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Chamber and committees

Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee

Meeting date: Tuesday, June 13, 2017


Contents


Subordinate Legislation


Prohibited Procedures on Protected Animals (Exemptions) (Scotland) Amendment Regulations 2017 [Draft]

The Convener

Welcome back to the public part of the meeting. The committee will now take evidence on a draft Scottish statutory instrument. We are joined by Roseanna Cunningham, Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform; Andrew Voas, veterinary adviser; and Judith Brown, solicitor.

The cabinet secretary will make a short opening statement on the draft regulations.

The Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform (Roseanna Cunningham)

Thank you, convener, and good morning, everybody. The draft regulations before you would amend the 2010 regulations to include an exemption to permit tail shortening in some limited circumstances.

You have heard that research commissioned from the University of Glasgow recorded that about one seventh of working dogs surveyed in the 2010-11 shooting season sustained at least one tail injury in that year, with a higher incidence for certain breeds. The Scottish Government considers that the research provides sufficient evidence that shortening the tails of puppies at risk of tail injury while they are engaged in lawful shooting activities in later life will improve the welfare of those dogs. However, in line with the research findings, we do not intend for that to apply to all types of working dogs, and we require conditions to be met that aim to ensure that only those dogs at most risk are affected by the regulations.

The proposed exemption therefore applies to the only two types of working dog, spaniels and hunt point retrieve breeds, that are commonly used in those lawful activities. The evidence showed them to be at significantly higher risk of tail injury than other types of dog. The evidence also showed that there was no benefit in trying to reduce injury by removing more than the end third of the tail. For that reason, the draft regulations limit the extent by which a tail may be shortened to no more than the end third.

The draft regulations ensure that, as far as is reasonably possible, only those dogs that are likely to be used for lawful shooting purposes can have their tails shortened, and that veterinarians are the only persons who may carry out the procedure. The operating vet must therefore be satisfied that evidence has been produced to him or her showing that the dog is likely to be used for working in later life. The regulations also provide that the procedure may only be carried out for the purpose of dog welfare.

As required under the provisions in the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006, we consulted those considered to have an interest in tail shortening. A full public consultation on a tightly defined exemption took place between 10 February and 3 May 2016. Of the total number of responses, 92 per cent favoured permitting shortening, and 52 per cent considered that shortening should be restricted to the end third of the tail.

We are of course aware that the question whether or not to introduce such an exemption remains a highly emotive issue. Ultimately, the proposed amendment to the previous provisions will place responsibility for making the decision in the hands of those who are best placed, in my view, to make an informed professional judgment. Those are the practising veterinary surgeons, mostly in rural Scotland, who know the clients who are working dog breeders, who understand the risks of injury associated with normal shooting activities and who, most importantly, have a professional duty to ensure the welfare of all animals in their care.

I am happy to answer any questions.

The Convener

Thank you. The consultation document stated:

“This consultation concerns the case that has been made to us for the introduction of a tightly defined exemption regime”.

Could you outline for us who made the case that the law should change and that docking should be allowed in certain limited circumstances? What made that case persuasive?

Much of the work took place before I was in post. I will ask the chief veterinary adviser to give you some of the background to what led up to the present situation.

Andrew Voas (Scottish Government)

When all tail docking was banned in Scotland back in 2007, a lot of concern was raised by people who were interested in shooting—gamekeepers and members of the British Association for Shooting and Conservation, or BASC—that it would leave dogs involved in shooting at risk of injury. A commitment was given at the time that, if new evidence came to light about the risk of injury to dogs involved in shooting, we would review the evidence in Scotland.

After 2007, the Diesel study was carried out, as has been mentioned previously, and the report was published in 2010. It considered all types of dogs, so it was not focused on working breeds or on working dogs in Scotland. If I remember rightly, only 24 dogs involved in shooting activities were identified in that study. A lot of dogs were traditionally docked at that time, so the population of dogs studied by Diesel would have included quite a high proportion of dogs that had already been docked.

For those various reasons, that study did not give us the evidence that we needed and that specifically applied to dogs from working breeds actually working in Scotland. For that reason, we were asked by the then Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs and the Environment, Mr Lochhead, to commission some research. The research that we commissioned is the research that you have just heard about, by Glasgow university.

We are now in a position to consider the results of that research and the arguments that have been made around what it shows. The pressure has come from people who have been closely involved with working dogs in Scotland, who believe that there is significant concern about injuries to the tails of undocked working dogs that are currently working in Scotland.

Let us discuss that research further.

Mark Ruskell

We have heard quite a lot of evidence about the limitations of the research, so I would like to run through some aspects of those limitations. The Diesel study to which you referred found out that a significant aspect of tail injury related to kennelling arrangements. Did either of the studies consider kennelling?

Andrew Voas

The Diesel study considered all types of dogs, both working breeds and non-working breeds. There were only a small number of what we would commonly understand to be working dogs involved in shooting.

As you have heard, two main studies came out of the Glasgow research, and two main papers. One of those was looking at owner-reported injuries and it was intentionally targeted at the community most likely to experience those injuries—the owners of working dogs in Scotland. As a result, respondents were recruited from Scottish gamekeepers and BASC and other groups that were involved in shooting.

Did any of those studies look at kennelling?

Andrew Voas

As you said, the Diesel study looked at kennelling.

Sorry—I meant the two studies that were commissioned by the Scottish Government.

Andrew Voas

Those two studies did not specifically look at kennelling. The second study looked at veterinary practice information on whether animals had recorded tail injuries; it did not look at the cause of those injuries.

Mark Ruskell

Thanks for that. I will move on to the impact of tail docking on behaviour and communication in dogs. Did either of the two studies that were commissioned by the Scottish Government look at the potential impact on those dogs of tail shortening and its impact on behaviour and communication?

Andrew Voas

No, that was not a specification.

Why was that the case?

Andrew Voas

Well—

Roseanna Cunningham

The intention was simply to get statistical information about the extent of tail injury. The impact of tail shortening, which the committee had an interesting debate on, was not the primary focus of that research. The research was an attempt to establish better information about what was being claimed about tail injuries and their extent and whether those claims were borne out by the facts.

Andrew Voas

The proposition that was put to us was that working dogs were experiencing more tail injuries because they were predominantly undocked. The purpose was to investigate that specific point.

