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Neutering of the dog

Either sex can be neutered. At the present time it is more common for bitches to be spayed or sterilized  by an operation  which removes the sex organs than to have the male castrated  by the surgical removal of the testicles. This  seems a strange  preference among dog owners -and contrary  to neutering  operations performed  on cats - because spaying involves incising the abdomen, a rather more serious  and considerably  more expensive operation  than castration.

Owners often worry that the removal of sex organs will lead to a change in the animal's character; this is rarely the case, although the less desirable aspects of male behavior, libido  and  aggression,  usually  disappear,  and  the  bitch naturally no longer comes into season. All neutered animals have a tendency to obesity; it is a common  but erroneous  belief that this is due to the neutering operation. In fact, neutered dogs of either sex become overweight through their owners' mistake in giving more food than can be converted into energy. After a neutering  operation,  food intake should  be reduced  and exercise increased.

The  bitch can be spayed as a puppy,  but most veterinary surgeons advise a delay until the bitch is physically and mentally mature, at three to four months after the first (or subsequent) estrous. The popular idea that allowing a bitch to have a litter before she is spayed 'is good for her' is not borne out by fact and merely increases the number  of puppies which have to be found  homes. The similar suggestion that a dog should be allowed to mate a bitch in order to 'cool him off' before castration is equally misplaced. Copulation is not essential for the well-being of the dog; the majority never experience it and do not appear to suffer any frustration as a result.