- A Canadian study found working dogs need a day to recover after daylight saving time, unlike pet dogs.
- The study used motion-sensitive watches to monitor 25 sled dogs and 29 pet dogs.
- Researchers found older pet dogs were less active after the time shift, highlighting the need for gradual changes.
Working dogs need a day to recover after daylight saving time clicks in, however, their domestic counterparts don’t, Canadian researchers say.
Daylight saving is used by many countries to maintain the alignment between daylight hours and human activity patterns, by setting clocks forward one hour in the spring and back one hour in the autumn.
Previous research has shown that daylight saving can disrupt human sleep and behaviour but its impact on the domestic animals has not been studied.
To investigate how daylight saving impacts domestic dogs (Canis familiaris), researchers used motion-sensitive watches to monitor the activity patterns of 25 working sled dogs, 29 pet dogs, and their human caregivers living in Canada, during the weeks surrounding the autumn daylight saving time shift.