Mark Ruskell

Looking at this from an animal welfare point of view, a lot of research has been submitted to the committee that strongly implies that there could be an impact in terms of communication and behavioural difficulties in dogs with docked tails. Why was that impact not considered? Clearly there could be a cost and a benefit to the proposed exemption.

Roseanna Cunningham

I did not instruct the research in the first place and I cannot answer for the people who did. The purpose of the research was just to establish the extent of tail injuries and to operate on that basis. I read with interest the committee’s discussions on behaviour, although it appeared to me that there was no conclusive evidence either way. I accept that there is an interesting discussion to be had around that, but my view is that that discussion needs to be taken forward by veterinarians. They need to look at how they would, in certain cases, manage pain if it was felt that pain had to be managed. I do not, at this stage, get a sense that the veterinary profession is at the point of having that kind of discussion on a UK-wide basis.

Mark Ruskell

So kennelling and behaviour have not been considered. Can I ask about the Lederer study? It was a self-selecting study that was advertised in country sports magazines. Do you see any inherent biases in that study?

Roseanna Cunningham

My first reaction is that that study was attempting to get information about working dogs. Previous studies have looked at all dogs or at working breeds—but of course not all dogs from working breeds will be working. The Lederer study was an attempt to get to those people whose dogs were actually working. I am not a statistician, but I am not sure how else the researchers could easily have reached out specifically to owners of animals that were actually working.

Mark Ruskell

Why the emphasis on a self-selecting group that clearly has an interest in preserving the tradition? Why is this not being led by veterinarians looking at their case work with working dogs and assessing what the impacts could be?

11:15  

Andrew Voas

That was the purpose of the second study. There was an initial survey of the owners and users of working dogs. The second study, published in 2014, was the survey of veterinary practice data, which is known as the Cameron report. It teased out from veterinary practice data, as far as we could gather, the information about injuries to dogs of working breeds. The third study, which did not go ahead in the end, was designed to give the best quality evidence. It would have been a prospective cohort study in which we would have identified a group of dogs that were going to be used for working over the next shooting season and monitored what happened to those dogs as the season progressed. The research was originally set up with those three parts. Unfortunately, the third part was not achievable for various reasons, so we have to interpret the first two parts of the study as best we can.

Mark Ruskell

At a previous committee meeting we heard evidence from a vet who docks tails, or would like to dock tails. He had seen only six tail injuries in the past year. Does that not conflict with the figures that are coming out of the Lederer study, which assumes that all dogs at some point in their lives will have a tail injury that will need to be presented to a vet?

Roseanna Cunningham

In reality we should run a study over a 10-year period because a working dog has a working life of more than one year. We may see a small number of dogs with a tail injury in one year, but over a period of time that number is likely to be a lot higher. That might have been an interesting thing to study, but it would take a very long time. We would need to track a cohort of dogs over their entire working lives, which none of those pieces of research has done. In those circumstances the incidence of injury would be likely to be considerably higher than the data shows at the moment.

I specifically asked a question, and we have some evidence, on what percentage of dogs are now being imported from south of the border so that they are already docked—and that will be fully docked—as compared with the dogs that are being worked with undocked tails. There are many issues with that and I know from the response that I have had that those numbers are a bit of a guesstimate at the moment but they are fairly significant. That will also be having an impact on the numbers of injuries, because we are not looking at those numbers in the context only of working dogs that are undocked, if you see what I mean.

The Convener

Can I come in on that point? The other great unknown is the number of injuries that are sustained that are not presented to veterinary surgeons. Is there any feel for the scale of that? The owners are perhaps dealing with the injuries without ever presenting at a vet because the injuries are relatively minor.

Roseanna Cunningham

I remind people that dogs have a longish working life and that superficial or minor injuries in one year might become a more serious problem in subsequent years. The studies are in effect a one-year spot-check look and dogs that have minor injuries in one year may go on to have more serious injuries later.

Andrew Voas

I can give you some figures. At the previous meeting the committee was seeking some firmer estimates of the number of working dogs in Scotland and how many might be brought in. We have had the BASC submission, which estimates that there are currently perhaps 50,000 working dogs in Scotland. I have been having a look at some of the figures and trying to relate them to the information that we have from the research. We can assume from the BASC estimate of 50,000 working dogs that perhaps 38,000 of those are spaniels. The Lederer study reported that a third to a half of working spaniels are currently being imported from England, and most of those will be either partially or fully docked, as we have heard.

If we assume that spaniels will live for 10 years, on average, 3,800 puppies will need to be supplied every year in order to maintain that population of 38,000 spaniels. Approximately half of those might be imported from England, so we are left with perhaps 2,000 puppies per year having to be bred in Scotland to keep constant the population of spaniels in work.

If we look at statistics from the different studies, and take those 2,000 puppies per year, we can see that, according to the Lederer study, we might have 1,000 owner-reported injuries that will range from fairly minor nicks—which can cause blood to be spread everywhere and can look very unpleasant, but will be relatively minor injuries—to more serious tail injuries. Of those 1,000 injuries, there might be 333 that need veterinary treatment; again, that figure comes from information gathered in the Lederer report. Of those 333 injuries, there might be 66 amputations. That figure is based on the ratio of tail injuries to amputations, which is approximately 5:1 according to the Cameron study. It is also consistent with the Diesel study, although the ratio in that study was more like 3:1.

In order to provide those 2,000 working spaniels, we might have to breed 2,000 spaniels if every puppy from every litter went on to be a working dog. If, say, only one in six puppies from a litter went on to be a working dog, we would have to breed 12,000 spaniels. If we assume that there is a stable population of 10,000 Scottish-bred dogs, with an intake of 2,000 puppies per year, and let us say that they work for five years, on average, before retiring, we could then multiply the figures that I have mentioned by five, to give an approximate total incidence in Scotland. That would give perhaps 1,500 injuries that need veterinary treatment, which might give 300 amputations in working spaniels.

I return to the number of puppies bred. If we assume that perhaps 50 per cent of puppies go on to be working dogs, and we have to dock the tails of the entire litter to protect that 50 per cent, we might have to dock 4,000 puppies to save 66 amputations, which is a ratio of 80 puppies to save one amputation. We must remember that those figures are in one year, whereas the puppies are exposed for their working lives, so they might be exposed, year after year, for five years.

