Over the past decade, parliamentary records reveal that more than 89,000 dogs have been microchipped in compliance with the legal mandate instituted in 2012 for canines over four months old.
Microchipping, an essential measure for pet identification and retrieval, involves implanting a permanent chip beneath the skin, containing unique identification details registered in the National Microchipping Database.
The statistics indicate fluctuating trends in microchipping rates for dogs, with the highest recorded in 2021 at 11,358 and the lowest in 2014 at 5,877. However, there has been a slight decline in microchipping numbers in 2022 (8,848) and 2023 (7,430) following the peak.
While dogs are legally required to be microchipped, no such mandate exists for cats, ferrets, or other pets, despite proposals for compulsory microchipping for cats made by the Commissioner for Animal Welfare Alison Bezzina in 2021.
Bezzina argued that electronic microchipping is crucial for permanent pet identification, reducing abandonment instances, and ensuring responsible ownership.
Though the UK and various parts of Europe and Australia have introduced mandatory microchipping for cats, it remains a voluntary practice in Malta, posing challenges in tracing lost or injured felines and curbing abandonment effectively.
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