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help! my pup eats her own feces why does she do that??
what can i di to stop it?!?! help please! she is a labradoodle (lab poodle mix)

2006-07-26 07:18:03 · 17 answers · asked by Yahoo!® answerer 1 in Pets Dogs

For your info Darin E i do feed it and i don't apreciate you calling my puppy a damn dog!

dolly i'll let you know don't worry just as soon as i find a way.

2006-07-26 07:33:10 · update #1

17 answers

Natural Behavior

Mother dogs clean their nursing puppies and eat the feces. With pups in the nest, you can imagine the unhealthy situation that would result from the waste being allowed to accumulate. Cats perform this task for their kittens, too. Other adult dogs in the family sometimes take over motherly duties in times of need, such as a litter too large for the mother or a mother who is ill or dies.

False pregnancies are normal in intact female dogs, and female dogs tend to cycle on the same schedule with other females in the same household. Other females who are in false pregnancy are often well equipped to mother some or all of the pups in another female's litter.

You can see that eating dog feces is not at all an unusual behavior for dogs. When the pups start eating solid food and walking well enough to get out of the nest to poop, mom can stop the cleaning duty. But the habit can certainly persist in her, and the hard-wired instinct probably exists in most dogs, ready to be triggered by various life situations.

Triggers

Sometimes we don't know why a particular dog starts eating poop, but certain conditions can trigger the behavior. Since some of these indicate a dog who needs help, you'll want to consider them as possibilities for what is going on with your dog.

1. A dog with a physical problem that causes excessive hunger, pain, or other sensations may resort to eating feces. If your adult dog who has not previously had this habit suddenly develops it, take the dog to your veterinarian for a check-up.

2. A dog who is not getting enough to eat or is going too long between meals may eat feces. Your veterinarian can help you evaluate the dog's weight and can suggest a feeding schedule and amount. Sometimes it takes experimentation to see what works best for a particular dog.

3. A dog with intestinal parasites or other condition that creates blood or other fecal changes may eat feces. One dog may eat the feces of another dog who is shedding something like this in the stools. A fresh fecal specimen to your veterinarian for evaluation can detect some of these problems.

4. Sometimes a change of diet helps. There doesn't seem to be any one food that is right for all dogs, and your dog may need something different than you're currently feeding. Be sure to make any changes of diet gradual, mixing the new food in with the old over a period of several days or weeks, to give the dog's intestines time to adjust and avoid diarrhea from the change.

5. Some dogs develop a mental connection that they will be punished if their humans find them in the same room with feces. Dogs react to this fearful situation in various ways, and one way is to eat the feces so it will not be there to make the human angry. This is one of many reasons not to use punishment when housetraining a dog.

6. Boredom can cause dogs to do all sorts of things, including eat feces. Interesting toys that have treats inside them for the dog to get out can help with lots of boredom-based problems.

7. Dogs may do just about any wild thing when suffering from separation anxiety. If that is the problem, this won't be the only symptom, and you'll want to help your dog work through the separation anxiety.

Sanitation

The number-one thing you can do to help overcome feces eating is to keep your dog's area clean of feces. This means housetraining, and supervising the dog whenever the dog is in the designated relief area. It's obviously not healthy for dogs to eat feces, and preventing the dog from carrying out the habit is also basic to getting the habit to fade.

It's not healthy for humans or dogs to have the feces lying around, either. Until a dog is fully housetrained and the feces-eating habit has died out, picking up after each bowel movement is an important tactic. After the dog's habits are steady, you may be able to pick up just once a day if you have a private place for the dog to use.

Food Additives

Some people swear by food additives to stop a dog from eating feces. Sometimes the theory is that the additive provides a nutrient the dog is seeking when eating feces and thus the dog will no longer crave feces. Other times the theory is that the additive makes the feces taste bad and the dog will not want it.

