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		<title>Where Did Dogs Come From?</title>
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					<description><![CDATA[For a few years, I taught a college seminar called Pets and People—and loved it.  Students also got excited by the course, even though it was part of the dreaded general education requirements.  I find that people like learning about the animals in their lives–especially students who have had to leave their beloved pets back&#8230;]]></description>
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	<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="wp-image-1166 alignleft" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Tica-sprawlRS-500x667.jpg" alt="" width="415" height="554" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Tica-sprawlRS-500x667.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Tica-sprawlRS-768x1024.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Tica-sprawlRS-1152x1536.jpg 1152w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Tica-sprawlRS-scaled.jpg 1536w" sizes="(max-width: 415px) 100vw, 415px" /></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">For a few years, I taught a college seminar called Pets and People—and loved it.  Students also got excited by the course, even though it was part of the dreaded general education requirements.  I find that people like learning about the animals in their lives–especially students who have had to leave their beloved pets back home.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Since it was an inquiry, research, and writing course, I wanted to make the inquiry and research genuine for the students. So, on the first day of class, they broke into small groups to talk about what they wanted to learn, wrote questions on big sticky notes, and posted all the notes on a wall.  We then clustered related questions together so we could identify and choose a few learning goals for the course.  They chose animal domestication every time.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">If I’d been a student in the course, I would have written “How were animals domesticated?” on my sticky note, too.  I had a vague notion that humans domesticated animals for food and work around the same time that we domesticated plants in Mesopotamia—ideas that must have come from a Social Studies textbook I read in elementary school.  Fourth grade maybe?  Boy, those old lessons stuck!  Too bad they were often wrong or wildly oversimplified.  Years later, when I actually began to think about domestication, I realized I knew almost nothing, though I had read somewhere along the way that dogs came from an extinct species of wolf.  That, at least, was right.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">This article focuses on the dog for a few reasons.  For one thing, the dog came first among the domestic animals, and by a long shot.  Exactly when—15,000, 32,000, or 40,000 years ago—and where<em>—</em>in the Near East, Asia, or Africa—have been and continue to be matters of debate.  Second, the transformation of a wild wolf into a household dog seems so unlikely.  Surely, a large aggressive predator is a lousy candidate for domestication.  Third, dogs have been a meaningful part of my life for as long as I can remember and, like my students, I enjoy learning about them.  In particular, I want to know more about their origins and have been drawn to studies about the first dogs for the last fifteen years.  Writing this article has enabled me to weave a number of discoveries together.  </span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1167" style="width: 510px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1167" class="wp-image-1167 size-medium" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/wolf-dawn-villella_ap-500x333.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="333" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/wolf-dawn-villella_ap-500x333.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/wolf-dawn-villella_ap-1024x683.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/wolf-dawn-villella_ap-768x512.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/wolf-dawn-villella_ap-1536x1024.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/wolf-dawn-villella_ap-scaled.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1167" class="wp-caption-text">Photo: Dawn Villella</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>How did humans domesticate the wolf?</strong>  One of the first things I learned is that this is the wrong question to ask.  It puts humans at the center and in charge.  Greger Larson, an evolutionary geneticist at Oxford, points out that we treat the verb <em>to domesticate</em> as transitive, as if a human subject acted on an animal object.  This would mean that many thousands of years ago some people envisioned a domesticated wolf and acted on that vision, even though such an animal had never existed before.  Further, the question treats the animal’s actions and needs as irrelevant.  What part did the wolf play?  Finally, the question sidesteps the possibility that humans were also changed—domesticated, if you will.  Maybe humans and dogs co-evolved. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Current research suggests that we did.  Domestication was a dynamic process in which two species adapted to and alongside each other, with natural selection driving change.  Larson prefers the term <em>relationship</em> to describe the early interactions between humans and other species.  