Scientists reveal 10 common misconceptions about canine behaviour

The unique relationship between humans and dogs dates back almost 40,000 years.

But even after all this time, it can be tricky to know what your pet is thinking at any given time.

Animal behaviour experts Dr Melissa Starling and Dr Paul McGreevy, from the University of Sydney, have revealed 10 common dog behaviour myths in an article for The Conversation.

They argue that hugging your dog can make them feel uncomfortable while an excessively friendly dog may actually feel anxious and distressed.

The scientists say their tips can help dog owners become better companions by appreciating what their pet may be feeling.

 

Dogs all have their own personalities and learned preferences and so can differ dramatically in how they approach life and what they take from it (stock image)

It is difficult to refer to what dogs, as a collective, like and dislike and how they behave. 

Just as humans do, dogs all have their own personalities and learned preferences and so can differ dramatically in how they approach life and what they take from it.

In our book, Making Dogs Happy, we use scientific research, illustrative photos and practical tips to help dog owners to appreciate what their dogs may be feeling from moment to moment, and have strategies ready to respond in ways that support their dogs.

Making Dogs Happy is focused on the pragmatic application of current theory to improve your relationship with your dogs and, of course, in the process make them happy.

There are many ways in which we can misjudge dogs by assuming that they are little furry humans.

Here are ten common misconceptions that stem from assigning human values and needs to dogs.

1. ‘Dogs have a human appreciation of sharing’

Humans can rationalise and appreciate the benefits of sharing. In contrast, among dogs, possession is ten-tenths of the law.

So we should not take toys, bones and chews away from dogs unless we have trained them to accept this form of intervention.

2. ‘Dogs always enjoy common human physical displays of affection’

Humans often show their affection for others by hugging and cuddling them.

Dogs simply do not have the limbs and joints to achieve this and so have not evolved to give each other a loving squeeze. 

When embraced by humans, many can find this uncomfortable or threatening. The same goes for patting dogs on the head.

3. ‘Barking and growling dogs are always threatening or dangerous’

These are distance-increasing behaviours. The dogs using these signals are chiefly trying to buy space so they can feel safer.

All dogs, regardless of their temperament or training, can at times want more space. 

They usually try more subtle signalling first, but many dogs learn that subtle signals don’t work and go straight for shouting.

4. ‘Dogs will welcome unfamiliar dogs to their home’

Dogs evolved from wolves and are therefore primed to defend what is theirs. They have an attachment to their home territory and the resources within it.

Dogs have no way of knowing that the dogs and human we invite around to our home, for example for a play-date, are ever going to leave.

They can be forgiven for thinking that this is the way it is going to be from hereon.

So it is to be expected that they will often try to lay out the local ground-rules and put the new arrivals in their place.

5. ‘Dogs like relaxing as much as humans do’

We go to work and go to school, so we greatly value the opportunity to chill out at home and maybe watch TV.

In contrast, dogs spend most of their time at home and so value exercise off the property far more than time spent on the sofa.

So, for dogs, a change is not just as good as a rest – it’s much better.

WHAT ARE THE TEN COMMONLY HELD MYTHS ABOUT DOGS?

It is easy to believe that dogs like what we like, but this is not always strictly true. 

Here are ten things which people should remember when trying to understand their pets.  

1. Dogs don’t like to share 

2. Not all dogs like to be hugged or patted 

3. A barking dog is not always an aggressive dog 

4. Dogs do not like other dogs entering their territory/home

5. Dogs like to be active and don’t need as much relaxation time as humans 

6. Not all dogs are overly friendly, some are shyer to begin with  

7. A dog that appears friendly can soon become aggressive 

8. Dogs need open space and new areas to explore. Playing in the garden won’t always suffice 

9. Sometimes a dog isn’t misbehaving, it simply does not understand what to do or what you want 

10. Subtle facial signals often preempt barking or snapping when a dog is unhappy

6. ‘An effusive dog is a friendly dog’

‘Friendly’ for one dog is not friendly for all dogs, and some dogs use excessive friendliness as a way to alleviate anxiety associated with meeting another dog or human.

Owners of very friendly dogs may be surprised when every other dog does not cheerfully receive their dog.

Some dogs prefer sedate greetings, and lots of personal space.

7. ‘Dogs approach when they want to engage playfully’

Sometimes owners are confused when a dog approaches a human or another dog in a friendly fashion and then growls or snaps at them.

These dogs may be motivated to approach chiefly to gain information, rather than to interact, and some may like strangers in principle, but nevertheless become anxious and overwhelmed all of a sudden.

If you are seeing this pattern, call your dog away from new dogs and humans after a couple of seconds.

