Yellow flakes on your dog's skin could be caused by a variety of factors such as allergies, fungal infections, or dry skin. To treat it effectively, you should consult with a veterinarian to determine the underlying cause. They may recommend medicated shampoos, dietary changes, or medications to address the issue. Regular grooming and a balanced diet can also help improve your dog's skin health.
The dog may loose hair around the infected area. He or she may scratch a lot around this area as well. You can also notice we a dog as dry skin by the flakes laying loose in his or her hair.
All dog have dander. Dander is dead flakes of skin that a dog loses, much like human beings. Larger dogs that are considered to be hypoallergenic or close to it are the standard poodle and the goldendoodle.
soap
No because it's dead.
Hair and Skin flakes
it is an organ, because your skin or epidermis is the biggest organ of you body
ash/skin flakes
Flakes of dead skin!
Dust mites do not actually eat dead skin cells but rather feed on the flakes of skin shed by humans and animals, consuming approximately 1/3 of their body weight in skin flakes daily.
If your dog is not yellow it is brown with spots
It has no function. It is simply dead flakes of skin from the scalp.