I have given some approximate figures that might help members. I am not saying that they are absolute, but they will give general guidance on the overall numbers that we are talking about.

Mark Ruskell

I still get the sense that that is finger-in-the-air stuff. Clearly, when the ban was brought in, there was an opportunity to do a 10-year cohort study that would have looked not at general dog populations but specifically at working dogs, compared the situation in England, and come up with robust data. Instead, we have a survey that is publicised in country sports magazines. We do not have such an attitude to doing surveys on wildlife crime or fox hunting.

I am concerned about inherent biases and about the lack of empirical data that is veterinary led. I am curious as to why that third study was not completed, because I think that it would have given us the information that we need in order to judge whether, in animal welfare terms, the exemption is a sensible one.

Roseanna Cunningham

I am afraid that I do not recall the work that was done in leading up to the legislation and the regulations in the first place. I think that Ross Finnie was the minister at the time. I cannot go back and work out what was done in those circumstances. It was Ross Finnie who gave the assurance that the position would be reviewed if veterinary evidence became available. After that, there was a debate, which I suppose was ex post facto as far as the legislation was concerned, that led to the subsequent instruction of the research that we are discussing.

In order to have done a 10-year study, Ross Finnie would have had to instruct the study almost immediately the legislation was passed, and that was not in people’s minds at the time of the debate. I pluck 10 years out of the air, but I am not 100 per cent confident about the working life of one of those dogs, as opposed to when they get retired. I am assuming that it is somewhere between five and 10 years and I think that that is probably right, although there are people in this room who may have a slightly better sense than I have of the life of a working dog.

The issue has not gone away. The extent to which puppies are now imported from south of the border, because there is a different regime there, is significant. The regime south of the border is less tightly controlled than what we are proposing, because it permits full docking, which we are not permitting, and we think that what we are presenting is a proportionate move that is fairly tightly controlled and does not preclude the possibility of further future research if people feel that that is required. Nevertheless, we think that it is an appropriate response to the concerns of those people who are actually breeding, raising and working these dogs.

Finlay Carson

I agree with much of what Mr Ruskell said about the finger-in-the-air approach taken to some of the research that we have seen. At the risk of being totally bamboozled by statistics again, I will ask a question that I hope you will be able to answer. What information do you have on the level of damage to working dogs’ tails in the parts of the UK where there is already an exemption? Has work been done that will allow us to compare what has been happening in Scotland with the regimes in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, where exemptions exist?

Roseanna Cunningham

Off the top of my head, I am not aware of a piece of comparative work. I know that the regime south of the border has a wider exemption than we would allow and that the controls are a bit less tight, so I am not sure how useful such a comparison would be, because we would not be comparing like with like. I am conscious that what we are proposing is quite narrow, and we would need to see how it worked out. The range of breeds that are covered south of the border is wider. It includes terriers, which we have excluded, so a comparison would not be easy to do.

Finlay Carson

It would have given us a ball park. As has been mentioned, we have had time since the ban was brought in and we are now looking at exemptions, but there appears to be very little information. There are exemptions south of the border and we know what breeds we are talking about here, so even a rough idea would have been helpful to our considerations, but that sort of information does not appear to be available at all.

Andrew Voas

The information not been collected in England. The closest is the Diesel study, which gave an instance of 0.03 per cent in docked dogs and 0.023 per cent in undocked dogs—that is the best evidence that docking has a protective effect against injuries. Some might say that it is self-evident that, if an animal has had its tail removed, it is less likely to have its tail injured.

That covered all dogs.

Andrew Voas

Yes, that covered all dogs, so one would expect the effect in relation to working dogs to be even greater.

Claudia Beamish

What assessment has been carried out of alternatives to tail docking to reduce tail injuries later in life? The committee has heard some evidence prior to today about the use of tail protectors, and a small amount of evidence about breeding for tail carriage, although I appreciate that that would take longer. Points about the possibilities of appropriate kennelling have already been highlighted by my colleague Mark Ruskell, but I would like to hear the cabinet secretary’s comments on alternatives to docking.

11:30  

Roseanna Cunningham

As far as I am aware, none of the studies has looked at alternatives in detail. I read with interest the exchanges about the various methods by which tail injury could be—probably not wholly, but at least partially—prevented. Professionally, I am not in a position to assess whether they are practical in the context of working dogs. I can see that they might be useful with a domestic animal that might run out into wilder ground from time to time, but the difficulty with working dogs is that they are in that terrain all the time, often in very wet weather. I imagine that that creates significant difficulties with some of the proposed methods that have been discussed.

I have not seen any conclusive findings emerge from the committee’s evidence to indicate that such methods would necessarily be effective; I think that they have been presented as possibilities rather than anything else. None of the research studies has been designed to look at that. I am not sure where such other practices are in place, and I do not know how a study could be designed that would manage that.

Andrew Voas

We have considered evidence on things such as the tail protectors that are available and which are used in the United States. They seem to be marketed as protective tail tips for pointer dogs in particular. The device is similar to a 50mm syringe case—it is basically a plastic covering that is taped on to the end of the dog’s tail. If you look online, you will see that they seem to have fairly mixed reviews. Some people say that they work, while others say that they fall off very easily. I think that, in the States, they will be used mainly for pointers rather than for spaniels, which are the predominant concern in Scotland. I could well imagine that a full-tail spaniel with a fairly heavy protector on the end of its tail would be at risk of injuring itself, or that the protector could get damaged in the undergrowth and fall off or pull the tail. I could well believe that tail protectors are not really a practical solution in the Scottish situation for working spaniels with full tails.

Is it the case that what you are saying is speculative?

Andrew Voas

Yes. Nobody has done any detailed research on the effectiveness of such devices.

Claudia Beamish

We heard from Jim Dukes that he was not confident that, in a wet country such as Scotland, wrapping a bandage round the tail of a dog or using Vaseline—I am not disparaging such practice—would work. However, if there are possible alternatives, it would be useful to have a bit more detail on them. I am talking about kennelling, protectors and hair trimming.

