SPAYING OR NEUTERING YOUR NEW PET
Did
you know that there are many benefits that your pet can gain by being spayed or
neutered?
CANCER: 50% of unspayed female dogs and 80% of unspayed
female cats will get breast cancer. They can also get uterine and
vaginal cancer.
Male dogs can get prostatic
and testicular cancer.
Spaying or neutering reduces
these risks to about 0.5% or less!
UTERINE INFECTIONS:
Many middle-aged and older
females will get an
infected
uterus (pyometra). Uterine infections are
life threatening, and she must be spayed to make her well - even though the
surgery is more dangerous at this time than when she was younger and healthier.
UNWANTED PREGNANCIES:
Humane Societies call this the
“Whoops” factor! Unless you are willing
to keep her in the house and walk her only on a leash for 6-9 weeks of the
year, you run the risk of her getting pregnant. Fencing isn’t adequate - male dogs come from miles away and they
can climb over, dig under or through fences!
It takes two! Male animals are the other half of controlling the pet
population! Neutering the male will also help decrease the number of cats
and dogs that are destroyed every day at
Humane Societies.
BEHAVIOR: Female dogs in heat bleed for 7 - 9 days twice a year,
and will attract male dogs. Female cats
in heat cry at night, urinate out of their litter boxes, and will attract male
cats to your house. Allowing a female
dog or cat to have a litter does nothing to improve her personality.
Male dogs and cats have a powerful urge to
roam in search of females. Of the dead animals that the Department of
Transportation picks up off the roadside, 75% are unfixed males! Neutering removes the number one reason why male
animals try to get out and roam.
Male cats spray urine in the house to mark
their territories. Male dogs are harder
to housebreak, and they mark
trees, telephone poles, plants, etc. with urine. Neutering also helps
eliminate leg mounting and certain types of aggression.