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      Assigning Degrees of Ease or Difficulty for Pet Animal Maintenance: The EMODE System Concept

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          Species differences in responses to captivity: stress, welfare and the comparative method.

          Approximately 26 billion animals, spanning over 10 000 species, are kept on farms and in zoos, conservation breeding centers, research laboratories and households. Captive animals are often healthier, longer-lived and more fecund than free-living conspecifics, but for some species the opposite is true. Captivity is a very long way from the ideal 'common garden' often assumed by evolutionary and ecological researchers using data for captive animals. The use of comparative methods to investigate the fundamental biological causes of these species differences would help to improve husbandry and enclosure design, and might even reveal relationships between susceptibilities to poor captive welfare and susceptibilities to anthropogenic threat in the wild. Studies of these species differences could also inspire and facilitate 'evo-mecho' research into the functions of behavioral control mechanisms. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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            Longevity of British breeds of dog and its relationships with sex, size, cardiovascular variables and disease.

            A Michell (1999)
            The results of a questionnaire provided data about owners' perceptions of the cause of death of over 3000 British dogs. The mean age at death (all breeds, all causes) was 11 years one month, but in dogs dying of natural causes it was 12 years eight months. Only 8 per cent of dogs lived beyond 15, and 64 per cent of dogs died of disease or were euthanased as a result of disease. Nearly 16 per cent of deaths were attributed to cancer, twice as many as to heart disease. Neutered females lived longer than males or intact females, but among dogs dying of natural causes entire females lived slightly longer. In neutered males the importance of cancer as a cause of death was similar to heart disease. Mongrels lived longer than average but several breeds lived longer than mongrels, for example, Jack Russells, miniature poodles and whippets. There was no correlation between longevity and cardiovascular parameters (heart rate, systolic, diastolic, pulse and mean arterial pressure, or the combination of heart rate and pulse pressure) but smaller dogs had longer lifespans. The results also include breed differences in lifespan, susceptibility to cancer, road accidents and behavioural problems as a cause of euthanasia.
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              Assessing reptile welfare using behavioural criteria

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics
                J Agric Environ Ethics
                Springer Nature America, Inc
                1187-7863
                1573-322X
                February 2014
                August 15 2013
                February 2014
                : 27
                : 1
                : 87-101
                Article
                10.1007/s10806-013-9455-x
                33ea1ba8-a6d6-43b0-b5f9-227f6ce1178a
                © 2014
                History

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