Before you try adding any of these things to your dog's food, consult your veterinarian about whether the particular additive is safe for your particular dog. Don't expect any additive to be a miracle cure. These things tend to work for the occasional dog, but chances are pretty good that your dog won't be the one.

Bait and Switch

While you're hanging out with your dog to supervise, you can hurry the process of fading out the feces-eating habit with a simple and pleasant training technique. The tools you'll need are a collar or head halter for the dog, a leash, and small treats your dog values highly.

If your dog is easily handled, the collar will do. If the dog is extremely determined to eat the poop, extremely fast or strong, have a behavior specialist fit your dog with the correct size head halter, introduce your dog to it gently, and give you one or more lessons on how to use the head halter safely and effectively. It gives you more control over the dog's mouth than a collar, and if your particular dog needs it for this training you'll be glad to have the skill for other training situations, too.

Take your dog out to potty on leash. As soon as the poop hits the ground and the dog shows interest in it, call the dog to you. Use the leash not to jerk the dog, but simply to keep the dog from being able to reach the feces. Keep the treats out of sight.

The instant the dog reaches you, praise the dog, whip out a treat and give it. Then back away from the dog, praise and give another treat for coming to you, and repeat that for a total of three to five times. At this point you have really taken the dog's mind off the feces.

Go on indoors with the dog and come back out without the dog to clean up. Once you have good control and a good rapport with the dog, you can go ahead and clean up while the dog is still outside. As you set this habit more strongly through repetition, you will be able to do the bait-and-switch with the dog on a long line, coming to you at the back door for a treat. Eventually you'll be able to do bait-and-switch without a leash or line on the dog. Keep up the same energy and level of reward, if you want the dog to keep responding!

hope this helps!

2006-07-26 07:21:03 · answer #1 · answered by la♥chiva 4 · 3 0

There's no real rhyme or reason as to why dogs eat feces. You can try meat tenderizer on your pet's food--this is supposed to make the feces "undesirable" but it doesn't always work. The best way to stop your pet from eating feces is pick up the feces right way.

2016-03-16 05:58:08 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Although most people find it repulsive, it is quite natural for dogs, especially puppies to eat feces. (Feces found in kitty's litter box is an especially favorite treat.) Fresh feces closely resemble the first solid food the puppy ate: warm, semi-solid, semi-digested food that mom regurgitated for her pups to eat.
Often this behavior will just go away when the pup matures. In the mean time, keep the pup's toilet area as clean as possible. Be sure that the puppy is checked for worms and other possible problems such as something lacking in the dog's diet. It is a good idea to have the dog's diet approved by your vet, or switch to a nutritionally complete dog food sold by your vet or pet store.

Many owners have had success in stopping this behavior by supplementing their dog's diet with one spoonful of canned pineapple or a teaspoon of spinach. There are products on the market such as 'Forbid' that can also be added to the dog's food to help stop the problem.

If the dog is still fond of feces, try teaching your dog not to touch it using the command 'Off.' Put your dog on leash and walk him by some feces. If he shows any interest in it, tell him, 'No, off.' If he continues to go for it, then loudly scold him, 'OFF!!!' and pull him away from it with a short, sharp tug on the leash. When he stops, praise him. Continue walking and keep returning to different piles of feces over and over, repeating the off procedure until he gets the idea that you disapprove of his dietary interests. Whenever he shows no interest in the feces, be sure to tell him how happy you are through praise and reward.

It is also possible to make the feces unappetizing by sprinkling them with hot sauce, lemon juice or anything the dog finds distasteful. Some dogs like hot sauce and will consider it a garnish, so find out what your dog does not like before using it.

Be sure to clean up your dog's feces immediately after he defecates so as to prevent the problem in the first place. Do not give him the opportunity to indulge himself.