The relationship conferred an advantage that helped both species survive and have viable offspring.  How the relationship unfolded would have been mutual, situational, improvisational, and gradual.    </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>So, how did humans and a now-extinct species of wolf develop a relationship that transformed wolves into dogs?</strong>  The most plausible story I’ve found is based on climatological, archeological, genetic, and nutritional research.  This hypothesis could change, however, as new evidence is discovered.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">The story begins roughly 30,000 years ago during the last great Ice Age, as ice sheets advanced south across Eurasia and North America.  They reached their greatest spread from 23,000 to 19,000 years ago, during a period called the Last Glacial Maximum, when glaciers covered about 25% of the earth’s land area.  Forced to move as the ice advanced and the climate changed, many animals found refuge on a large plain in northeastern Siberia that remained free of glacial ice and was slightly warmer.  Prey animals such as mammoths, bison, and horses migrated there starting around 30,000 years ago—and predators followed, including wolves and humans.  The climate was harsh but the plain provided vegetation for grazing animals, who provided meat for predators. There, humans and animals remained, cut off from the rest of the world until roughly 15,000 years ago. </span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1168" style="width: 482px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1168" class="wp-image-1168" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Ellesmere_Island_06.jpg" alt="" width="472" height="321" /><p id="caption-attachment-1168" class="wp-caption-text">Glacier on Ellesmere Island</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">A 2021 examination of the ancient genetics of both humans and dogs reveals that dogs may have come into being in this region during this period, about 23,000 years ago, alongside people known as the Ancient North Siberians.  Then, 15,000 years ago as the glaciers retreated (the Ice Age fully ended roughly 12,000 years ago), people and their dogs dispersed east into the Americas and west across Eurasia.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>By about 25,000 years ago, Brian Hare and Vanessa Woods note in <em>Survival of the Friendliest</em>, humans had become essentially modern. </strong> We had revolutionized hunting.  We had developed throwers, akin to the Chuckits we use now to throw balls for our dogs in the park, that propelled spear shafts tipped with stone points “more than 300 feet at better than 100 miles per hour,” as Hare and Woods report. With these spear throwers we could hunt large animals such as mammoths and swift ones like horses—and could rely more on hunting and less on gathering.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">We had also developed the tools and skills to make clothing and shelters, and our camps had become larger and more organized.  We processed and cooked our food.  Areas within a camp were divided and dedicated to butchering, cooking, sleep, and waste.  We made jewelry and art and had developed trade networks.  In the harsh conditions of Ice Age Siberia, human camps were limited to about 25 people.  Still, these groups communicated with one another and married out of their small family clusters.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">On this arctic plain in northeastern Siberia, wolves and humans had less space to avoid each other, and over hundreds and then thousands of years the two species formed a relationship.  Some wolves crept closer to the human camps and hunting sites—reacting less fearfully to people and fleeing less quickly when people approached—and took advantage of what the bands of people left, such as the remains of a kill.  In other words, a set of wolves moved into a promising new ecological niche near humans and began to adapt to it.  A combination of the brutal climate and forced proximity started a process of evolutionary change.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong> </strong><strong>But in such challenging circumstances wouldn’t wolves and humans have competed for food?</strong>  What could humans possibly leave for scavenging wolves?  Two surprisingly mundane answers have been proposed: poop and leftovers.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="alignright wp-image-1169" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Dog-and-poop-500x335.jpg" alt="" width="444" height="298" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Dog-and-poop-500x335.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Dog-and-poop.jpg 550w" sizes="(max-width: 444px) 100vw, 444px" /></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">If you know dogs, you know dogs who eat poop.  Our dog Bailey used to wander around the yard grazing on rabbit droppings.  She also used to raid the cat box if we didn’t block the door.  To our neighbors’ dismay, their dog Lonzo has a knack for finding and eating human poop in the woods.  (The 2018 study I’m using here calls poop an “anthropogenic food subsidy,” a delightfully tidy way to describe human shit.)  While poop-eating seems disgusting, today in many parts of the world free-ranging dogs depend on it.  Human waste is rich in energy and protein, so much so that eating human feces is equivalent to eating the remains of a small mammal.  What’s more, poop has an advantage over a mammal: it won’t run away.  