Dogs & Open
Car Windows
Experts estimate that dogs can catch a whiff of
something that's one million times less concentrated than what
humans can detect. With so much sniff power, it's hardly surprising
that they stick their heads out car windows. They could care less
about the scenery. What they're after are smells. If you're driving
through town at 30 miles an hour and your dog has his nose out the
window, he knows where the bakery is, where the butcher shop is,
which street leads to the local McDonald's, and maybe even what the
mayor had for breakfast.
Dogs assume a characteristic expression when
they put their faces into the wind: Their upper lips curl, their
noses wrinkle, their eyes partly close, and their ears fold back.
It looks as though they're experiencing a moment of ecstasy (which
they probably are) but mainly they're concentrating. It's as though
they're closing down all the rest of their senses to focus on this
one.
There's a world of fascinating scents outside
the car. This dog loves to hang her head out the window and sample
every one of them. All dogs, from huge Great Danes to tiny
terriers, have extraordinarily acute senses of smell. Their
scenting ability is enhanced when they are moving quickly, which is
one reason that they take advantage of open car windows.
Smells are so important to dogs that they have
two separate systems for detecting them. One is the nose system. It
consists of a huge amount of tissue called olfactory epithelium,
which is loaded with scent receptors. This area takes up about 1/2
square inch in humans, but up to 20 square inches in some dog
breeds. As air moves over the tissue, odor molecules settle in
millions of scent receptors. The more air flow there is, the more
scents dogs detect. A Dog's sense of smell is enhanced when they're
moving quickly. In the evolutionary scheme of things, this probably
made them better hunters because they could load up on scents while
chasing prey.
Dogs have a second smelling system that's
headquartered in their mouths. Near the upper incisors is a tiny
duct that leads to a specialized gland called Jacobson's organ.
It's designed to capture and interpret the most primitive types of
smells. Dogs depend on it to identify other dogs, choose a mate,
and smell prey. When dogs scrunch up their faces in the wind, it
looks like they're catching flies, but what they're really doing is
catching scents.
Written By:
Keith
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