Andrew Voas

I support Jim Dukes’s comments about bandaging, because dogs’ tails are notoriously difficult to bandage. I have had experience of trying to get a bandage to stay on a dog whose tail is wagging vigorously. The dog might constantly try to chew the bandage off, and there is a risk of the bandage getting caught in things or getting wet and muddy. I support Jim Dukes’s view that such solutions are not practical in Scottish situations.

That is the case with bandages, at least.

Andrew Voas

Yes—it is particularly the case with bandages.

Mark Ruskell will continue with the theme of possible alternatives to what is proposed.

Mark Ruskell

Cabinet secretary, I think that you said in your opening remarks that it was your intention that as few dogs as reasonably possible that do not go on to work would have their tails docked. Do you agree with the evidence of witnesses such as Tim Parkin, who told the committee that, as a result of the regulations, the tails of full litters of puppies of the relevant breeds will be docked, regardless of whether they end up being working dogs? If it is the intention of the regulations that as few dogs as reasonably possible will have their tails docked, how will you ensure that the docking of the tails of full litters of puppies, regardless of whether they go on to be working dogs, can be prevented?

Roseanna Cunningham

We confine it to the breeds in question in the first place. I fully accept that not every single puppy in every single litter will go on to become a working dog. I am not an expert and I do not know how dogs are identified as likely to be good working dogs, but I expect that, at the age of between three and five days, the assessment would be difficult. I do not suppose that even the best breeder can look at a three-day-old puppy and think, “That’s the one that is going to be the champion working dog; the others will go to be pets.” I expect that there will be a degree of tail shortening of dogs that might subsequently become pets. That is one of the reasons why we want to confine the practice to as few breeds as possible—to breeds from which the majority of working dogs in Scotland are chosen, and to dogs from areas where the vets know the breeders and the demands of the economic activity that we are discussing. Vets will be able to make the best assessment that they can, but we are leaving it up to their professional judgment.

Would that then further skew the findings of the Lederer study, which focused entirely on working dogs? There is a wider population of non-working dogs out there that have their tails docked.

Roseanna Cunningham

A study of working dogs would study adult dogs that are actually working. If we accept that not every single puppy from every single working breed litter goes on to become a working dog, we accept that the ones that are not working dogs would not be included in such a study. The Lederer study looked at working dogs as opposed to working breeds. The two things are not the same, and we accept that. You cannot know that a dog is going to be a working dog until it is an adult. However, if you leave the procedure until the dog is an adult, the issues that people are concerned about become even more critical and probably more difficult to manage.

Again, I am not an expert and I do not know at what age a dog can be identified as likely to be a good working dog, but it is probably when they are more than six months old. Shortening the dog’s tail at that age will clearly be a bigger issue for it than if that happened when it was between three and five days old.

Mark Ruskell

Is there not a significant loophole here? I will give you an example. A couple of weeks ago, somebody got in touch with me via social media to tell me that they had gone to England to buy a puppy with a docked tail that had come from a litter of working dogs. It was being brought to Scotland not to be worked but to be kept as a pet. Is there not a significant loophole in the English legislation that could be replicated here, whereby such dogs could be sold and moved on, yet they do not become working dogs?

The loophole exists. If the situation in England that we are describing continues, we are not opening up a loophole.

We are just replicating it.

Roseanna Cunningham

The fact is that people are already going south of the border to get dogs with docked tails, so we are not creating a loophole. We are already experiencing the consequences of the difference between the systems north and south of the border. Will some puppies with shortened tails end up as pets? Clearly, that will happen.

We will focus on the specific breeds that we are talking about. I remind you that those do not include terriers. Terriers are a huge breed south of the border and their tails can be docked. We are not including terriers. We are focusing on as narrow a population as we think is reasonable to focus on. It is difficult to see how we could focus any more narrowly, short of waiting until individual dogs are identified as dogs that are going to be working dogs, by which time the animal welfare issues become even more difficult to manage.

The Convener

I would just like to explore the practicalities, if I may. If, in the event that the regulations were to proceed, some veterinary surgeons opted out of undertaking the procedure, would an issue arise with regard to meeting the requirement that judgments be exercised by vets with knowledge of those presenting dogs for the procedure and therefore knowledge of the likely use to which those dogs would be put? Would the process be undermined, or is it the Government’s view that the vets who will be asked to carry out the procedure will be largely those who have seen the harm that has been done to working dogs simply because those are the dogs that they see?

I might not have explained that clearly enough, but I think that you get the thrust of it.

Roseanna Cunningham

I suspect that most vets who practise in rural Scotland and whose practices cover such dogs, because they are required in the local area, will be the ones most likely to accept the need for the measure, because they are the ones who are most likely to see the consequences of the procedure not being done. I do not think that there are so many breeders in Scotland that there will be some who are not well known; the breeders of these breeds are probably pretty well known across the board as things stand. It is not as if every vet practice will have its own particular breeder who is very specific to it. There will be breeders who cover broader areas.

Might some vet practices choose not to do the procedure? That clearly might be the case. Might individual vets in vet practices choose not to? That might be the case, too, and I do not know how the practice management will handle that. However, I imagine that the most likely outcome will be that vets who are already well acquainted with and understand the issues will be those who will carry out the procedure and those who are most likely to know which puppies in a litter are likely to go on to become working dogs.

The Convener

In the past few days, we have received written evidence from veterinary practices and vets in rural settings in support of the exemption.

I want to touch on another aspect. Could the resistance to the measure that we have heard is out there among some vets, particularly younger ones, be down to their concern that they do not possess the skill set to carry out the procedure? No vets under the age of 29 or 30 in Scotland have had experience of doing the procedure. If that is the reason for the resistance that we are told exists, what steps might the Government take to ensure that vets are equipped with the required skill set and therefore have the confidence to carry out the procedure?

Roseanna Cunningham

I certainly understand that someone who has become a vet in the past 10 years will have no experience of this form of tail shortening. Of course, they might have experience of dealing with tail injuries or of shortening or amputating an adult dog’s tail—those are procedures that they might have come across. However, I would have thought that ensuring that vets had such skills would be a matter for the veterinary bodies in the first instance. As for whether there might be a role for the Government to step into, I would not like to commit myself to that at this point, because we would need to talk to the British Veterinary Association about what it thought might be necessary. It is probably most likely to be young vets who want to work in rural practices who we will need to ensure have the necessary skills.

