Well done paper from Ted Greenlee
about Northern Breeds in warm conditions.
Temperature Adaptation in Northern Dogs
by Ted Greenlee
January, 1971 Newsletter of the Samoyed Club of Colorado
March, 1971 issue of "Northern Dog News"
Since we left the Pacific Northwest and moved to Florida with
our Samoyeds, I have frequently been asked how they tolerated
the heat in this climate. The question usually produced my "five
minute lecture" on Northern Dogs in the South. When I repeated
this jist of this lecture to Doris and Harold McLaughlin
recently, they requested that I write a short paper discussing
how Northern dogs adapt to varying temperatures. This discussion
actually revolves around at least two scientific works on the
ability of arctic animals - seals, whales and Northern dogs
among others - to stand exceedingly low temperatures, and on the
methods of heat exchange in dogs.
I was specifically asked to write this discussion in lay terms
"as I spoke them". Since most of my writing activities are
related to writing for scientific literature, I find this a very
difficult task, but I shall make an attempt. In general, in
attempting to discuss work of a scientific nature in lay terms
one either talks over the heads of some readers or beneath the
knowledge of others and never quite finds the individual who has
exactly the right amount of information as you write the
article. To begin with, I would like to review a little basic
information in relation to temperature control that I am sure
most people have been exposed to at some time. The main
consideration is that the dog, similar to man, will not tolerate
significant variation of his body temperature. Also, most of the
reactions taking place in the body, energy producing reactions
much like the reactions in an automobile engine, produce heat.
Intemperate climates, where the outside temperature is fairly
close to body temperature, the primary concern for the animal is
to get rid of the excess heat produced. In the case of the
automobile, one circulates water through the engine and then
passes it through a radiator that has a relatively high degree
of efficiency at transferring the heat from the water to, in
this case, the air. In general, this is not a terribly efficient
method, though it is adequate in the case of the automobile.
In the case of man, the radiator, for all practical purposes, is
his exposed skin. In order to enhance the loss of heat, man uses
the simple principle of evaporation. In general, the amount of
heat loss by the evaporation of a certain volume of water from
the skin is some five-hundred and forty times greater than the
raising of the same amount of water one degree in temperature.
This principle of evaporation is very important in many cooling
systems and particularly in the cooling of the body. If,
however, the major problem ceases to be that of getting rid of
excess heat, but rather maintaining what heat is produced in the
chemical reactions in the body, one has to look to different
techniques. In general, this only becomes necessary if an animal
is forced to live in a climate where the temperature is much,
much lower than body temperature. This, of course, is the case
of the Northern dog. The best way to conserve heat is the
well-known method of insulation. The arctic dog's coat is so
constructed that it is a very efficient insulator. Therefore,
little of the heat produced by the body is lost by means of
contact with the outside air through the skin. This, of course,
is very good in the winter; but unfortunately, Arctic areas in
summer can reach very high temperatures, somewhere in the 70's
and 80's or even higher for short periods of time. So,
therefore, the animal must also be able to adapt to this
increase in temperature. It so happens that the insulation
principle is still of use to the animal. If one lives in warmer
climates, it is much easier to air-condition a well insulated
home than it is to air-condition one that is not insulated. In
the case of the animal, the only requirement is that there be
some relatively efficient mechanism that the animal can turn on
to dissipate his own heat. With a well-insulated body, he will
be very little effected by the outside temperature once this
mechanism is established. The animal then can maintain his body
temperature with changes in outside temperature. Animals that
have not adapted this type of mechanism, that is an insulated
mechanism, not only will be susceptible to cold, but will also
be very susceptible to an abnormal increase in the outside
temperature as compared with what he is used to. Therefore, the
Northern dog in southern climates will do as well or better in
excessive heat that the short-haired dog who is very susceptible
to heat stroke.
I would now like to discuss two mechanisms of heat control, one
which is utilized specifically in the case of Northern animals,
and one which is utilized by dogs in general. I would first like
to discuss the problems of severe cold and how the animal
protects his body temperature in addition to his insulation. It
is not possible to totally insulate the dog and in general, the
areas not adequately insulated are the areas that are in contact
with his snowy world. Those areas are, of course, his feet and
legs. Problems of the feet and legs, or in the case of man, the
hands and feet, are frequently noted in cold exposure. Man, who
is not well insulated, to protect his body temperature and vital
organs, will literally shut off blood supply to the feet and
hands. When one goes out in the cold and is not properly
dressed, one's feet and hands become extremely cold and
frostbite or freezing of the fingers and toes is a common
occurrence. If this process was followed in the case of a dog in
his 60 to 70 degree below zero weather, he would of course be in
very bad straits. Therefore, instead of stopping the blood
supply to the extremities so the blood does not become chilled,
what occurs is that the warm, oxygen carrying arterial blood
going into the limb runs right next to the cold, unoxygenated
blood leaving the limb. Since they are right next to each other,
the warm blood gives up its heat to the cold blood, preventing
the loss of this heat as it gets down to the exposed part of the
dog's foot. The oxygenated blood can get to the vital parts of
the foot to maintain their nutrition, but at the same time does
not allow a loss of body heat to the cold air.
