Dog bites might be more common on hot and polluted days

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Dog bites might happen more frequently on days with hotter, sunnier weather, and when air pollution levels are higher, according to international researchers. The team looked at dog bite data in eight US cities between 2009 and 2018, and compared this with daily levels of fine particulate matter, ozone, temperature, UV levels, and rainfall. They found dog bites increased by 11% on days with higher UV levels, 4% on hotter days, and 3% on days with increased ozone levels. Dog bites slightly decreased (by 1%) on days with high rainfall. While there may be many other factors at play behind a dog bite, the team says previous research has found that hot weather and high pollution are associated with increased aggression in humans, Rhesus monkeys, rats, and mice, so this might translate to dogs too. 

Journal/conference: Scientific Reports

Research: Paper

Organisation/s: Harvard Medical School, USA

Funder: This study was funded by NIH Grants 1R01AG066793 and ES000002.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Veterinary: Dog bites may be more common on hot and polluted days

Dog bites may occur more frequently — by up to eleven percent — on days with hotter, sunnier weather, and when air pollution levels are higher, suggests a paper published in Scientific Reports. However, the authors caution that more data and further research is needed to confirm these findings.

Previous research has documented that hotter weather and higher levels of air pollution can be associated with increased aggression in humans, Rhesus monkeys, rats, and mice. However, it is unclear whether dog aggression against humans also follows this trend.

Clas Linnman and colleagues examined data on dog bites in eight US cities — Dallas, Houston, Baltimore, Baton Rouge, Chicago, Louisville, Los Angeles, and New York City — between 2009 and 2018. The data was either drawn from publicly available repositories recorded by animal control authorities or based on previous dog bite compilations. This included 69,525 reported dog bites, an average of three bites per day over ten years. The authors examined the association between dog bite rates and daily levels of fine particulate matter (PM2.5), ozone, and temperature. They also assessed UV and precipitation levels.

The authors report that dog bite incidence increased by eleven percent on days with higher UV levels, by four percent on days with higher temperatures, and by three percent on days with increased levels of ozone. In contrast, dog bite incidence slightly decreased (by one percent) on days with higher levels of rainfall. The authors reported no changes to dog bite incidence on days with higher levels of PM2.5.

The authors caution that the dog bite records did not include information about other factors that can affect an individual dog’s risk of biting, such as dog breed, sex, or whether the dog had been neutered or spayed. Additionally, no information about prior interactions between the dog and the bite victim, such as whether the individual was familiar with the dog, were available.

The authors conclude that these findings appear to expand the association between higher temperatures and levels of air pollution and aggression across species to include dogs. However, further research is needed to confirm and explore this relationship.

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