Do you commit to having that conversation with the veterinary bodies?

I think so. I want to refer to the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons here, but I do not suppose that that is what I mean—

Andrew Voas

It probably is what you mean, cabinet secretary.

As a vet, I docked puppies back in the late 1980s when lay people were allowed to do it, and I have also dealt with chronic tail injuries. The actual operation to dock a puppy’s tail is very straightforward. I think that the point that has been highlighted is probably being overplayed; as has been explained, the operation is very simple, and if a young vet is talked through it by someone with previous experience, they will have no difficulty with the practicalities of what is very straightforward surgery.

11:45  

From talking to the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, we think that it would be useful if the Government gave guidance to veterinary surgeons to explain—if the regulations are approved—that we are not necessarily advocating tail docking for all dogs or making it compulsory. We are simply giving the vets who see the value of docking the opportunity to exercise their professional judgment on which puppies are most at risk of injury later in life, based on their knowledge of the breeder and where the breeder’s puppies have gone previously, and based on their experience of seeing tail injuries in practice. Those vets are best placed to decide whether docking is justified for a particular litter of puppies.

Vets have a professional obligation to endeavour to protect the welfare of animals in their care—when we qualify, we take an oath to do so. That obligation should override all other considerations when a vet has to make the decision. If the vet genuinely believes that tail docking is in the animal’s best interests, they will be acting in accordance with the oath that they have taken. If they do not believe that, to carry out docking would be to fail in their duty. People take that seriously. I understand that there is an ethical dilemma, but the profession is in a unique position to make the decision and should be expected and trusted to do so.

Emma Harper

I am interested in the pain management aspect of shortening a puppy’s tail compared with amputation in an adult dog, which could be more invasive, especially if the dog has had multiple engagements with a vet because of repeated injuries. How do you interpret the research on the pain and distress that are associated with docking a puppy, compared with the pain and distress that an adult animal might suffer? In our paper, it says “docking”, but I am sure that shortening is a bit less invasive than docking the whole tail.

Roseanna Cunningham

I have looked at the evidence on that; although I do not have medical knowledge, I thought that an interesting point was made about there being an issue to do with pain management early in a puppy’s life, because the animal’s body is not properly developed and cannot absorb all the pain relief that might be given. An adult dog can get really good pain relief, but a tiny puppy cannot, because its organs are not able to absorb the drugs. I am looking at Andrew Voas; he is the one with that knowledge.

Andrew Voas

I think that Tim Parkin mentioned that. We have local anaesthetics that might be used on very young puppies, but many vets say that the pain that is associated with giving the anaesthetic is as bad as, or worse than, the brief pain that is associated with the tail shortening procedure.

There is an analgesic drug that is commonly used in veterinary practice that gives longer-term pain relief, but it is contraindicated for animals under six weeks old, which Tim Parkin said is because the liver is not sufficiently developed to cope with it.

Pain in puppies is an interesting area. It is difficult to assess pain in neonates such as puppies, because of their lack of behavioural responses to pain. I think that all vets accept that docking or tail shortening are painful procedures. Puppies certainly yelp or vocalise briefly when the tail shortening is done. Typically, they are then put back with the mother, and they start suckling and become calm. Some people have suggested that suckling releases endogenous opioids or endogenous pain killers and is a form of comfort and pain relief for the puppy. That is the acute pain issue. Docking or tail shortening is certainly painful for the puppy at the time, and the acute pain will pass.

There is wider concern in a couple of areas. One is that an experience of acute pain as a young animal can sensitise animals to painful or stressful experiences later in life. We do not have any good evidence for that in dogs and we have to say that, based on the anecdotal evidence or the accumulated mass of experience, it is not commonly recognised that puppies that have had their tails shortened go on to be chronically nervous or chronically stressed individuals. Many people have seen working spaniels that have had their tails docked go on to be apparently happy active dogs. We have to bear that in mind.

The other main issue is nerve regeneration, or neuromas. It is well recognised in human medicine that when we amputate a digit or a limb, the severed nerve tries to regrow. That often forms what is called a neuroma, which is a disorganised mass of nerve tissue that is trying to heal, and granulation tissue. In human patients, that can result in abnormal sensation, particularly if the wound is infected or damaged, so that it subsequently contracts. There can be paraesthesia—pins and needles—there can be a sensation called allodynia, in which previously normal touch sensations are perceived as painful, and there can be heightened sensitivity to pain. Those conditions are seen in perhaps less than 10 per cent of human patients who have a limb or digit amputation.

There is concern that severing a nerve can result in neuroma. Neuroma is a normal response to a nerve being severed; it is not surprising that we find them. They have been found in dogs; there is a paper from 1990 that describes six dogs that had neuromas following tail docking. Those cases were investigated because the dogs showed signs of being in chronic pain—biting their tails or their tails being sensitive when handled. We do not know whether the neuromas in those cases were just incidental findings, but the point is that they caused obvious signs in those animals. However, on the wider scale, the syndrome of a tail shortening operation causing chronic pain to a dog later in life is unusual; those are highly unusual cases and it is not generally recognised that spaniels that have had their tails shortened by a third will go on to have painful tails, constantly bite at their tails or show signs of pain that would require a further operation.

There is some interesting work on neuromas in pigs. I am sorry to go on, but—

I think that you might be giving the committee more information than is absolutely necessary.

We have got the gist.

Emma Harper

What is the proportionality of shortening a puppy’s tail versus the pain or animal welfare issues that are involved in the injury of an adult dog’s tail? Would the adult injury outweigh the shortening of the puppy’s tail at five days old?

Andrew Voas

I have done both procedures. Shortening a puppy’s tail seems to cause brief pain. The puppy then suckles and gets comfort from the mother and it seems that there is no obvious long-term effect, although we have to bear in mind the probably valid concern about potential chronic pain later in life.

However, the tail amputation of an adult dog is a serious operation. It is relatively straightforward surgery, but the problems are usually in the healing process. Often, the tail tip swells up, stitches can come out and there may well be infection. Therefore, it is a much more serious and potentially painful operation for an adult dog than a tail shortening procedure is for a newborn puppy.

