Authors: John Bradshaw
8
. The bush dog is a rare social canid found in South America. Its stumpy tail, round head, and furry feet would probably, if married to a suitable temperament, be rather appealing.
9
. This list of desired traits is derived from research by Australians Paul McGreevy and Pauleen Bennett; see their “Challenges and paradoxes in the companion-animal niche” in
Animal Welfare
19(S) (2010): 11â16. Bennett and her colleagues at Monash University in Australia presented further refinements of the ideas behind this list at the 2nd Canine Science Forum held in Vienna in July 2010.
Most of the source material for this book comprises papers in academic journals, which are often difficult (and expensive!) to access for those without a university affiliation. Although I've included references to the most important of these in the endnotes, I can also recommend the following books, most of which were written by knowledgeable academics but with a more general audience in mind.
Wolves: Behavior, Ecology and Conservation
, edited by L. David Mech and Luigi Boitani (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003), provides detailed up-to-date information on wolf biology from a host of experts. Older books on wolves are less useful because they contain misconceptions about the organization of wolf packs.
Ãdám Miklósi's
Dog Behavior, Evolution and Cognition
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2009) is currently the standard textbook on dog behavior. It contains a great deal of detailed information on domestication, canine cognition, and ways in which dogs perceive people, although his conclusions are not identical to mine.
Apart from Ray and Lorna Coppinger's
Dogs: A New Understanding of Canine Origin, Behavior and Evolution
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002), there are few readily accessible accounts of social behavior in dogs that draw on up-to-date science.
Carrots and Sticks: Principles of Animal Training
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008), by Professors Paul McGreevy and Bob Boakes from the University of Sydney, Australia, is a fascinating book in two halves: The first half explains learning theory in accessible language, and the second contains fifty case histories of animals (twelve of them dogs) trained for specific purposes, ranging from film work to bomb detection. Each case history is illustrated with color photographs indicating how the animals were trained.
Karen Prior, Gwen Bailey, and Pamela Reid are among the dog-training experts whose many books are worth looking out for.
Paul McGreevy's
A Modern Dog's Life: How to Do the Best for Your Dog
(New York: The Experiment, 2010) is full of indispensable advice for dog owners.
For more information on the effects of early life events in humans and animals, I recommend
Design for a Life: How Behaviour Develops
by Patrick Bateson and Paul Martin (New York: Vintage, 2001). If you're looking for practical advice on choosing and raising a puppy, I suggest Ian Dunbar's
Before and After Getting Your Puppy: The Positive Approach to Raising a Happy, Healthy, and Well-Behaved Dog
(Novato, CA: New World Library, 2004) or Gwen Bailey's
The Perfect Puppy: How to Raise a Well-Behaved Dog
(New York: Readers Digest, 2009).
Patricia McConnell's
For the Love of a Dog: Understanding Emotion in You and Your Best Friend
(New York: Ballantine Books, 2007) is an excellent and accessible account of current understanding of canine emotions. Alexandra Horowitz provides an enlightened integration of recent research into dogs' sensory and cognitive abilities in
Inside of a Dog: What Dogs See, Smell, and Know
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 2009). Sophie Collins'
Tail Talk: Understanding the Secret Language of Dogs
(San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 2007) is a good pictorial guide to canine body-language. David McFarland's
Guilty Robots, Happy Dogs
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2009), though more about robots than about dogs, provides a discussion of several highly complex philosophies of self-awareness and consciousness.
The sensory worlds of animals is a rather neglected topic. For a general introduction to the ways in which animals' sensory worlds affect their behavior, an excellent source is the late Professor Chris Barnard's textbook
Animal Behavior: Mechanism, Development, Function and Evolution
(Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2003). In addition, Tristram Wyatt's
Pheromones and Animal Behaviour: Communication by Smell and Taste
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003) provides a thorough coverage of odor communication across the whole of the animal kingdom.
The pioneering work on breed differences in behavior, John Paul Scott and John L. Fuller's
Genetics and the Social Behavior of the Dog
, has been reprinted (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998). Information that is even more up to date can be found in Kenth Svartberg's chapter on personality in Per Jensen's multi-author textbook
The Behavioural Biology of Dogs
(Wallingford, UK: CAB International, 2007).
Abandonment,
96
,
145
,
254
,
283
,
284
Active submission,
19â20
Affiliation display,
20
,
21 (fig.)
,
22
African basenji,
269
,
270 (fig.)
,
271
African wild dog,
11â13
,
12 (fig.)
Africanis,
256
Aggression,
17â18
,
22
,
139
,
140
,
141
and biting,
176â177
,
178â179
and breeding,
254
and conflict resolution,
87
and laws, breed-specific,
272â273
,
276
and punishment,
178
and selective breeding,
271â275
,
274 (table)
territorial,
167
and training method,
119â120
Aguara dog,
9â10
Air movement, and odors,
234â239
,
237 (fig.)
Allergens,
290â291
Alpha model,
22â23
Alpha-wolf roll-over disciplinary technique,
97
American cocker spaniel,
256
,
269
American Humane Association,
282
American timber wolf,
23â24
,
24â25
,
44
.
See also
Wolf
Anatolian Karabash,
127
and domestication,
29â30
and pedigree,
254â255
and aggression,
166â167
and biting,
177
See also
Emotions
Animal Behavior and Training Council,
282
Anthropomorphism,
149â150
,
151
,
224
Antithesis, principle,
158
and anti-anxiety drugs,
173
and biting,
177
See also
Emotions
Anxiolytics (anti-anxiety drugs),
173
APDT.
See
Association of Pet Dog Trainers
Appearance,
54
selective breeding for,
254
,
257
,
263
,
288
vs. personality traits,
276
Association of Pet Dog Trainers (APDT),
282
Associative learning,
105â108
and classical conditioning,
102â104
and extinction,
103
and inadvertent reinforcement,
106
and operant conditioning,
102
,
105
and punishment,
103â104
unintentional,
107â108
See also
Learning
over-,
176
and rewards,
279
Attachment figure,
144â147
Aversion,
103
Awareness.
See
Self-awareness
Back shape,
262
Bailey, Gwen,
111
Bantu dog,
256
Bar Harbor project,
268â270
,
271
Barking,
113
Basenji,
269
,
270 (fig.)
,
271
Beagle,
269
Behavior development,
141â142
Behavior rules,
88â90
Behavioral disorders,
283
Behavioral problems,
96
,
139â141
,
143â144
,
171
Belly-up display,
21â22
,
21 (fig.)
Biting,
176â179
Body-language,
166
,
202
,
203
,
262â263
See also
Facial expressions
;
Postures
;
Signals
Bomb detection,
182
Bonobo,
3â4
Boredom,
175
Borophagine,
5
Boston terrier,
256
Brain, social,
130â131
Brain development,
141â143
Breed barrier,
65
Breed clubs,
257
Breed standard,
257â258
and aggression,
254
and ailments,
254
and ancient breeds,
59â63
,
252â253
and companion role,
254
for companionship,
285â290
controlled,
285
cooperative,
16â17
and deliberate selection,
58â65
and genetic mutations,
255
human intervention in,
59
line-,
258
out-,
259
over-, accidental,
258
pedigree,
65
and registration system,
255
and welfare,
252â254
,
255â256
,
259â260
See also
Inbreeding
;
Selective breeding
Breeds
specialty,
62â63
See also individual breeds
Burials,
34â36
,
36â40
,
38 (fig.)
Cairn terrier,
268
Canaan dog,
256
Canidae (aka Dog family),
1
,
5
.
See also
Canid
Canis
,
5â6