My Puppy, My Self

How dogs make us human.

The Unified Dog Theory IV: Celebrating the Wolfiness in Dogs

It's Time We Started Celebrating the Wolfiness in Dogs!

"I have spent the past few years puzzling over why dog training is no longer working that well. Today there is much more management and less reliability..."  - Dr. Ian Dunbar

Dunbar is right, especially later in the same blog article, when he writes that the teaching process he now espouses "cannot really be defined by existing learning theory." As mentioned in the first post in this new series, Dunbar has also agreed to contribute a chapter to Cesar Millan's upcoming book.

As for me, I fiirst saw Cesar Millan on TV in 1997, long before he was famous. He was featured in an evening news clip on New York's channel 7. Personally, I thought his insistence that no dog walk ahead of him because no wolf walks ahead of the pack leader (which, it turns out, isn't true), was misguided and misinformed, and possibly based on personal issues. But in the ensuing years, he's softened. In fact, I now agree with him about 50% of the time (or so).

And while Millan is growing and learning, many in the +R movement are stuck in the past, defining what they do as the only "scientific method," or the only real alternative to dominance training. And one of the ways they're doing so is by downplaying the connection between dogs and wolves.

With that in mind, I'd like to go over the five primary reasons I think the wolf model - the real one - is important to understanding dogs, especially if we're to create a unified dog theory, where the importance of "leadership," the value of positive reinforcement, and the usefulness of prey drive-oriented techniques (borrowed from trainers of working dogs, and based on the energetic principles of attraction & resistance and tension & release), are all a part of our standard repertoire.[1]

One: Social Instincts in Canines Come from the Wolf's Prey Drive
The social instincts in wolves only exist to facilitate the hunting of large prey. Wolves who settle near garbage dumps don't form real packs. Coyotes form packs, but only when they need to hunt large prey. Clearly, a canine pack is, first and foremost, a cooperative hunting unit.

While the predatory sequence (the chain of hunting behaviors) seen in wolves (the search, the eye-stalk, the cull, the chase, the grab-bite, and the kill-bite) has been "broken" in dogs (meaning that wolves can't stop once the sequence starts, while dogs can't always follow through), the genetic tendency to engage in these behaviors is still found in all dogs (except the cull, which is found only in some types of herding dogs).

It's often said, for instance, that you can't teach a bloodhound to play fetch, because the "search" aspect of the sequence is too strong in the breed; there's not enough "chase" left in the genes. And yet it's quite possible to teach a bloodhound to fetch. You just have to start with very short throws.

Two: Dogs and Wolves Sublimate Aggression Into Social Behaviors
In order for the wolf's aggression (his urge to bite) not be directed at his packmates, there has to be a behavioral/cognitive mechanism in place that allows the individual wolves to sublimate the energy behind that aggression into alternative, pro-social behaviors.

The primary mechanism facilitating or controlling the formation of packs (as well as the ability of each wolf to sublimate aggression into alternative social behaviors) is probably oxytocin. Most predators kick their young "out of the nest" at about 6 mos. Wolf pups stay until they're at least 2 years old. My thesis is that wolf pups and parents keep producing oxytocin long after other predators and their offspring do. Keeping the young around longer is what enable wolves to hunt together rather than separately.

I think it's also important to understand that almost all obedience behaviors (except the sit) are based on the predatory motor patterns found in wild wolves. So no matter what techniques we use, if we're teaching obedience, we're still stimulating and satisfying a dog's prey drive in some way.

Three: There Are Big Differences Between Captive and Wild Wolves
The ability to bite and kill large prey on a regular basis is what marks the distinct differences between the behavioral tendencies we see in wild wolf packs (where dominant and submissive behaviors are rare), and captive packs (where such behaviors are the norm). It's clear that the latter is a product of captivity stress.

One indicator that this is so is that "dominance-aggression" in dogs can be managed with anti-anxietals. If dominance were an inherited character trait, such drugs would have little or no effect. It's also been observed, that playing tug-of-war, reduces dominant-type behaviors in dogs. Likewise, overmarking, which is often thought of as a "sign of dominance," gradually disappears once the dog is able to play biting games.

Going back to wolves, the primary difference between the two types of "packs" is that wild wolves still hunt large prey for a living. They run through all the steps of the sequence, and their ultimate release of stress comes via the kill-bite. Captive wolves never get to experience that kind of release. It's also interesting to note that when a real wolf pack becomes too big -- essentially limiting the number of wolves able to get the satisfying release of tension brought on by biting and tearing at the hide of a large prey animal -- that's when you also begin to see dominant and submissive behaviors emerge where you don't see them as often in smaller packs.

Four: The Dog/Wolf Connection Is Over 5 Million Years Old
The current model for how dogs became domesticated is based on the fact that some modern wolves seem to prefer settling near a garbage dump rather than expending their energy hunting large prey. This has been observed in Mexico by evolutionary biologist, Raymond Coppinger. And his theory on how domestication took place - the dogs-as-scavenger's model - is currently widely-accepted, and has a great deal of merit.

However, even if this is how domestication took place, modern dogs still share a long evolutionary history with wolves and/or pre-wolf like animals that goes back much further in time (at least 5 million years) than the domestication process (about 14,000). As a result, dogs still retain many of the behavioral tendencies seen in wolves. It's true that wolves still make a living with their teeth, while dogs make a living with their hearts. But no matter how big a dog's heart is, his teeth and jaws are still hardwired to find satisfaction through biting. (This is why most, if not all, dog owners have baskets full of toys, bones, etc.)

Five: Repressing the Urge to Bite Increases Stress Levels in Dogs
Some dogs have been bred to have less of a "kill bite" than others. Others have been bred to focus their urge to bite, independently, onto small prey animals, rather than to be part of a group hunting dynamic. These types of dogs are usually more susceptible to certain types of behavioral problems. That's where the genetics comes in. Still, it's always about the urge to bite, and how it's either suppressed by breeding, repressed by training, or sublimated into social behaviors by the dog himself.

In my last post I talked about new scientific evidence strongly suggesting that the dog's genetic diversity may come directly from the wolf's DNA. It should be clear that much of a dog's behavioral traits (except dominance and submission, which aren't character traits, but are probably symptoms of anxiety) also come from the wolf's DNA.



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Lee Charles Kelley is a dog trainer and best-selling mystery author.

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