Not every dog owner likes to clean up after his or her pet. Fecal land mines are menacing enough to some neighborhoods that there are now fines and dog feces DNA tests to nab regular offenders. But just how much damage does a canine friend’s stray bowel movements actually do?
It’s harder to tell than you might think. The microbiotia in dog poop excrement is remarkably similar to that of human excrement, which makes it tricky to test for dog feces in, say, a puddle of water that eventually enters your kitchen faucet. But after years of research (pdf), Orin Shanks, a research geneticist at the US Environmental Protection Agency, and his colleagues may have finally cracked the code on dog feces’ unique characteristics. Shanks discovered 11 genetic markers that only appear in a dog’s excrement, opening the door to research on its environmental effects.
Your pooch’s poop is polluting the neighborhood drinking water – Quartz.