8. ‘A big yard can replace walks’

Because dogs spend so much time at home in the yard, they often find the area a little too familiar and sometimes rather dull.

The size of a yard is far less important to dogs than what happens in it. Dogs truly thrive on play with each other, with us and with toys.

HOW DID DOGS BECOME DOMESTICATED?

A new study has found that dogs and humans have sustained loving relationships with each other for at least 14,000 years (file photo)

A new study has found that dogs and humans have sustained loving relationships with each other for at least 14,000 years (file photo)

A genetic analysis of the world’s oldest known dog remains has revealed that dogs were domesticated 20,000 to 40,000 years ago in a single event by humans living in Eurasia.

Dr Krishna Veeramah, an assistant professor in evolution at Stony Brook University, said: ‘The process of dog domestication would have been a very complex process, involving a number of generations where signature dog traits evolved gradually.

‘The current hypothesis is that the domestication of dogs likely arose passively, with a population of wolves somewhere in the world living on the outskirts of hunter-gatherer camps feeding off refuse created by the humans.

‘Those wolves that were tamer and less aggressive would have been more successful at this, and while the humans did not initially gain any kind of benefit from this process, over time they would have developed some kind of symbiotic [mutually beneficial] relationship with these animals, eventually evolving into the dogs we see today.’ 

There are many ways in which we can misjudge dogs by assuming that they are little furry humans. These include hugging them like people and expecting them to share, like humans do (Stock image)

There are many ways in which we can misjudge dogs by assuming that they are little furry humans. These include hugging them like people and expecting them to share, like humans do (Stock image)

They particularly love to do so in a novel environment, so time spent out of the yard is the very best of fun.

9. ‘Dogs are wilfully defiant when they don’t do as they are told’

Rather than deciding to disobey us, dogs sometimes simply can’t do what we ask them to.

Either they don’t actually know what we’re asking them to do, or they have much, much more pressing things to do at the time.

Dogs are not great at generalising, so just because they sit nicely when asked to in the kitchen when you have treats in your hand doesn’t mean they automatically know what ‘sit’ means when they are at the off-leash dog park.

And while your dogs might know what ‘sit’ means when being trained at home without distractions, asking them to do so when visitors are at the door might be like asking a child to kneel and pray upon arriving at an amusement park.

10. ‘Barking, snapping, or lunging is the first sign of an unhappy dog’

Dogs often give subtle signs they are becoming anxious, like avoiding eye contact with whatever is worrying them, licking lips, brow furrows, lifting a paw, tightening muscles in their face.

If nothing is done to help these dogs move away from whatever is worrying them, these signs can often escalate to more troubling behaviour that is more obvious, such as growling and snapping.

WHEN DID PEOPLE START KEEPING ANIMALS AS PETS?

Pets have been a companion to humans for millennia.

In fact, according to Greger Larson, director of the University of Oxford’s palaeogenomics and bio-archaeology research network, humans have likely kept baby animals for amusement as long as humans have lived.

But the story of exactly how animals became domesticated is much debated and often only glimpsed at from scraps of fossils and DNA.

Scientists largely agree that dogs were the first domestic animal. They were tamed and used for work or for their meat.

A study published by University of Maine researchers in 2011 found evidence that dogs were being bred, and, eaten, by humans living in Texas some 9,400 years ago.

A more recent study in 2017 found dogs were domesticated in a single event by humans living in Eurasia. 

Dr Krishna Veeramah, an assistant professor in evolution at Stony Brook University, told MailOnline: ‘We’ve found clear evidence that dogs were domesticated 20,000 to 40,000 years ago.

‘New research last year provocatively suggested that dogs could have been domesticated twice but our conclusion was there is no evidence for dual domestication.

‘We would argue that finding evidence for only one domestication event is a big deal, because it is very important to helping us understand how domestication works.’

His research found that dogs evolved to be a separate species from wild wolves sometime between 20,000 and 40,000 years ago. 

But it’s not known if they were the first pets, and kept for companionship. 

A study this year found  compared the genomes, or complete genetic codes, of modern domestic and wild rabbits to see how long it had taken them to diverge.

Using the known mutation rate of certain biomolecules as a ‘molecular clock’ they found it was not possible to pin down rabbit domestication to a single date or event.

Instead, the creation of tame buns appeared to be a cumulative effect stretching back to Roman times and possibly the Stone Age.  

The story of domestication is not a linear progression from wild to domestic, Larsen told the Smithsonian. 

‘These things exist on a continuum,’ says Larson. He said when the first pet came into being is ‘a bit like asking when did life begin?’

The Conversation



Read more at DailyMail.co.uk