Bark
Collar Home Page
Why Dogs Bark
It is part of their normal and natural
communication and behavior. Dogs can bark for appropriate and good
reasons, such as when strangers approach our house, they hear an odd
noise, or they are herding sheep. Most of us want our dogs to be
"watch dogs" and alert us to anything unusual. But dogs can also
bark inappropriately. In two scientific surveys of dog owners,
approximately 1/3 of them reported their dogs barked excessively. To
control barking in our dogs, we first need to understand why they
are barking.
Types of canine vocal communication
Dogs, as well as wolves use many types of
vocalizations to communicate. This communication starts very early
in life. Young puppies make a mewing-like sound when they are
searching for food or warmth. Louder crying sounds are heard if the
puppy is hurt or frustrated. As dogs get older, they make five main
classes of sounds: howls, growls, grunts, whines, and barks. Each of
these classes of sounds is used in different situations.
Howling is used as a means of long-range
communication in many different circumstances. Howls are more often
associated with wolves, but dogs howl too. Wolves often howl to
signify territorial boundaries, locate other pack members,
coordinate activities such as hunting, or attract other wolves for
mating. Dogs may howl as a reaction to certain stimuli such as
sirens.
Growling can occur in very different activities.
It is used to threaten, warn, in defense, in aggression, and to show
dominance. But growling is also used in play as well. By looking at
the body posture we should be able to tell the difference. Growls
during aggression are accompanied by a stare or snarl, and the
growling dog often remains stationary. Play-growls occur in
combination with a happy tail and a play bow to signal willingness
to play. These dogs are often moving and jumping about to entice
play.
Grunts in dogs are the equivalent of contented
sighs in people. They can also be heard when dogs are greeting each
other or people.
Whines or whimpers are short- or medium-range
modes of communication. Dogs may whine when they greet each other,
are showing submissiveness, are frustrated or in pain, to obtain
attention, and sometimes in defense. Dogs generally whine more than
wolves, perhaps because they use the whine more as an
attention-seeking behavior, and are often rewarded for it. Think
about it. The first sound you may hear from a new puppy is the whine
at night when he finds himself alone. We often are guilty of
unintentionally reinforcing this whining by giving the puppy the
attention he wants.
Barking is another mode of communication that
seems to be more common in dogs than other canine species. Again,
this may be the result of human encouragement. Certain breeds have
been bred to bark as part of their watchdog or herding duties.
Barking is used to alert or warn others and defend a territory, to
seek attention or play, to identify oneself to another dog, and as a
response to boredom, excitement, being startled, lonely, anxious, or
teased.
Why dogs
bark
Alert/warning barks
are the type of barks some owners encourage. They want their dog to
alert them to the presence of a danger or suspicious stranger.
Warning barks tend to become more rapid as the intruder approaches.
Aggressive barks are low in pitch and may be combined with growls.
We need to be able to distinguish warning barks from barks due to
fear.
Attention-seeking
barks are most often used by puppies to get you to focus your
attention on them. They can become very insistent and hard to
ignore, but ignore them we must.
Play/excitement
barks are often short and sharp. These barks are common if the dog
gets too excited with the game. Often a time-out is in order.
Self-identification
barking is what you may be hearing when your dog seems to be
answering other dogs he hears barking in the neighborhood. It is his
way of saying, "I am over here."
Bored
barkers simply need an outlet for their energy and a more
stimulating environment.
Lonely/anxious
barking occurs if your dog is experiencing
separation anxiety. The barking can become self-reinforcing
as he becomes more stimulated and anxious. Anxious barks tend to get
higher in pitch as the dog becomes more upset. This type of barking
can be especially annoying to your neighbors.
Startle
barking occurs in response to an unfamiliar or sudden sound or
movement. As with an alert/warning bark, we need to be able to
control this type of barking quickly.
As you can see, there are many reasons for barking
and most barking is a normal behavior. There are
some instances in which barking is considered pathological. Whatever
the reason, barking can be a nuisance. If your dog barks
excessively, a bark collar is an excellent tool to get excessive
barking under control.