2006-07-26 07:22:15 · answer #3 · answered by halfpint 4 · 0 0

It could be that the dog suffers a digestive problem, like a deficiency of some vitamins (B or K), usually produced by bacteria in the intestine. Eating his own feces, he gets those essential elements, that otherwise will go out of his body in great amounts. You can also spread the feces with a bad taste substance, like some curry. Another treatment could be a drug used to control flies, which will infect feces giving them a bad taste. In the most serious cases, it could be necessary to give him apomorphine (that produces vomit) as soon as the dog has eaten his feces; in a short time the negative effects of the drug will arise, and the dog will feel bad during a couple of hours, associating this experience with his own feces. Obviously such a drastic measure should be consulted with your veterinarian. There are two ways of thinking: one says that the strong odor of the herbivorous feces disguises the strong canine odor, and helps hunting dogs to hide in search for a potential prey; the other suggests the odor can help to reinforce the dog's body odor. The last explanation seems more feasible in practice, because dogs that have take a bath recently tend to search for herbivorous feces to get dirty as soon as they go out for a walk. As taking a bath diminishes his normal canine odor, the dog can search to reinforce his social status, as his natural way of cleaning himself has been replaced. In any case, he will have to take another bath, and we must try to keep him apart from the sources of those feces. I GOT THIS OFF A WEBSITE http://www.seefido.com/html/how_do_i_stop_my_dog_from_eati1.htm

2006-07-26 07:29:11 · answer #4 · answered by BebeTran_x 2 · 0 0

Some dogs just do this. Its a nasty habit.

Couple of things you can try. Pick up the poop as soon as she goes so she does not have the opportunity to eat it. It will break her of the habit.

You can get a product called 'Forbid.' Your vet or just a pet store will carry it. You sprinkle it on their food and its supposed to change the taste of the poop so they don't like it (sounds strange but people say it works).

The other thing I've heard of is that people mix rabbit food (the small pellets) in with the dogs' food. Again, it changes the composition so its not appealing for the dog to eat.

Good Luck.

2006-07-26 07:41:19 · answer #5 · answered by Cornsilk P 5 · 0 0

its normal for a puppy to eat feces. hopefully it will stop around 6 months. there is a very good web site petplace.com that explains dog behavior. good luck

2006-07-26 08:01:48 · answer #6 · answered by cutiepie28 1 · 0 0

our Jack Russell pup does the same thing. She's nearing one year now, and doesn't do it as often as she did at first.

we spoke to our vet and he recommended a pepper pill or there's a powder you can get also. You put it in the pups food, or give to them orally. Its not hot when they eat it, but it makes their poop hot to the taste. Makes it taste 'yucky' to them...
You can buy the pepper pills also from the pet store, but they might not be as strong as what you can get from the Vet.

He explained to us, its not always behaviour problems or digestive issues but simply that the food she's eating doesn't completely digest... so when she poops, she still smells the food in it, therefore eats it.

Take your pup to the vet just to eliminate any digestive problems first..
But the only other remedy is to scoop the poop immediately. Out of sight, out of mind.

Good Luck

2006-07-26 07:46:52 · answer #7 · answered by ♥JavaJunkie♥ 2 · 0 0

My goldendoodle did the same as a pup. The vet said it is often due to nerves, but that some dogs just do it without anyone knowing why. I taught my dog the command "leave it", and told her that so often when around poo now she leaves it alone all together.

2006-07-26 07:20:58 · answer #8 · answered by Elle 4 · 0 0

whenevr she attempts to eat it, firmly tell her no, and lightly flick her on th nose or spray her on the face lightly with water. supervise her whenevr she goes potty, and do this if she is eating her feces. hopefully, she shud eventually stop. try giving her more food also, maybe she might be hungry.
i iwsh u the very best of luck with ur dog!!
ps ive seen labrdoodles. they are sooo precious in my opinion!! ur lucky!!
:-)

2006-07-26 07:47:58 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

My vet had me hide in the dog a bowl of food hot pepper then when she went she didn't eat her poop because of the hot pepper in it.

2006-07-26 07:40:00 · answer #10 · answered by g-day mate 5 · 0 0

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