The hypothesis goes that the Ice Age wolves who tolerated human proximity started scavenging human feces near human encampments and eventually quit hunting with their family groups.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">These wolves also got leftovers—“a surplus of animal derived protein that could have been shared with incipient dogs,” according to a 2021 study.  It’s hard to believe that people would discard any food during a brutal Ice Age winter, but they did.  Humans are not typical carnivores.  Our ancient primate ancestors ate plants and insects, and were prey rather than predators.  Later in our evolution we became predators, too, but our digestive systems never fully adapted to a carnivorous diet.  We can only meet about 20% of our energy needs from protein, and too high a concentration of protein in our diet can sicken or kill us.  As a result, during the Ice Age winters when the store of plant-based foods dwindled and the prey animals grew lean, we consumed lots of fat, a rich source of energy.  There’s archaeological evidence that we butchered our kills to focus on the fatty parts.  We couldn’t consume all the lean meat, and possibly carcasses were only partly processed.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">By contrast, wolves are typical carnivores.  They consume a greater proportion of protein within their diet and are able to rely entirely on protein for months at a stretch.  This means that wolves and humans have complementary nutritional needs and could eat different parts of the same kill.  With a supply of poop and leftovers, the new ecological niche created by humans enabled the wolves who took advantage of it to survive.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>Still, how did the wolf turn into the dog?  </strong>It’s one thing to scavenge successfully around human camps, but quite another to evolve into a new kind of creature.  The story of dog domestication picks up, still in Siberia but many thousands of years later, with what Hare and Woods and many others consider “the greatest behavioral genetic experiment of the twentieth century.”  This experiment revolutionized the way we think about domestication.</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1170" style="width: 212px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1170" class="wp-image-1170" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/DBelyaev.jpeg" alt="" width="202" height="202" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/DBelyaev.jpeg 240w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/DBelyaev-150x150.jpeg 150w" sizes="(max-width: 202px) 100vw, 202px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1170" class="wp-caption-text">A statue honoring Dmitry Belyaev (1917-1985) with one of the foxes.</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">The experiment’s design was simple and audacious: Start at the beginning.  This time, the transitive verb <em>to domesticate</em> most definitely applies, since the experimenters had a vision and a plan: to domesticate silver foxes, another canid, in order to understand how wolves might have become dogs.  In 1959, the geneticist Dmitry Belyaev and his associate Lyudmila Trut set to work at a silver fox fur farm near Novosibirsk, 2000 miles east of Moscow.  The farm foxes were captive but not domestic.  Belyaev and Trut sorted hundreds of seven-month-old foxes into two groups: a friendly group and a control group.  When Trut stood in front of the cage and tried to touch the animal (wearing thick protective mitts), some foxes retreated to the back of the cage while others showed interest and even approached her.  The top 10% of the friendliest foxes were chosen for breeding.  They continued this practice across many generations.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">The results were remarkable.  First, the foxes became friendlier.  Within six generations—that’s only six years—a small group of the foxes started acting like friendly dogs. They could be petted and picked up, they licked people’s hands, and they whined and wagged their tails.  Fifteen generations into the experiment, Trut took one of the kits, Pushinka, into a small house to live with her to test whether the foxes could live with people.  They bonded so closely that Pushinka curled up beside Trut in bed.  Almost all of the foxes bred in the experiment are now this calm and friendly.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="size-medium wp-image-1171 alignright" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Begging-for-attention-500x281.png" alt="" width="500" height="281" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Begging-for-attention-500x281.png 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Begging-for-attention-768x432.png 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Begging-for-attention.png 1024w" sizes="(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">After 20 years and 20 generations, their bodies began to change.  Many developed pie-bald coats, floppy ears, and curly tails.  The adult foxes looked younger, with shorter, rounder snouts, smaller teeth, shorter limbs, and stockier bodies.  Their reproductive cycles shifted: they came to sexual maturity earlier, had larger litters, and could have litters more than once a year.  Finally and probably most importantly, their hormonal development and levels changed.  Hormonal surges of corticosteroids, stress hormones, started later during the development of the friendly fox kits; and when they did start, the surges were milder.  