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New study reveals wolves more tolerant than dogs

A new study has refuted the myth of tolerant dogs and aggressive wolves.

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A new study has refuted the myth of tolerant dogs and aggressive wolves.

For long, it was assumed that humans preferred particularly tolerant animals for breeding. Thus, cooperative and less aggressive dogs could develop. Recently, however, it was suggested that these qualities were not only specific for human-dog interactions, but characterise also dog-dog interactions.

Friederike Range and Zsofia Viranyi from the Messerli Research Institute, who investigated in their study if dogs are in fact less aggressive and more tolerant towards their conspecifics than wolves , carried out several behavioural tests on dogs and wolves. The animals were hand-raised in the Wolf Science Center in Ernstbrunn, Lower Austria, and kept in separated packs of wolves and dogs. Range and her colleagues tested nine wolves and eight mongrel dogs.

To test how tolerant wolves and dogs are towards their pack members, pairs consisting of a high-ranked and a low-ranked animal were fed together. They were fed either a bowl of raw meat or a large bone. While low-ranked wolves often defended their food against the high-ranked partner and showed aggressive behaviour as often as higher-ranked wolves, this was different in dogs. Low-ranked dogs held back and accepted the threats of the dominant dog. Overall, however, neither wolves nor dogs showed a lot of aggressive behaviour, rather they showed threat signs.

Lead author Range added that wolves seem to be more tolerant towards conspecifics than dogs that seem to be more sensitive to the dominance hierarchy, which was shown by the fact that also low-ranked wolves can challenge their higher-ranked partners and the dominant animals tolerate it, while in dogs aggression was a privilege of the higher-ranked partners.

Range cocluded that wolves are already very tolerant to their conspecifics, which was shown by the fact that high-ranked wolves accepted the threat behaviours by their lower-ranked conspecifics in the feeding experiment. This tolerance enables wolf-wolf cooperation which in turn could have provided a good basis for the evolution of human-dog cooperation.

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