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Scientists in Japan have solved a long-standing veterinary mystery: how dogs can stand and walk for so long on snow and ice without apparent discomfort, and without freezing their paws.

Scientists at Tokyo's Yamazaki Gakuen University wondered why dogs do not seem to feel the cold in their paws, even though the paws have less insulating fur than their trunks. The paws have pads containing a high fat content, which freezes less easily than other tissues, but they also have a high surface area-to-volume ratio, which means they should lose heat easily.

In humans exposed to frigid temperatures, vasoconstriction occurs in the extremities to reduce the blood flow and resultant heat loss, and ensure the blood returning to the rest of the body does not cool too much.

The research team, led by Dr. Hiroyoshi Ninomiya, used a scanning electron microscope to study the paws of four adult dogs, and discovered that the arteries supplying blood to the pads had networks of numerous small veins, or venules, closely associated with them, and that the system essentially acts as a counter-current heat exchanger.

When warm blood arrives in the paws via the arteries, heat is transferred to the venules closely associated with the arteries, thus ensuring the blood has been warmed up before it returns to the rest of the body.

The counter-current heat exchange system prevents the body cooling and ensures the paw temperature stays within reasonable limits. The same system has also been identified in other animals such as Antarctic penguins, where it occurs in their legs and wings, and dolphins, which use a heat exchange system in their fins.

The Arctic Fox (Vulpes lagopus) was already known to have a counter-current heat exchange system in its paws, along with numerous other adaptations to the cold, but the existence of such a system in domestic dogs had not been previously suspected or identified. The findings suggest that domestic dogs might have originated in a cold climate, in which such a system would have had survival benefits.

Domesticated dogs are not all able to withstand icy conditions on their paws to the same extent, depending on their environment (such as habitually living indoors), and the breed. Common tips often suggested to help domestic dogs avoid cold feet in winter is to ensure their pads are not split or injured in any way, and to spray their paws with cooking spray before taking them out in the snow. Frostbite is very rare in dogs, but it can occur.

The paper is published in the journal Veterinary Dermatology.

Via PhysOrg.com
More information: Veterinary Dermatology, Volume 22, Issue 6, pages 475–481, December 2011

Responses to "How dogs can walk on ice without freezing their paws"

  1. lonewolf says:

    thanks,never thought about cooking spray.
    shay butter or vaseline....but not cooking spray....they would love to lick that,i dont think its too healthy though.

  2. Anonymous says:

    Love this picture, it looks like the Husky that showed up in our back yard and stayed for 4 months. Her owners finally came around and claimed her. She was so beautiful, solid while with blue eyes, but only 3 legs. Apparently, a neighbor had shot her because they don't like dogs, resulting in loosing her right front leg. She was so precious and loving. I miss her so much it is just awful. Maybe later the Lord will provide me with another love. Glad her rightful owners got her back. We searched for them for a long time.

  3. Lonewolf,
    Vaseline not good petroleum product. (If the dog licks it) coconut butter? In Alaska they give the dog booties to run the Idiatrod....

  4. Anonymous says:

    Very intersting. Thanks.

  5. My pugs can't walk on ice or snow. They don't even like to walk on wet ground!

  6. Anonymous says:

    There is concern about the methodology of this research, namely methylmethacrylate corrosion casting. Would this not prevent circulation in dogs' paws, as well as requiring surgical removal of the material? Or were these dogs who had died--I hope, of natural causes?

    I have no access to the journal article, and the abstract doesn't specify. I would be very grateful to anyone who answers this for me.

    Thanks. -- Julie K.

  7. Anonymous says:

    I'd suggest coconut oil. If they lick it off it is not harmful, actually it is healthy.

  8. Anonymous says:

    look at the bottom of paws their like leather .

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