dogs at highest risk of exposure are those that are exposed to water that may be contaminated by
urine from
wild animals or farm animals.