Breeds & Instincts
-
By Kathy Diamond
Davis
Author and Trainer
Does it
matter what breed of dog you pick, in terms of the dog s behavior? Yes,
absolutely! Many dog temperaments are neither good nor bad, but are either right
for your family or are not going to make you happy. In researching a breed, what
factors will help you determine that you re choosing a dog with the behavior
potential for a good match with you?
Size
The size of a dog
largely determines the dog s strength. One formula is that a dog is about three
times as strong as a human of the same weight. In these terms, a 50-pound dog
has about the strength of a 150-pound human male. Some dogs are stronger than
this, particularly the terriers.
So, for example, if you are a 130-pound woman who wants to be stronger than
her dog, you might look to a breed that will tend to weigh less than 43 pounds.
If you want a dog for a child to handle, either for leashed walks or in dog
sports, you d look to choose a dog sized for that child.
Sheer strength is not the only factor in how manageable a dog will be, as
many large dogs are docile either through temperament or training and thus
easier to handle than their size would indicate. This is one of many reasons
it s important to thoroughly research any breed you consider adopting and if
you re considering a mixed breed, research all the breeds in that mix.
In general with a large dog you should expect to put in more training time
both for the dog and to develop your own technical dog-handling skills, in order
to be able to handle that dog in public. Larger dogs also tend to mature more
slowly. Larger dogs can do much greater damage to a house than small dogs during
their longer adolescent period, or in cases of separation anxiety.
Larger dogs can do more damage if they bite people or get in fights with
other dogs. Larger dogs are more likely to be able to knock people down by
jumping on them, which means you have to teach the dog not to jump up on
people.
Larger dogs can drag you on leash, which means more effort on your part to
teach the dog to walk on a loose leash without pulling. If the larger dog is a
breed that requires grooming, there will be more fur to groom, meaning more time
the dog must hold still and tolerate this handling.
Coat and Grooming
A
dog s coat can make surprising differences in behavior. The wonderful poodle
obviously requires professional grooming. This is a turnoff to a lot of people,
but it shouldn t be. When you choose a nice poodle from a good breeder and find
a great groomer, you are also getting training included with grooming! A good
groomer trains your dog in those regular grooming sessions. It is one of the
secrets to the nice temperament found in so many poodles.
Dogs who don t get the professional grooming their coats require can develop
behavior problems. Tangles tighten into mats, and matted fur pulls the
underlying skin tight, eventually creating sores. Those sores can harbor
maggots. When it hurts to be petted, the dog tends to become defensive and even
aggressive about being touched. If your dog requires professional grooming, be
sure to have it done on an appropriate schedule. Between visits to the groomer,
keep the coat combed free of tangles.
Long-coated dogs stay a bit warmer depending on the coat, possibly a lot
warmer and this can affect how close they want to be to people. Short-coated
dogs are the ones who tend to want to get under the covers with you, especially
the small ones who need help holding body heat. So if you want a bed-warmer dog,
consider a dog with short coat. Be prepared, though, to teach your short-coated
dog to wear dog coats and sweaters in cold weather.
Long-coated dogs may feel petting differently. If you do the grooming their
coats need regularly, they re likely to adore being petted. Covered by extra
hair, their skin may be more sensitive to touch, and regular grooming will help
to offset any excessive sensitivity.
Carefully consider the grooming requirements of any breed you research. It
will make a profound difference both in your dog s behavior and in how you will
need to manage the dog for the healthiest and safest behavior.
Activity
Level
A highly active dog shows obvious differences
in behavior from a laid-back one. If you need a couch-potato dog, choose
carefully. Some people find an active dog irritating, and in that case they want
a couch-potato breed.
Some people, though, simply need a dog who won t be crashing into things. For
that you might consider a small dog who has plenty of room to be active indoors
without knocking the furniture over. Or you might like an agile breed that can
run around the house nimbly without crashing.
One advantage to a naturally-active breed is self-exercising. Give this dog a
little space and some interesting toys and people to follow around, and that may
handle the exercise needs. This is especially true when you have a couple of
them. Some dogs don t self-exercise, and for those you may need to expend more
effort getting them out to work those muscles.
