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  • [Abby panting]

  • You've seen dogs do it and you know it's called panting - even though dogs don't wear pants.

  • But have you ever wondered why they do it? You and I don't seem to do it. Cats and other

  • mammals do it very occasionally. But dogs and their relatives are best known for it,

  • and for good reason.

  • Panting is one way, the main way really, that dogs release heat in order to lower their

  • body temperature. Humans do this mostly by sweating, of course. When you get hot and

  • start to sweat, your body heat excites the water molecules on the skin. Some of them

  • get so hot that they evaporate away, leaving the cooler molecules behind. Those molecules

  • escaping into the air take the heat energy with them, leaving you cooler. So evaporation

  • removes heat from a liquid, which is how sweating cools us down.

  • Now you may have heard that dogs can't sweat, but that is not true. Dogs do have sweat glands,

  • but only their paw pads. And that is not enough surface area to keep the dog's whole body

  • cool, especially when they spend so much time standing and walking on their precious paws.

  • So to make up the difference, dogs release that heat through the evaporation of their

  • saliva, in addition to their sweat.

  • With all that hard and fast breathing, more water than usual evaporates from their mouths

  • and throats, and even their lungs. This removes a lot of heat really quickly, even from the

  • inside of their bodies. But it also means that they need a lot of water when they're

  • hot because they lose a ton of it through that evaporation.

  • And panting is more than just heavy breathing. Dogs also let their tongues hang out of their

  • mouths when they pant, not because they're tired or lazy, but because it makes their

  • saliva evaporate even faster. If you've ever gotten a loving lick from a pup, you've no

  • doubt noticed that their tongues are long and flat, creating a lot of surface area for

  • evaporation. They're also packed with blood vessels, so the blood can be cooled quickly

  • before reentering the core of the body.

  • So even though it's slobbery and messy, panting is a really remarkably complex and efficient

  • system. So why don't all of our furry friends use the same system then? Why don't we pant?

  • Well we do! All mammals, even humans, pant under certain conditions such as extreme heat,

  • over-exertion, or allergic reactions. But most of us have lots of other ways of keeping

  • cool. Cats and kangaroos ,for example, lick themselves and let their saliva evaporate

  • that way. Other animals, like pigs and hippos and elephants, coat their bodies with mud

  • and are cooled as the water evaporates from that.

  • So the next time your dog looks like this, give her some water, maybe a hug, and then

  • both of you take a moment to be thankful for the process of evaporation.

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[Abby panting]

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