DOI: 10.3390/ani16131965 ISSN: 2076-2615

High Rank, Low Tolerance: Hierarchy-Dependent Reactions of Cohabiting Companion Dogs to Being Separated from Their Owner

Petra Dobos, Kata Vékony, Viktória Bakos, Blanka Veres, Csenge Anna Lugosi, Péter Pongrácz

Cohabiting companion dogs establish hierarchy among themselves. It is hypothesized that the owner represents the main and undividable resource, thus primary access to this is a main organizing factor of rank-related behaviors of dogs. Here we tested high- and low-ranking cohabiting companion dogs’ (N = 70) reactions to their owner’s absence in a 3 min separation test. Rank scores have been assigned with a validated questionnaire (DRA-Q). We predicted that dominant dogs would show stronger reactions to being separated from their owner. Indeed, we found that higher-ranking dogs showed more intense activity and sooner arising attempts to leave the room (rearing at the wall, scratching the door, moving around, barking) than lower-ranking dogs did. These reactions may show also the intention to reestablish their connection with the absent owner. The associations between dogs’ rank and the behavioral responses were modified by the dogs’ age (negatively), the number of cohabiting dogs (positively), and we found that subcategories of the dog’s dominant status (such as ‘agonistic’ and ‘leadership’ subscales) were also associated with finer details of the outcome. These are the first results indicating that presence of the owner may provide more reassurance to higher-ranking dogs against stress than it does to lower-ranking dogs.

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