Thursday, 13 November 2025

Has your dog been ill?

 When we talk about pesticides we tend to focus on the harm to flora and fauna (especially pollinators)  followed by the impact on human health.  But there’s another group that are impacted that we tend to forget: our dogs and cats. 

Just as our children are in contact with pesticides as they make contact with sprayed areas, so are our dogs and cats. Children playing on the ground can easily make contact with sprayed areas but our pets have no choice: by walking on the ground they are bound to make contact.  Symptoms of acute pesticide poisoning (single incident exposure) in cats and dogs can include vomiting, diarrhoea, drooling, irritation to the skin or eyes, chemical burns, breathing problems, lethargy, disorientation, seizures and even death. While instances of acute pet poisoning are sometimes studied and recorded, there is almost no research on the long-term, chronic effects on pets’ health of regular, ongoing direct exposure to pesticides that have been linked to diseases in humans such as cancer.

Spraying in our parks and green spaces is exactly where we walk our dogs. We recently heard a case where somebody had tied their dog to the railings around a play area, while they took their child inside where dogs aren’t allowed, then ran up a vet’s bill of over £1,000 when the dog fell ill.  The area along the railings had been sprayed.  There has even been a case of a dog dying after lying on a sprayed area and ingesting the poison through its skin.

Making the connection between pets falling ill and pesticide use is in its infancy. The Veterinary Poisons Information Service (VPIS) has recorded a 55% increase in pesticide related poisoning enquiries between 2019 and 2021, but this is only through voluntary contact with the VPIS, so the issue is likely to be much greater.

The lessons to be learnt from this are:        

  • Keep your dog away from sprayed areas and especially don’t tie your dog up where it can make contact with a sprayed area.
  • If your dog does fall ill with any of the symptoms above and you suspect poisoning visit the VPIS website to get advice.
  • Be aware this can affect cats too and as we have no control of where they go outside we have no way of controlling pesticide exposure to cats.
  • If you take your dog or cat to the vet and poisoning is suspected, please ask the vet to report it to the VPIS – we need more data.  Vet membership of the VPIS is only £8/month.
  • Don’t spray your garden.
  • If you get the opportunity to stop the council spraying on the areas outside where you live, please take it.
  • If you take your dog across the fields try and avoid sprayed areas.  Farmers often spray round field edges and some crops are sprayed too if the crop has been specially developed to resist pesticide spraying.  Look for the tell-tale tractor wheelings through crops that indicate the passage of a spraying vehicle or brown grass round field edges.
  • Be wary of footpaths through crops where the footpath has been cleared of the crop by spraying.
  • Don’t let your dog drink from puddles and ponds near sprayed areas.
  • If you see spraying taking place try and keep upwind of it and better still avoid the area altogether - for your health too!

Please join Leicester Friends of the Earth in pressing your council not to spray in public parks and green spaces.


No comments:

Post a Comment