sweat???? 
And I thought I was the only one who thought this!!! LOL :lol: :laughing7:bella_blue said:I think dogs' feet smell like Fritos (corn chips).![]()
thats what I was always told and always believed.Amocat00 said:Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't "panting" also a dog's way of sweating?...
LOL! Sometimes when Bella's been running around all day, I can smell her feet when we're on opposite sides of the couch. :lol:deuce's mommy said:U guys are funny, but personally I don't stiff feet often, so I wouldn't know. Kinda gives me the munchies though.
Well guess so? yes and no.. It is the only way for them to cool down their body temperature, much like sweating in humans. Dogs regulate their body temperature through their tongue, they don't "sweat" to regulate their temperature like humans do.. I don't think I'm explaining it well, and I'm saying the same thing. :lol:Amocat00 said:Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't "panting" also a dog's way of sweating?...
Dogs and temperature regulation
A common misconception is that dogs do not sweat. Primarily, dogs regulate their body temperature in a completely different way, through their tongue. That is why after a dog has been running or on a hot day you will see its mouth wide open and tongue hanging out. This is a very efficient form of cooling in terms of maximizing heat lost while conserving moisture, because it carries heat from the hottest part of the body, the interior core of the thorax, compared to sweating, which cools the already coolest part of the body, the skin. Besides being intuitively correct, this higher efficiency of thermal loss in terms of moisture conservation stems from heat flow being proportional to temperature gradient in a given system. In addition, dogs effectively sweat through the pads of their feet, since they are not furred. Again, on a warm day and after exercise, a dog's naturally wet footprints might be visible on a smooth floor.
Dogs possess a rete mirabile in the carotid sinus at the base of their neck, a complex of intermingled small arteries and veins which acts as a heat exchanger to thermally isolate the head, containing the brain, the most temperature sensitive organ, from the body, containing the muscles, where most of the heat is generated. The net result is that dogs can sustain a high degree of physical exertion over a prolonged time in a hot environment, compared to animals which lack this apparatus; thus, a dog chasing a jackrabbit through the desert may not be able to outrun the rabbit, but it can continue the chase until the rabbit literally drops dead from overheating.
Dogs possess a rete mirabile in the carotid sinus at the base of their neck, a complex of intermingled small arteries and veins which acts as a heat exchanger to thermally isolate the head, containing the brain