Pet Waste and Water Quality
Dangers of pet waste if not handled properly:
- Spreads diseases between pets.
- Infects children and adults with disease-causing bacteria and
parasites.
- Spreads diseases between pets.
- Infects children and adults with disease-causing bacteria and
parasites – When pet waste is disposed of improperly, not
only does water quality and pet health suffer, but our health
may be at risk too. Pets and children who play in yards or in
parks where pets defecate are most at risk for infection from
disease-causing bacteria and parasites found in pet waste. Diseases
that can be passed from pet waste to humans:
- Campylobacteriosis – a bacterial
infection carried by dogs and cats that frequently causes
diarrhea in humans.
- Salmonellosis – the most common bacterial
infection transmitted to humans by other animals. Symptoms
include fever, muscle aches, headache, vomiting, and diarrhea.
- Toxocariasis – roundworms usually
transmitted from dogs to humans, often without noticeable
symptoms, but may cause vision loss, a rash, fever, or cough.
- Toxoplasmosis – a parasite carried
by cats that can cause birth defects if a woman becomes infected
during pregnancy. Can also be a problem for people with depressed
immune systems.
- Makes our river water unsafe – Pet waste left on the ground
may wash into storm drains and end up in the Rio Grande. Our river
water quality suffers. Pet waste, after being washed into the
Rio Grande, uses up oxygen when it begins to decay, causing harm
to aquatic organisms and degrading river health. It can make our
river unsafe.
You can make a difference
When walking with your pet, take a plastic bag or paper cup along
and dispose of the waste properly.
- Flush it down the toilet.
- Put it in the household trash after securely wrapping it. (Don't
use a yard waste container.)
- Be aware of the Animal Control Ordinance that governs pet waste
clean up – "...waste left by a dog on any property
other than the owner's must be cleaned up by the pet owner. If
the law is violated, you could be subject to prosecution."
Did you know?
- 80,000 registered dogs reside in the City of Albuquerque.
- These dogs create 20 tons of waste per day!
- Pets can catch diseases from coming into contact with infected
feces of other pets.