The British Veterinary Association (BVA) is urging owners to keep their dogs out of freshwater bodies during August and September, after a Cocker Spaniel died from suspected blue-green algae poisoning following a dip in a Hampshire lake.
Warmer weather provides the ideal conditions for toxic cyanobacteria (blue-green algae), which appear as green or greenish-brown scum on the surface of water, and can prove fatal to pets, birds, and livestock if ingested, even in small quantities.
Algal bloom sightings have been reported at more than 50 locations around the UK, including Milarrochy Bay on Loch Lomond in southern Scotland, Pullar’s Loch in Lerwick, Shetland, and Anton Lakes, Hampshire.
BVA president Justine Shotton explained that symptoms, which can appear within minutes or hours, include vomiting, diarrhoea, drooling, disorientation, trouble breathing, seizures, and…