Is there evidence on the proportion of dogs that develop infections after the docking procedure?

Andrew Voas

I do not think that anyone has done studies on that. We have heard anecdotally about it. I think that we heard from one previous witness that she had seen litters that had died from blood loss or infection, but that is incredibly unusual.

Claudia Beamish

I apologise for not asking the right question and for not being clear. I meant to ask about adult dogs that have not had their tails docked as puppies. What proportion of adult dogs have had infections because of having their tails docked?

Andrew Voas

I do not think that anyone has gathered such statistics systematically. The likelihood of infection getting into the wound and becoming established would depend on the sort of injury, what caused it and how long it was left before it was seen by a vet. Giving of antibiotics would be routine when carrying out an amputation, but infection might have been established before the operation took place.

Alexander Burnett (Aberdeenshire West) (Con)

I was going to ask whether you have a feel for the number of dogs potentially affected, how many spaniel and hunt point retrieve dogs are born in Scotland, and how many go on to be working gun dogs, but I think that Andrew Voas has given a fairly comprehensive extrapolation of the available data. Is there anything that the cabinet secretary would like to add to that?

Roseanna Cunningham

There is not, really. As we are all aware, there are in Scotland a lot of working dogs in legitimate areas of activity. However, not all the puppies in the litters that they come from go on to become working dogs. We could try to specify further how many dogs would be affected, but at the moment the numbers can only be broad. That is partly because—as we are constantly aware—many dogs are brought in from south of the border, which changes the numbers: our estimate of the number of such working dogs must always take into account that about a third are not bred in Scotland, but have been brought in from elsewhere.

Alexander Burnett

My supplementary question is about data collection. As has been said repeatedly, there are a lot of limitations in the data. We have microchipping, there are issues around breeding licenses, and there will be on-going monitoring of the regulations, should they be passed. What are your views on future recording of statistics on dogs?

Roseanna Cunningham

I hope that we will take things forward across a broad range of animal welfare issues. I am not quite sure how we would construct a set of statistics on dogs that would give us the very specific information that we are looking at in relation to the regulations. We will go away and have a think about that and consider whether there is a better way to count dogs’ heads—or tails—to establish a more accurate picture. We will never have an entirely accurate picture. We know that dogs are imported from all over the place, and not just from south of the border. We will consider whether we can refine the information that we have on numbers. I will let the committee know either way whether there is a way to do that.

The Convener

Before I bring David Stewart back in, the reference to microchipping brought something to my mind. We heard the assertion that the pain that is felt by a puppy in docking might be equated to that involved in microchipping. It was also suggested that a microchip being inserted close to a nerve would be quite a bit more painful. Can Andrew Voas comment on that evidence?

Andrew Voas

My experience in practice predates common microchipping, so I cannot comment on that first hand. It is unlikely that microchipping in general causes significant pain. My opinion is that shortening the tail of a puppy would be more painful than putting in a needle to inject a microchip. There may well be exceptions, as we have heard.

12:00  

David Stewart

Cabinet secretary, I want to return to the type of evidence that you will ask vets to seek in deciding whether a dog is likely to become a working dog. However, before you answer that, let me talk about an email that I received this morning—by happy coincidence—from a working vet in my patch, the Highlands and Islands. The vet said:

“For practising vets, there are also concerns as to how any amendment to legislation could be enforced; evidence suggests that it is impossible to assess the suitability of a dog for a working role at 5 days old or less (Alder, 2007) and colleagues across the border have raised concerns as to how current exemption regulation in England leaves room for abuse in terms of proving in concrete terms the ‘working’ function of the puppy. This could result in many dogs unnecessarily undergoing this painful procedure despite the fact that they will not go on to fulfil a working function in later life.”

How do you respond to that working vet’s assessment of the proposed legislation?

Roseanna Cunningham

I have conceded that at three to five days old it is probably impossible to identify which puppy or puppies in a litter will be working dogs in their adult lives. I also indicated that we cannot wait until they are mature. Tail shortening could be done when they are a lot older, but I presume that shortening is a much more traumatic experience for a puppy that is six to nine months old than it is for a puppy that is three to five days old.

What we are proposing does not mean that only puppies that go on to be working dogs will have their tails shortened. That is why we have talked about breeds rather than working dogs per se. It is also why we want to leave the decision to vets’ judgment. I cannot speak about the vet who wrote to you; he or she might make the decision that they will not carry out tail shortening, which is a decision that they are perfectly entitled to make.

We have said that vets will look at the history of the breeder with whom they are dealing or the person who brings the dog to them—the gamekeepers and people with shooting licences, who are active in hunting. If someone rocks up from a suburb of Aberdeen wanting their dog’s tail shortened, I can imagine that a vet might be somewhat sceptical as to whether that dog will go on to be a working dog. However, dogs that are brought in by recognised breeders or by people who take part in activities that involve working dogs will be viewed differently by vets. It will be for vets to make decisions in individual circumstances.

David Stewart

I will send the email on to you. I welcome your comments and appreciate that you cannot necessarily respond to it cold.

I have a few final questions on enforcement. You gave that example about Aberdeen. Let us imagine a hypothetical situation in which you get evidence that vets are not checking whether dogs are likely to be used for working and the lawful shooting of animals. Who will be the inspector? Will it be the vets’ professional association? Will it be some new organisation that you will set up? The old story, for any legislation, is that we need to ask who guards the guards. What inspection regime will there be?

Roseanna Cunningham

I do not anticipate setting up a specific body of inspectors to deal with the issue. We do not take that approach with general practitioners and other clinical practitioners, and I do not suppose that we will do so with vets in respect of tail shortening. We will rely on veterinary surgeons having a proper professional attitude towards the practice. Repeated reports of rogue practice or a rogue vet would be for the professional body, not the Government, to deal with.

David Stewart

For the record, I agree with the cabinet secretary that we have a very professional group of vets in Scotland, and I do not expect there to be an issue. However, any legislation requires teeth. There will be no new body, and you will require the vets’ professional association to take enforcement action if a vet breaches the legislation.

Roseanna Cunningham

I expect that that would be a matter for the professional association, if it thought that vets were doing unnecessary tail shortening. Let us be honest, it would have to be on breeds that were not working breeds.

