Dog Owner's Manual › Chapter 3: Daily Interaction With Your Dog › Dog Verbal Cues and Body Language ›Dog Verbal Cues and Body Language
Audible dog communication typically assumes one of the following forms: Howls: Wolves howl to locate other pack members over long distances. Many domestic dogs have kept this behavior. It can sometimes be initiated by such things as police sirens. Growls: This sound is often associated with aggression, threats, and displays of dominance. However, dogs may growl during play as well. Study the dog’s body language to distinguish one from the other. Grunts: These are often heard when dogs greet humans or other dogs. They are the equivalent of a human sigh. Whines: A form of communication over intermediate ranges that can signal anything from pain to submission to happiness at meeting someone. Barks: As with howling, these can be used to get attention, to raise the alarm, or to identify an individual. A dog who is anxious tends to bark in a high pitch; a dog who is warning off an intruder barks at a lower pitch. Warning barks may become more rapid as a stranger gets closer. ![]() Chapter 3: Daily Interaction With Your Dog
Comments for This Page (3) | Post a CommentMy dog has an issue with his possessions,it started a week after we got him, because he was just getting to know us,now when ever our cats walk near his crate or in front of it he jumps up on his front paws and growls at them, we were told he was possessive of his stuff,how can we break this habit. Post a Comment for This Page
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Thanks.Now I able to know my dog is doing.Saying doggy words