To assess the activity level of a breed and how it will feel to you, observe
the breed as much as possible before getting a dog. You might offer to dog-sit
or foster a dog of the breed for awhile to get a better working knowledge. This
is a good way to learn about any breed.
Protection and Territorial
Guarding
The basic dog if there is such a thing
anymore! would have a moderate protection instinct as well as instinct to guard
a home territory. One way (and there are many) to define protection attitude is
the instinct to protect oneself and ones pack or family.
A male dog who barks at people when they approach the fence of his family s
property is guarding that territory. If he is in that fence with a female dog
who also approaches the fence and he turns around and drives her back from the
fence, he is protecting her. He is placing his body between her and the
potential intruder. If you see this happen in two dogs who get along well,
you ll notice she yields quickly to this aggression on his part because he
does not hurt her, and she knows why he s doing it.
This same behavior can turn into redirected aggression, when dogs behind a
barrier are overstimulated by something on the other side. It can become
dangerous to the dogs when their pack order is not easy-going and clear, such as
when you have two dogs of the same sex who haven t worked out which of them is
leader.
What s especially problematic in some homes when it comes to protection and
territorial guarding instincts is that these have been accentuated by selective
breeding in many breeds. You most likely want a moderate dog, and in some breeds
you re not at all likely to get that when it comes to protection and territorial
guarding.
Be very, very sure to do your homework on this aspect of any breed you are
considering. The result of getting too much protection or territorial guarding
instinct for your situation can be, tragically, a human fatality.
Breed
Propensities
What work, if any, was the breed you are
considering originally selectively bred to do? What will that mean in terms of
the behavior you can realistically expect from a dog of that breed in your
family?
Do you want a dog bred to go into holes, hunt down small animals and kill
them? How about a dog bred to run all day fetching to the hunter? Or a dog bred
to bay loudly and be heard continuously over long distances at night so the
hunters can locate the pack?
Researching breed history is fascinating. It also takes away the blame game
of putting a breed down for behavior you might not find desirable in your home
today. That behavior was and probably still is desirable for some situations,
though it might not be good for yours. Pick a dog for behavior that fits your
needs, not expecting a dog to change. That doesn t work in choosing a dog any
more than it works for choosing a spouse!
One of the most humane things you
can do in having a dog is to choose a dog in the first place with breed
propensities that fit your situation. The dog doesn t get to choose a home,
which makes it our responsibility to choose the dog most likely to be happy in
ours.
Children
If you have
children, grandchildren, or other kids who will be exposed to your dog,
carefully research how this breed does with children. Responsible breeders will
be eager to tell you, especially if it s a breed not too comfortable with kids.
Children tend to run around screaming and to suddenly do things like hug a
dog in the face, pull ears, or fall on top of the resting dog. Of course you ll
teach your children not to treat your dog this way and you ll supervise visiting
children to make sure they do not abuse your dog. But if your dog will be around
kids, the dog needs the ability to tolerate a little of this behavior to give
you time to get the kid under control. Some dogs are just too sensitive or too
physically fragile for this exposure.
Aggression toward Other
Dogs
If you want a dog who will enjoy dog-park
socializing, you ll be looking for a paragon of tolerance toward other dogs.
Frankly even the dog who starts out with this ability may lose it after being
attacked a few times in the park. For many dogs, one attack will do it. So for
best results on having a dog you can walk on leash in safe places around other
dogs who are under control, avoid the dog parks.
Aggression toward other dogs is strongly bred into some dogs who have
unfortunately been used for human sport, betting on dog fights. Such a dog will
require special handling in any situation around other dogs. With training you
can teach the dog to remain under control, provided the other dogs can be kept
from actually getting into the dog-aggressive dog s face. But you ll always have
to be careful.
The dog who is aggressive toward other dogs generally should not be kept with
another dog of the same sex at home. These dogs tend to have extreme difficulty
working out a stable pack order, and remain a risk for killing the other dog of
the same sex. Such a dog may do just fine living with another dog of the
opposite sex, though.
Trainability
A breed s
trainability relates to the work that breed was originally bred to do. A
sheep-herding or hunting retriever breed, bred to follow a human s directions
when a quarter of a mile out in the field, can be a good choice for higher-level
training.
