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Stressy Staffy? Anxious Afghan? Behaviour problems likely to be common in all doggos

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If you think your pet's personal problems are down to your dog's breed, these Finnish researchers have a bone to pick with you. They snooped on 13,700 Finnish pet dogs, and found anxieties and behavioural problems are common across all breeds. Nearly three-quarters of the dogs they investigated had some kind of problematic behaviour, with noise sensitivity and fear of other dogs or strangers being the most common.

Journal/conference: Scientific Reports

Research: Paper

Organisation/s: University of Helsinki, Finland

Funder: This study was partially funded by the Academy of Finland (308887), the ERCStG (260997), ERA-NET NEURON and the Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation. H.L. is a member of HiLIFE. M.S., S.M., E.H. & H.L. are members of the Helsinki One Health.

Media Release

From: Springer Nature

Animal behaviour: Anxieties and problematic behaviours may be common in pet dogs

Anxieties and behaviour problems may be common across dog breeds, according to a study published in Scientific Reports. The findings suggest that noise sensitivity is the most common anxiety trait, followed by fear.

Hannes Lohi and colleagues used an owner-reported survey to examine seven anxiety-like traits and problematic behaviours in 13,700 Finnish pet dogs and found that 72.5% showed problematic behaviours, including aggression and fearfulness. Noise sensitivity was the most common anxiety; 32% of dogs were fearful of at least one noise and 26% of dogs were afraid of fireworks, specifically. Fear was the second most common anxiety, found in 29% of dogs. This included fear of other dogs (17%), fear of strangers (15%) and fear of new situations (11%).

Noise sensitivity, and especially fear of thunder, increased with age, as did fear of heights and surfaces, such as walking on metal grids or shiny floors. Younger dogs more often damaged or urinated on items when left alone, and were also more often inattentive, hyperactive or impulsive and chased their tails more than older dogs. Male dogs were more often aggressive and hyperactive/impulsive than female dogs, which were more often fearful.

The authors also found differences between breeds. Lagotto Romano, Wheaten Terrier and mixed breeds were the most noise sensitive while Spanish Water Dogs, Shetland Dogs and mixed breeds were the most fearful. 10.6% of Miniature Schnauzers were aggressive towards strangers, compared to 0.4% of Labrador Retrievers.

The findings suggest that canine anxieties and behaviour problems may be common across breeds. Efforts should be made to decrease the prevalence of these conditions, for instance through breeding policies and changes to the living environment, according to the authors.

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