Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Why You Should Register My Dog

By Lisa Lewis


According to the Domestic Animals Act 1994, the law requires pets to be registered. If one has a pet and it is not recorded one is fined for not complying. Many people ask why someone must register their pets whereas they can be micro-chipped for reunion purposes. What people fail to understand is that micro-chipping your pet cannot provide all that registration does. The following are the benefits you reap when you register my dog.

The amount of money that is collected once your canine is booked is used for various reasons which help in making the animals share the environment with human beings in a good way. The charges go into providing poo bins which are used to dump waste from canines to avoid littering the environment. Hound shelters are also built courtesy of the fees that you are charged when you book them. It is the same fee that is used in employing local animal management staff.

Information that has been gathered after the registration process is used to attend to the emergency animal welfare. There are instances where canines get lost, and the knowledge on them can be used to contact the owner to come and pick them. This information also is very vital when it comes to mapping out places where different canine breeds are found.

Information about canines that have been registered is very critical when it comes to evacuation and preparing relief centers. If the local council does not have this information, it is hard to prepare evacuation processes and relief centers to keep the animals with their owners. But with the details available such planning is possible and can be achieved within a short time.

In most common instances, hounds are left behind, or they walk away from their owners unknowingly. When someone has lost their canine for whatever reasons, and they cannot find them if their details were shared finding them will not be hard. Also, if there is no data on a particular cur, losing it to animal shelters or a new owner is very likely.

Unknown diseases which affect curs might strike when least expected. When infections occur, they infest a specific place or breed of mongrels and that why faster and immediate precautions must be taken. The best way to ensure bio-security is to know where these canines are, secluding them and treating them before the disease spreads. And this is only possible if tykes are registered.

The filed details together with the registration fee will be used for research purposes. Carrying this study will help in improving the welfare of canines in the future. Also, these research programs help in government planning and educating the public on the importance of caring for these animals.

Reuniting a lost tyke and the owner is possible if there are details of the owner. When lost canines are found they are taken in until their owner is found. These advantages should change your mind in registering your curs if you have not.




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