Andrew Voas

It would also be a technical offence under the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006, which can be enforced by SSPCA inspectors or local authorities. As we have heard, the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons would almost certainly want to take action if it were to receive reports about vets doing such docking, although it was otherwise in accordance with the legislation.

Could you remind the committee what the sanctions would be for a breach under the 2006 act?

Andrew Voas

I would refer that to a lawyer.

I am sorry: I am just making sure that Judith Brown has a chance to comment today, since she has been sitting so quietly.

Judith Brown (Scottish Government)

If the procedure does not accord with the terms of the proposed exemption, it would amount to the offence of mutilation under section 20 of the 2006 act. That would be a criminal offence. I will check right now exactly what the level of penalty would be.

David Stewart

While you are looking it up, after my unfair comment, I say that I take it that the SSPCA would still have a role in general in animal welfare under the legislation. For example, if an irate constituent in the Highlands and Islands knew of a vet who was not looking into whether an animal was likely to be used for work in connection with the lawful shooting of animals, they could refer that case to the SSPCA, which could look at whether there had been a breach of the 2006 legislation. Am I correct in that understanding of the law?

Andrew Voas

Yes, that is correct.

Judith Brown

Yes. A person who commits an offence under section 20

“is liable, on summary conviction, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or a fine not exceeding £20,000 or both.”

So, in such a case, the vet could be liable for professional misconduct under the British Veterinary Association and criminal action under the 2006 legislation?

Judith Brown

Yes, that is correct.

Thank you.

Richard Lyle

While Judith Brown is looking up section 20, can she confirm that, under the 2006 act, it is also an offence to take a protected animal from Scotland to a different regulatory regime for the purpose of having its tail docked in another country? We have had a discussion about the fact that people in Scotland are taking puppies down to—

No—that is not what I said. I talked about people going south to buy animals to bring them in.

I did not say that you said it. It has been discussed previously that people take their animals to England to get their tails docked. If they do, are they breaking the law?

If that is the context, it sounds very much like it.

Judith Brown

Yes. I think that that is prohibited.

Okay. I apologise to the cabinet secretary if she thought that I was referring to her—I was not.

We have been talking about people going south to buy dogs and bring them back as opposed to taking their own dogs south.

We talked previously about people having physically taken their dogs from Scotland to England to get their tails docked.

Andrew Voas

People are also taking their pregnant bitches to England to give birth, as they can then legally have the puppies’ tails docked in England. We have heard about that practice anecdotally.

Richard Lyle

Okay. I just wanted clarification, not to make a big issue of it.

The cabinet secretary might have covered my next question in her opening statement. Two weeks ago, the committee was told:

“The ‘combination of breeds’ element in that regulation could provide a huge loophole.”—[Official Report, Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee, 30 May 2017; c 40.]

What is your response to that?

Roseanna Cunningham

We have narrowed the exemption down as far as we think is reasonably practicable. I am not sure what loophole is being discussed.

As I said, terriers are included in the exemption south of the border but we have deliberately excluded terriers from exemption in Scotland.

I think that there was some conversation about mixed breeds, but they would fall within the hunt point retrieve and spaniel general breeds rather than be bred outside those two breeds. We think that we have narrowed the exemption down as far as we can in terms of actual breeds. Other than the loophole that there might be in the fact that some dogs that end up as pets might have their tails shortened, I am not sure what the loophole would be.

How could vets be certain that the breed that they were presented with for docking was covered by the regulation?

Roseanna Cunningham

I genuinely hope that a vet could tell the difference. Even I can tell when a spaniel is in front of me. I am not quite so confident about hunt point retrieve breeds, but I would definitely know a spaniel when I saw it, and I hope that a vet would.

I am sure that they would.

I defer to my veterinary colleague.

Andrew Voas

That would be a matter of professionalism. If a vet was presented with some weird cross and they were not sure whether it was a pointer, they would not dock its tail. That would be their professional duty.

They would look at the dog’s history.

I used to have a Yorkshire terrier, but there are different breeds, and breeders are cross-breeding. Is there scope for any dubiety? I know what a spaniel is, but—

Roseanna Cunningham

I think that, if there was scope for any dubiety, a professional vet would ask questions about the dog’s ancestry and, if they did not get reasonable answers, they would have to say no. I accept that lots of cross-breeds are appearing, but vets are becoming familiar with the more popular cross-breeds.

The Convener

Given the penalties that we identified a few moments ago, I presume that you are confident that vets would take every care in the matter.

As members have no more questions, we move to agenda item 4, which is consideration of motion S5M-05754. I invite the cabinet secretary to speak to and move the motion. Procedurally, this part of the meeting can last up to 90 minutes and Government officials cannot take part in the discussion.

Roseanna Cunningham

I refer members to the comments that I have already made.

I move,

That the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee recommends that the Prohibited Procedures on Protected Animals (Exemptions) (Scotland) Amendment Regulations 2017 [draft] be approved.

Mark Ruskell

Cabinet secretary, I dealt with the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006 in the second session of the Scottish Parliament. The issue of tail docking and potential exemptions for working dogs was given thorough scrutiny at that point, and the Parliament disagreed to having an exemption on the basis of the veterinary evidence that was presented to us. I do not feel that anything has changed.

I am not being presented with a robust, scientific case for introducing the exemption at this point. I believe that the evidence in front of us is deeply unscientific—it consists of one study that was self-selecting through the pages of country sports magazines and another study that was based on a wider population of dogs but that does not distinguish between working and non-working dogs. A third study was not even commissioned and did not take place. This is happening 10 years after tail docking was banned in Scotland, and we just do not have the scientific evidence from an animal welfare point of view to allow the exemption to be approved.

None of the studies has looked at the wider causes of tail injuries or at kennelling and none of the studies has looked at the wider potential behavioural impacts of removing puppies’ tails, so we have no way of comparing the costs and benefits. In addition, not a single veterinary body in this country is backing the exemption. We have to ask why that is.

In England, exemptions were brought in but they are full of loopholes. In essence, the Scottish Government wants to mirror that situation here—it wants to weaken the progressive legislation that we passed in session 2 to match the unworkable exemptions that exist in England and Wales.