If you don t plan to train your dog to a high level, though, the highly
trainable dog can be exactly the wrong choice! These dogs are hard workers, bred
to stay busy. They like to be close to people and they thrive on near-constant
direction. If you don t enjoy an attentive dog and don t wish to cultivate in
yourself a high level of dog-handling skill, this type of dog can be a terrible
match.
One area of trainability in which there is huge misunderstanding is
housetraining. Housetraining is not a slam dunk, especially for the tiny breeds.
If housetraining is important to you, think twice about getting a male of a tiny
breed and keeping him intact for mating! Since housetraining tends to be the
first major training task people do with a new dog, it can be a rude awakening
when they haven t done enough breed research.
Training involves manners and habits as well as intricate skills you may or
may not need from your dog. Think about what you want your life with your dog to
be like. Make a list of the things you need your dog to do well.
Talk to your friends who have dogs and to breeders, trainers, groomers,
veterinarians and others of your acquaintance about what training they consider
important. In evaluating any breed you research, ask about that breed s ability
in the types of training you ve decided you need with your dog.
Homework
Researching a
breed for the behavior that will fit your needs is not a simple matter. The
popular notion that a dog s behavior will be determined by how the dog has been
raised is incorrect. Genetic heritage breed has enormous effects on a dog s
behavior.
Researching breeds is fascinating and fun. If you re looking for a dog to
join your family, forget about buying a puppy for the holidays or other special
occasion. Focus on doing the research and finding the right breed, the right
breeder, and with that breeder s help, the right dog. Every minute you spend on
this research will be worth it!
Date Published: 12/6/2004 11:13:00 AM
Dr. P's : Genetics & Breeding
Working temperament
& its inheritance.
- Canine Diversity
Project - an attempt to acquaint dog breeders with the dangers of inbreeding
from Dr. J. B. Armstrong
- Temperament Is A
Many-Splendored Thing by K. Behan
- Genetics & the Border
Collie (Bordercollie.org)
- Purebred Dog
Breeds into the 21st Century by J. J. Bragg
- Genetic
Health for Dogs by J. Bragg
- Purebred
Dogs Inherit Many Genetic Diseases (Breeds Apart)
- The Truth
About Dogs by S. Budiansky (Atlantic Monthly 7-99)
- Canine
Genetic Primer by J. C. Cargill, MA, MBA, MS & S. Thorpe-Vargas, MS
- Inbreeding Coefficient
Description (Dantero Kennels)
- Evaluating
Working Animals for your Breeding Program by D. & M. Fenzi
- Incorporating
Working Temperament Into a Breeding Program by D. & M. Fenzi
- The Choices
& Consequences in Breeding Dogs by D. & M. Fenzi
- Peter
Pan Pooches - summarizes some behavior genetic research in dogs by D.
Goodwin et al. (Burke's Backyard)
- Behavioral
Genetics & Animal Science by T. Grandin & M. J. Deesing (Chapter 1)
- Dog Genome
(F. Hutchinson Cancer Research Center)
- It's in the
Genes by M. Koyanagi
- A
Terrible Beauty by M. D. Lemonick (Time Domestic, 1994)
- In Praise of Working Dog
Temperment by T. Mancuso
- Finding the Genes that
Determine Canine Behavior - nontechnical explanation of the dog genome
project by Dr. P. Matzinger
- Working Shepherd Registry
Database (MFC Mobile)
- Belgian
Sheperds Pedigree Search provided by M.A. van Mierlo
- Canid Genetics from K.
Miles
- Inheritance of
Temperament by B. Nibling
- Genetic Testing: Can It
Spot Killer Dogs? by M. Rose
- Canine Genetics Research (TAMU)
- The Genetic Cul-de-sac by
S. Thorpe-Vargas Ph.D., J. Cargill MA, MBA, MS, D. Caroline Coile, Ph.D.
- Dog Genome Project
(UC-Berkeley)
- Canine Diversity
Project (U. of Ottawa)
- Genetics of Behavior
(USBCC Newsletter, Winter 1994)
- What is a Breed
Anyway? (USBCC Newsletter, Spring 1995)
- Genetics & the Border
Collie (US Border Collie Club)
- You may also wish to examine Scientific Info:
Genetics.