Aggression
by Jenny Turner
Aggression
is a normal canine behaviour. Dogs
use varying degrees of aggression to establish their rank in the pack,
hunt and protect food, defend themselves from harm, defend their
territory or due to pain. However,
severe aggression is frightening and not necessary for a dog to display
in a normal household/pet environment, and once you’ve got it you
should take fast action or it will get worse.
The
vast majority of seriously aggressive dogs are intact males, therefore
desexing (neutering) is necessary and is your first course of action.
If you don’t want to neuter an aggressive male because you are
hoping to breed from him, think about what kind of genes you will be
passing on to his offspring!
Growling:
Growling, lip-curling and shying away are the pre-cursors to biting –
they are the warning signs that the dog is uncomfortable, scared or
angry. These signs are
good – you want your dog to give these warnings.
Dogs that are punished for showing these warning signs may skip
the signs altogether and go straight to lunging and biting.
If your dog gives warnings such as these, turn him away and
remove him from the situation, then calm him and praise him for calming
down.
What
to do:
Your first course of action is to get professional help.
Contact your local obedience club, be honest and open about your
problem and ask if they have the skills to help you.
If not, or if you try the club for a while and the problem is not
improving, ask them to refer to you an animal behaviourist, someone who
specialises in aggression.
Socialisation
– I put fear from mistreatment and abuse in this category, as the dog
needs to be re-introduced to a normal environment so he can build trust.
That is basically what socialisation is – exposing the dog to a
normal environment to build his confidence, trust and appropriate
responses. A poorly
socialised dog will show aggression due to fear or dominance.
Fear
– Never use the leash to drag your dog towards something it’s scared
of or you may leave it no choice but to defend itself – this reaction
is called fear aggression. Instead,
you go to the frightening object, touch it yourself and call your dog to
you, let him come in his own time and reward for any progress he makes.
This may take minutes, days, weeks or longer, but it is up to you
to be patient and build his trust in you.
If the object of his fear is something you can’t “touch”
such as a group obedience class, just stand at the outskirts of the
class, as far as necessary for your dog to be comfortable and try to
decrease the distance each week.
Dominance
– In this instance dominance falls into two categories:
1.
Dominance over other dogs – If you dog is in the habit of approaching
another dog with hackles up, or standing stiffly over the top of other
dogs and growling, you need to reward and remove the dog before
the behaviour occurs. Don’t
let your dog get close enough to stand over the other dog. Stop the approach just before the hackles go up, reward and
then move on. If your dog
is the type to bark furiously from a long distance, turn him around so
he’s not making eye contact with other dogs and praise him when he’s
quiet. Over a period of
time you can decrease the distance between your dog and others.
But please realise that it’s probably unreasonable to expect
your dog to be best friends with every other dog it comes into contact
with – do you get on with every person you’ve ever met?
The best we can hope for is a dog that will ignore the dogs he
doesn’t like.
2.
Dominance over family members – Dogs who are allowed to run the
household will often show aggression towards their own family members
when they’re asked to cease their activities.
This sort of thing includes a dog that growls when asked to get
off the bed or lounge, or snaps if the owner comes near its food bowl.
What is needed is a clear set of guidelines and control exercises
to establish the humans as higher ranking members of the pack (click on
the link for Control Exercises below for more tips).
This is not to say that every dog that is allowed to sit on the
lounge is going to have a dominance problem.
But if you do identify this as a problem, don’t risk being
bitten by trying to drag a growling dog off the lounge.
Change the rules so he’s not allowed up there in the first
place. To prevent him from
jumping on the lounge stack magazines or empty boxes on the cushions,
then encourage your dog to sit on its own bed.
If your dog does make its way onto the lounge, entice him down
with a treat and reward when he sits on the floor.
To tackle the food protection see Possession Aggression below.
Teasing
– This is the most common reason why children are bitten by dogs,
because they are left unattended and they unintentionally push the dog
too far which causes him to bite from frustration.
For this reason a dog should never be tied up and left unattended
where someone could torment him, and children should always be
supervised when playing with any dog, no matter how good you think the
dog's temperament is.
Possession
aggression – This is very common and understandable – no matter
how many meals your dog sees come from a tin, his instinct tells him
that he needs to protect the food he has in case there is a shortage in
the future. To stop this,
give your dog only half his meal in the first sitting, then as he’s
still eating, bring another handful of food to him. If he growls
as you enter the room, place the food on the floor where you are and
leave. As you increase his
trust you will be able to decrease your distance and eventually he will
know that you are not trying to steal food from him but are actually
approaching his bowl to give him more.
[ Up ] [ Aggression ] [ Alone Crying ] [ Barking ] [ Chewing ] [ Coming When Called ] [ Control Exercises ] [ Digging ] [ Great Dog Tricks ] [ Housetraining ] [ How To Use a Kong ] [ Introducing a New Baby to an Existing Pet ] [ Introducing Cats and Dogs ] [ Jumping Up ] [ Play Biting & Bite Inhibition ] [ Riding in the Car ] [ Separation Anxiety ] [ Socialization ] [ Using the Game of Tug as a Training Tool ] [ Walking on a Loose Lead ]
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