What Can You Do About Dog Aggression?
Of all the behavioral problems dogs may exhibit, the most prolific one by far is aggression. Aggression is divided into several different categories, so it becomes necessary to understand which type you are dealing with.
1. "Are You Threatening Me?"
In this scenario, your dog believes that their position in the pack is being threatened. They see your family as a pack of dogs. Someone is the leader, and your dog plays a role in this pack. When someone threatens their role they react with aggressiveness.
2. "You Scare Me!"
This scenario is when your dog is aggressive out of pure fear. They are trying to protect themselves. If they are scared that they will be harmed, most dogs don't flee the scene. They fight.
3. "I'm Ready To Protect You!"
This is when the dog reacts to something or someone that they feel may be a threat to their family or their pack.
4. "Get Off My Property!"
This is an issue that occurs when the dog perceives that they must defend their "territory". Your dogs "territory" can be substantially larger than just your yard or house.
5. Possessive Aggression
Your dog feels that their toys, or anything they may have played with, or lied on is theirs. So if someone tries to take it from them they will react aggressively.
6. "I'm Angry and Don't Know What To Do...
This is more frustration than anything as a dog will be agitated by a person or another dog walking by outside the fence and directs that aggression towards something or somebody else in frustration.
All these are a serious situation and will require the help of an in-home dog behavior professional. An aggression problem will not go away by itself, so do not fool yourself.
However, there are things that you can do to limit the aggression to a degree.
- Consult with a veterinarian for possible medical causes for the aggression.
- Immediately seek a behavior professional as soon as the dog shows aggressive behaviors.
- You are liable for your dog's actions, so precautions must be taken. Limit the dog's activities until you can get professional advice. Keep the animal confined and under your constant supervision as well. If you need to take the dog out, muzzle them.
- Learn the situations that have elicited aggressive behavior and keep the dog away from those situations altogether.
- For possessive problems, limit the access to the items they are possessive of and the problem will follow suit, if only temporarily.
- Get the dog "fixed" so they can't reproduce. Dogs that have been spayed or neutered tend to mellow out and aggression levels are lowered, sometimes totally alleviated.
In any case, seek out a professional behavior expert. The problem will not simply go away by itself. By all means, do NOT try to punish the animal for aggression behavior as it may actually make the problem worse. Where they once simply growled, they may now bite or fully attack when threatened.
You need to take the proper steps to protect the dog, yourself, and anyone else around you. You may need to confine your dog when strangers are around. However, it is best if you just seek help. If your dog ever happen to get loose. This can be dangerous and expensive if they happen to bite someone and that person ends up suing you.
Confine, consult and seek assistance.
Misbehaving dog? Need to house train a puppy? Get dog training advice and dog training products at http://www.dogbehaviorexpert.com
Published October 4th, 2008
Filed in Home