Development of an ethogram for Predatory behaviour in dogs

open Predatory Behaviour in domestic dog (Canis Familiaris) has been considered to stem from the Wolf (Canis Lupus) hunting sequence for a long time. Thus, any behavioural analysis of the hunting patterns performed on dogs has been studied in face of what was observed in its wild counterpart. Opposi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: STEVANIN, GIULIO
Other Authors: MONGILLO, PAOLO
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Dog
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/40968
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spelling ftunivpadodiss:oai:thesis.unipd.it:20.500.12608/40968 2023-05-15T15:51:13+02:00 Development of an ethogram for Predatory behaviour in dogs STEVANIN, GIULIO MONGILLO, PAOLO 2022-12-15T09:38:36Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/40968 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/40968 Dog Predatory Behaviour 2022 ftunivpadodiss https://doi.org/20.500.12608/40968 2022-12-21T00:00:46Z open Predatory Behaviour in domestic dog (Canis Familiaris) has been considered to stem from the Wolf (Canis Lupus) hunting sequence for a long time. Thus, any behavioural analysis of the hunting patterns performed on dogs has been studied in face of what was observed in its wild counterpart. Opposite to what was previously assumed according to their taxonomic classification and relatedness, further ecological and ethological studies performed on both the species had highlighted the differences in social structure between the two: pack composition and hierarchies, predisposition to tameness and therefore proximity to humans, which inevitably result in different hunting and foraging strategies. Furthermore, the ecological importance of the domestic dog must be considered, since following human migrations Canis Familiaris has become one of the most widespread animal species all over the world. Therefore, each interaction with a wide array of elements in the biosphere performed by the numerous dog populations all over each continent might produce significant additive effects in respect of the composition of the ecosystem in which they are present. In order to provide a more detailed and tailored description of this behaviour, observations featuring instances of predation in dogs have been collected from videoclips present in YouTube, Vimeo and other public sources. Such observations were then used to perform a behavioural analysis to identify the different phases that constitute the predatory behaviour sequence and to determine the criteria for their identification, in order to produce a functional ethogram. Since such an ethogram is not present in scientific literature about domestic dogs, its validation would provide a valuable standardized instrument that would allow to reach a better understanding of the behaviour of this species and may have a consistent transitional value towards other canine species, given the high availability of dogs and the ease of working with them. Predatory Behaviour in domestic ... Other/Unknown Material Canis lupus Padua Thesis and Dissertations Archive (Università degli Studi die Padova)
institution Open Polar
collection Padua Thesis and Dissertations Archive (Università degli Studi die Padova)
op_collection_id ftunivpadodiss
language unknown
topic Dog
Predatory
Behaviour
spellingShingle Dog
Predatory
Behaviour
STEVANIN, GIULIO
Development of an ethogram for Predatory behaviour in dogs
topic_facet Dog
Predatory
Behaviour
description open Predatory Behaviour in domestic dog (Canis Familiaris) has been considered to stem from the Wolf (Canis Lupus) hunting sequence for a long time. Thus, any behavioural analysis of the hunting patterns performed on dogs has been studied in face of what was observed in its wild counterpart. Opposite to what was previously assumed according to their taxonomic classification and relatedness, further ecological and ethological studies performed on both the species had highlighted the differences in social structure between the two: pack composition and hierarchies, predisposition to tameness and therefore proximity to humans, which inevitably result in different hunting and foraging strategies. Furthermore, the ecological importance of the domestic dog must be considered, since following human migrations Canis Familiaris has become one of the most widespread animal species all over the world. Therefore, each interaction with a wide array of elements in the biosphere performed by the numerous dog populations all over each continent might produce significant additive effects in respect of the composition of the ecosystem in which they are present. In order to provide a more detailed and tailored description of this behaviour, observations featuring instances of predation in dogs have been collected from videoclips present in YouTube, Vimeo and other public sources. Such observations were then used to perform a behavioural analysis to identify the different phases that constitute the predatory behaviour sequence and to determine the criteria for their identification, in order to produce a functional ethogram. Since such an ethogram is not present in scientific literature about domestic dogs, its validation would provide a valuable standardized instrument that would allow to reach a better understanding of the behaviour of this species and may have a consistent transitional value towards other canine species, given the high availability of dogs and the ease of working with them. Predatory Behaviour in domestic ...
author2 MONGILLO, PAOLO
author STEVANIN, GIULIO
author_facet STEVANIN, GIULIO
author_sort STEVANIN, GIULIO
title Development of an ethogram for Predatory behaviour in dogs
title_short Development of an ethogram for Predatory behaviour in dogs
title_full Development of an ethogram for Predatory behaviour in dogs
title_fullStr Development of an ethogram for Predatory behaviour in dogs
title_full_unstemmed Development of an ethogram for Predatory behaviour in dogs
title_sort development of an ethogram for predatory behaviour in dogs
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/40968
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/40968
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.12608/40968
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