I do not think that the evidence stacks up, and I do not think that the guesstimates that we have heard today of the number of puppies’ tails that would have to be docked when they were under five days old to prevent a tail amputation in a working dog, stack up. It was mentioned that 80 puppies’ tails would have to be docked to save one amputation in an adult dog. I do not believe that the pain and injury that would be inflicted on a puppy at that age would be 80 times less than the pain and injury that caused amputation in an adult dog.

For all those reasons, I cannot see a robust scientific way to back the proposed subordinate legislation and I will certainly vote against it.

12:15  

Claudia Beamish

I, too, will vote against the regulations. The research that needed to be done over a 10-year period has not been done. Some parts of the regulations are not clear and are too speculative for me to able to support them. There has been no research into kennelling and no scientific research into the alternatives to docking, although we have heard from Andrew Voas on some aspects of that today.

Andrew Voas’s evidence also had some “maybes” in it in relation to the number of spaniels, and there were extrapolations from one study to another study, which made the evidence unclear and uncertain.

I have concerns about the impact of docking on behaviour and communication. As we know—at least, I do—a dog’s tail tells us a lot, yet no research has been done on that. I do not know how such research could be done. The difficulty in assessing pain in puppies also raises a big question mark.

I am not convinced by the evidence on animal welfare that has been given to the committee. I am also not convinced that tail docking is a proportionate response or that enough research has been done. As the regulations stand today, I will vote against them.

Emma Harper

In addition to receiving the written and oral evidence that has been given to the committee, I have looked into the matter and have spoken directly to vets. As someone who has participated in the amputation of limbs in humans, I think that allowing the docking of puppies’ tails is a proportionate way to avoid future injury. It would be appropriate to allow vets in rural practices, who know the breeders and the people involved in working dog businesses, to determine what is appropriate.

I had an additional concern about hunt point retrieve breeds, because they are quite big, but, as I found out when we took evidence, HPRs are not just hunters, pointers or retrievers but are becoming more mixed in their skills. That makes it more appropriate to include the hunt point retrieve breeds. However, it would be inappropriate to dock the tail of a pointer, because the carriage of the tail of such a breed is horizontal and would not go into the undergrowth.

I would be supportive of allowing professional vets help to support the regulations.

Finlay Carson

I am somewhat disappointed with the lack of joined-up evidence that the committee has received, given the time that has been available to gather information and the fact that there is already an exemption in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. However, on balance, given that tail shortening prevents the extreme pain that—as is widely accepted—tail damage in later life can cause, I will support the Government’s motion.

Kate Forbes

I, too, start from the position that we have a problem with pain in adult working dogs. Tail damage happens; the question is, what do we do about it? I share Mark Ruskell’s disappointment with the evidence on both sides. In the past 10 years, there have been opportunities for both sides to make a case, and I was disappointed when, two weeks ago, we asked those who are against tail docking for alternative solutions in the light of the fact that there is damage in adult working dogs but those solutions do not exist.

From an animal welfare point of view, it comes down to pain in a puppy versus pain in an adult dog. Given that tail shortening already happens to an extent in England, loopholes are currently being used. It would be far better to have a more proportionate response that targets a more limited population in Scotland.

Although evidence on the issue is critical, having spoken at length to people in my constituency, I recognise that there is a problem in adult working dogs and that we do not currently have a solution for the pain that they experience.

Angus MacDonald (Falkirk East) (SNP)

One salient point in the submission from the Scottish Gamekeepers Association is that, if tail shortening is to go ahead,

“these animals would be up to 20 times less likely to suffer prolonged injury in later life”,

as we have heard on numerous occasions. Another salient point is:

“The Lederer study tells us that over 1 in 2 Spaniels and over 1 in 3 HPRs with full length tails sustained one or more injuries in ONE SEASON.”

I believe that the Government has made the case, and I will support the legislation.

The Convener

I see the legislation as a preventative move that is aimed at avoiding significant painful experiences for dogs in later life. It is targeted at those dogs that are at risk.

I understand the concerns of some animal welfare organisations and of some colleagues, but those concerns ignore the clear harm that is being done to working dogs. Are we saying that we know that there is an issue, but so be it?

Like Kate Forbes, I admit that the evidence that the committee heard the other week from both sides of the argument was not persuasive in either direction. However, the subsequent written submission from the Scottish Gamekeepers Association, which was backed by a sizeable number and variety of knowledgeable rural vets, has convinced me. Nonetheless, I feel that—as we touched on earlier—if the regulations are approved, there is a need for work to be done to ensure that vets have a clear understanding of the exemption, that they are competent and that they possess the skill set that is required to carry out the practice. I, too, will support the legislation.

As no other member wishes to contribute, I invite the cabinet secretary to wind up.

Roseanna Cunningham

I do not want to add anything to what has been said. I simply remind everybody that we have deliberately used the language of tail shortening because the legislation is not a return to tail docking even in the very limited circumstances for which we propose the exemption. Removal of one third of the tail still leaves an expressive tail.

Much as I understand the emotional response, I believe that some of the concerns are just that: emotional. There is a problem with dogs that are used for particular work—a relatively small population in comparison with the total number of dogs in Scotland—and they need better protection than they currently get.

The question is, that motion S5M-05754, in the name of Roseanna Cunningham, be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Burnett, Alexander (Aberdeenshire West) (Con)
Carson, Finlay (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
Dey, Graeme (Angus South) (SNP)
Forbes, Kate (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Lyle, Richard (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
MacDonald, Angus (Falkirk East) (SNP)

Against

Beamish, Claudia (South Scotland) (Lab)
Ruskell, Mark (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 7, Against 3, Abstentions 0.

Motion agreed to,

That the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee recommends that the Prohibited Procedures on Protected Animals (Exemptions) (Scotland) Amendment Regulations 2017 [draft] be approved.

The committee’s report will confirm the outcome of the debate. Are members content to delegate to the convener the task of signing off the report?

Members indicated agreement.

The Convener

I thank the cabinet secretary and her officials for their time.

At our next meeting, on 20 June, the committee will hold an evidence session with stakeholders to explore waste generation and disposal in Scotland. We will also consider the Environmental Impact Assessment (Miscellaneous Amendments) (Scotland) Regulations 2017 (SSI 2017/168).

Meeting closed at 12:24.