The ability of the animal's foot and lower leg to live at very
low temperatures requires addition adaptation of the tissue,
some of which is not well understood. There is one example
though that is well understood and noted, and that is the
difference in the melting (or freezing, Ed.) temperature of the
fat associated with the foot and legs compared to the melting
temperature of body fat. The best example of this noted in the
case of neatsfoot oil which is the fat from the foot of a cow as
compared to the tallow which is the fat from the body of the
cow. As you remember, neatsfoot oil is a liquid at normal room
temperature, whereas tallow is solid. Therefore, the fat is
adapted in the foot of the animal to keep it from becoming solid
at these low temperatures and becoming brittle and breaking. I
am sure there are other changes in the cells in the tissues of
these parts which allow them to tolerate this lower temperature
and still function for the animal, but the heat exchange
mechanism between the arterial and venous blood in the limbs of
cold adapted animals is absolutely essential to their survival.
It is possible that a reverse heat exchange takes place in
hotter weather. In this instance, blood going to the feet would
pick up excess heat in the blood leaving the feet and carry it
away from the body, thus preventing a dangerous increase in the
animal's body temperature. I doubt, however, if this reverse
mechanism plays as important a part in the loss of body heat
during hot weather as the heat exchange mechanism does in the
protection of the animal in the cold.
Now, since the total animal is covered with an insulated
coating, perspiring for the loss of heat through the large area
of the skin of the body as in man is not practical. Therefore,
the animal must have another means of heat loss. Anyone who has
dealt with dogs knows that the dog pants when he is hot. It is
his panting mechanism that allows the dog to lose heat he does
not need when the weather is hot. The mechanism functions on the
principle of evaporation. As I have said before, evaporation is
extremely effective because you can lose almost five-hundred and
forty times as much heat without changing the temperature of the
air at all. This evaporation takes place in the dog's nose and
is enhanced by the fact that there are many folds of tissue in
the nose which increase the surface area that the air is in
contact with. In addition, this tissue actually perspires and
has a large blood supply, thereby acting much like the radiator
in the car. This makes a good mechanism of heat loss, but one
needs some way in which to shut it off when one does not want to
lose heat. Since the animal must breathe and must take in a
pretty constant volume of air at all times, because varying this
volume of air would interfere with other bodily functions,
people have often been concerned as to how this is controlled. A
recent study, just published, has looked into this problem and
has come to this conclusion. The air is brought in through the
dog's nose and in the case of panting is exhaled through the
mouth. In doing this, the air picks up much moisture and heat
from the nose, this cooling the nose and drying it. When it is
exhaled, it is exhaled through the mouth and since there is much
less blood supply to the area around the mouth and the surface
area is much less, almost all of the moisture is absorbed and
the heat will leave the dog's mouth and be lost. When the dog
does not wish to lose body heat, he simply exhales the air that
he has brought in through the nose back out the nose, in which
case a great proportion of the moisture and heat will be
returned to the large surface area and the membranes in the nose
thus minimizing the loss of heat. Therefore, when an animal is
hot, the hotter the animal is the more of the air he brings in
through his nose will be exhaled through the mouth, thus the
wide open, tongue out position. If he does not wish to lose heat
when it is cold out, he will breathe in and out through his nose
and keep his mouth closed. The provides a quite sensitive means
of temperature control, particularly in the case of the animal
who has other means of protecting himself from the cold and from
the outside temperature as do the long-haired Northern breeds.
The animal, therefore, in general has developed enough capacity
of heat loss through his panting mechanism to compensate for the
very wide swings in temperature.
In the case of man, the removal of clothing during hot weather
increases the ability to lose heat by evaporation of moisture.
The dog does not have this ability and therefore his insulation
is a protection to him during hot weather. If the animal loses
his insulation during very hot weather, by having his coat
clipped for instance, he runs the risk of not being able to
maintain his body temperature. His skin temperature loss
probably is not only inefficient but, since he does not
perspire, he will probably increase the temperature of his skin
and his body temperature as well.
Anything that would interfere with a dog's ability to pant
efficiently can also be a great danger to him in hot weather. It
is not uncommon to hear of animals who have died of heat stroke
after having been given an anesthetic for some minor surgical
procedure and then left in a hot car. If the animal is not wide
awake or has had an anesthetic, he is not able to compensate for
the increased temperature by increased panting. The animal
locked in a hot car does not have the ability to open the window
as do people and is, of course, very susceptible to heat stroke
and death. The dogs in our experience that are most susceptible
to hot weather and to sickness from heat are those that have a
poor panting mechanism, i.e., the short-nosed dogs such as
bulldogs, Pugs, etc. They are extremely susceptible to high
temperature and tolerate Southern climates such as ours very
poorly unless they are kept in an air-conditioned house.
I think the important point to remember in relation to Arctic
breed, is that these breeds were able to survive in the Arctic
not only because they could tolerate cold but because more
precisely, they could tolerate extremely wide swings of
temperature in relation to their body temperature. Therefore,
they are also, it appears, better adapted for severely high
temperatures. The animal that was selected by living in a
temperate climate, that is, one in which the temperature stayed
very close to the animal's body temperature throughout the year,
is not only going to be very susceptible to cold weather, but
also is going to be more susceptible to severely hot weather
which is well over the dog's body temperature.
The final point I'd like to make to in my "Five Minute Lecture"
on Northern Dogs in the South is that the Arctic breeds are
probably the best heat adaptable dogs one could find, so
therefore, I would not be fearful of their presence in a hot
climate. However, I might add, there are other problems
associated with hot climates such as increase parasites and skin
problems that do cause the long-haired Northern dogs to have
greater problems than do some of the short-haired breeds.
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