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Posts Tagged ‘black dog syndrome’


LA Times running an article about Black Dog Syndrome

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

Looks like the LA Times has picked up on some of the controversy in the animal welfare head space about dark colored animals. While we have reported about it here on PETS 911 it is not fully accepted across the board; yet it seems to be prevalent enough to merit both concern and controversy about the expectations of the public.

While the response seems to be not about adoptability, but length of wait, that still seems to fit the fears that this particular term is covering. Harder to adopt out isn’t the same thing as impossible to adopt out–it’s still something that may need further public education and outreach to counteract.

When prospective adopters do venture to a shelter, black dogs sometimes fade away into the kennel shadows. “They almost become invisible,” Bernstein said.

Reliable quantitative studies on the problem are few, and Ed Boks, general manager of the Los Angeles Animal Services department, said his data indicate black dog syndrome is a myth.

In the last 12 months, he said, 27% of the 30,046 dogs taken in by his department were predominantly or all black. Of those that were adopted, 28% were predominantly or all black, he said.

Whitman said the question isn’t whether a black dog will get adopted, but how long it will take. The average wait at her shelter is two weeks, she said. Black dogs may linger two months.

Karen Terpstra, who until recently was executive director of the Humane Society of Kent County in Michigan, said the problem is national. “We’d have a purebred black Lab, 2 or 3 years old, pretty much the perfect age, and it would sit there for weeks waiting to get adopted,” said Terpstra, now chief operations officer for SPCA Cincinnati. “A tan Lab would go in days.”

Link, via the LA Times

PETS 911 Article on Big Black Dog Syndrome

Big Black Dog syndrome

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Out in the animal welfare community, especially adoptions, it is well known that black dogs are among the most overlooked and least adopted animals from kennels. There are a number of pressures that seem to run through the public psyche that make them either less desirable or simply invisible to interested families.

In urban folklore black dogs have something of a strange rap a lot like black cats, except far more sinister. We only need look as far as Arthur Conan Doyle who resurrected the Irish pucca dog for The Hound of the Baskervilles, which also seems to play off even older legends. This suggests that there may be a permeating fear in the public psyche about large black dogs that most people are unaware of.

In fact, legends about ghost black dogs literally pepper the countryside from England all the way to the good ole USA. Entire tapestries of both fiction and amazing superstition surround them. [1]

Sometimes people just have bad notions about the color black, which they then apply to the black dog themselves. As if dark fur by some notion carries with them depression, or darkness, or some other malady. Really, the color of a dogs fur doesn’t affect their overall aggression, agreeability, or other personality traits as much as does their breed and general treatment.

This phenomena is known as “Black Dog Syndrome” and it literally afflicts hundreds of thousands of animals a year.

As people in the community of animal lovers we can work to change the perceptions of our friends and family about adopting such noble animals if and when they’re looking for pets to fill out their families. We can educate the public by speaking about how black dogs suffer under this strange stigma and it’s really not by a fault of their own.

Fiction, folklore, and the romanticism in our culture about black dogs certainly make for interesting storytelling but it’s important not to let it cast a pall over an entire group of dogs. Who, tails wagging with excitement, often as not rush to the door to see their family come home—and others wait, bating their own breath, at shelters for someone to take them home.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_dog_(ghost)