Overall, corticosteroid levels dropped by half within 15 generations, leading to much less predatory and defensive aggression. Within 30 generations, levels dropped by half again.  Their adrenal glands gradually shrank.  Within 50 generations, their serotonin levels rose by an order of five, making these foxes “happier,” as evolutionary biologist Lee Alan Dugatkin puts it.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Selectively breeding the foxes based on friendliness alone initiated a cascade of behavioral, morphological, reproductive, and hormonal changes.  Somehow, seemingly unrelated genetic changes hitched a ride as the silver foxes grew tamer and tamer.  This pattern can be seen in other domestic species as well—such as the red jungle fowl, the origin species of the chicken—and is known as domestication syndrome. This experiment suggests how wolves turned into dogs.</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1172" style="width: 193px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1172" class="wp-image-1172 size-full" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/LTrut-2.jpeg" alt="" width="183" height="275" /><p id="caption-attachment-1172" class="wp-caption-text">Lyudmila Trut with one of the domestic foxes. She died in October, 2024.</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>The silver fox experiment supercharged a natural evolutionary process. </strong>Within Lyudmila Trut’s lifetime, rather than across hundreds and thousands of years, these silver foxes became domesticated.  People now keep them as pets.  In fact, sales of the kits help support the ongoing experiment.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Hare and Woods offer a surprisingly straightforward explanation of domestication: it “occurs when animals who are friendly toward people become more successful at reproducing.”  That’s pretty simple!  The friendly wolves that scavenged around the human camps tended to breed together, producing pups who were even friendlier and better adapted to their new ecological niche.  These dogs-in-the-making gradually became more isolated from wild wolves, and across many, many generations small changes became large ones.  As they evolved within their new habitat, they domesticated themselves. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Over time, humans took in some of the puppies, recognized and took advantage of dogs’ abilities that complemented and enhanced our own, and began to select the dogs that best embodied those abilities. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">We ended up with the miracle that is the domestic dog—and I am deeply grateful!</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1173" style="width: 510px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1173" class="size-medium wp-image-1173" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/IMG_6818-500x375.jpeg" alt="" width="500" height="375" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/IMG_6818-500x375.jpeg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/IMG_6818-1024x768.jpeg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/IMG_6818-768x576.jpeg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/IMG_6818-1536x1152.jpeg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/IMG_6818-scaled.jpeg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1173" class="wp-caption-text">Photo: Rachel Ribis</p></div></p>
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	<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>References (in the order of their first appearance):</strong></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Starting in 2016, Greger Larson persuaded scientists from around the world to stop working in silos and to share samples from ancient dog remains so that all researchers could have access to the best DNA data.  This expanded database has enabled researchers to make breakthroughs, including the study that provides the background for the main hypothesis I’m presenting here, which traces the dog’s genetic trail back to about 23,000 years ago in northeastern Siberia.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Larson is an effective speaker who explains domestication, evolution, and genetics clearly for a general audience.  Check out these two interviews:</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Justina Desriute and Brian Dilg.  “Domestication with Greger Larson.”  <em>Dogstorian </em>Season 1, Episode 3 (July 20, 2022).</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Ricardo Lopes. “Greger Larson: Animal Domestication and Human Evolution.” <em>The Dissenter</em> #828 (August 31, 2023).</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">James Gorman.  “The Big Search to Find Out Where Dogs Came From.”  <em>New York Times</em>, January 18, 2016.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Patrick Pester and Kim Ann Zimmermann.  “Pleistocene Epoch: The Last Ice Age.”  <em>LiveScience</em>, February 28, 2022.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Angela Perri, et al.  “Dog Domestication and the Dual Dispersal of Dogs and People Into the Americas.”  <em>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences</em>, Vol 118, #6 (January 25, 2021).</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">James Gorman.  “In Ice Age Siberia, a Meeting of Carnivores May Have Given Us Dogs.”  <em>New York Times</em>, January 25, 2021.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">David Grimm. “Ice Age Hunters May Have Domesticated Dogs 23,000 Years Ago.”  <em>Science</em>, January 25, 2021.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Brian Hare and Vanessa Woods.  <em>Survival of the Friendliest: Understanding Our Origins and Rediscovering Our Common Humanity</em>.  Random House, 2020.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Survival of the fittest does not necessarily mean competition and struggle; fitness is simply whatever facilitates survival and the reproduction of viable offspring.   Hare and Woods propose that friendliness, or “positive behavior toward others,” is an “advantageous evolutionary strategy.”  Certain species are more disposed than others to develop a relationship with people.  Only a few have entered this relationship: horses but not zebras, one wolf species but not others, one wild cat species but not others.  Hare and Woods report, however, that there’s evidence that in the present day that a number of wild species are adapting to their forced proximity to humans and beginning the process of self-domestication.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">James R.A. Butler, et al.  “Anthropogenic Food Subsidy to a Commensal Carnivore: The Value and Supply of Human Faeces in the Diet of Free-Ranging Dogs.”  <em>Animals</em> 2018 (Vol 8, #5).</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Maria Lahtinen, et al.  “Excess Protein Enabled Dog Domestication During Severe Ice Age Winters.”  <em>Scientific Reports</em> 11, #7 (2021).</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">James Gorman.  “The Leftover Route to Dog Domestication.”  <em>The New York Times</em>, January 8, 2021.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Lee Alan Dugatkin. “The Silver Fox Domestication Experiment.”  <em>Evolution: Education and Outreach</em>, Vol. 11 (2018).</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">See Lee Alan Dugatkin and Aaron Dugatkin’s tribute to Lyudmila Trut, who died on October 9, 2024:  “The Daring Russian Geneticist Whose Experiments on Silver Foxes Explained Domestication Has Died.”  <em>Scientific American,</em> October 24, 2024.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">For more about the silver fox experiment, see Hare and Woods’ book.  Also, Lee Alan Dugatkin and Lyudmila Trut.  <em>How to Tame a Fox (and Build a Dog): Visionary Scientists and a Siberian Tale of Jump-Started Evolution</em>.  University of Chicago Press, 2017.</span></p>
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		<title>Chicken Little Chipmunks</title>
		<link>https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/chicken-little-chipmunks/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[petspeopleandotheranimals_j22bm3]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Nov 2024 16:14:08 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Animals and Psychology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/?p=1154</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Checking to see if the coast is clear The predators come in all shapes and sizes.  They fly, they run, and they slither.  They drop from the sky, they creep from behind rotting stumps, they rise from the leaf litter.  If you’re an eastern chipmunk, you’ve got a lot to fear.  Foxes, hawks, bobcats, coyotes,&#8230;]]></description>
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	<p><div id="attachment_1156" style="width: 560px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1156" class="wp-image-1156" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/chipmunk-log-500x333.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="367" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/chipmunk-log-500x333.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/chipmunk-log-1024x682.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/chipmunk-log-768x512.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/chipmunk-log.jpg 1280w" sizes="(max-width: 550px) 100vw, 550px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1156" class="wp-caption-text">Checking to see if the coast is clear</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The predators come in all shapes and sizes.  They fly, they run, and they slither.  They drop from the sky, they creep from behind rotting stumps, they rise from the leaf litter.  If you’re an eastern chipmunk, you’ve got a lot to fear.  Foxes, hawks, bobcats, coyotes, owls, fishers, weasels, snakes, racoons, and more, including domestic cats and dogs, are after you. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">But you’ve got to eat, and that means leaving the shelter of your burrow or hollow log.  You eat what you can forage: maple seeds, beech nuts, seedlings, acorns, trout lily tubers, fungi, fruit, berries, and even flowers.  And you do some hunting of your own for slugs, worms, insects, snakes, frogs, mice, and birds’ eggs.  Somehow, some way, you’ve got to eat without being eaten.  You’re always balancing risk and safety—searching for more beech nuts while avoiding the talons of a hawk.  As Woody Allen is reputed to have said, Nature: one big restaurant.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>In the fall, the stakes get higher as chipmunks gather food for the winter.</strong>  Naturalists use words like <em>frenetic</em>,<em>frenzied</em>, <em>intense</em>, and <em>obsessive</em> to describe their work.  Unlike bears or woodchucks, chipmunks don’t fatten up for winter; instead, they cache seeds and nuts in special chambers in their burrows.  They hibernate, but only enter torpor for a couple of weeks at a time and then wake up to eat before sleeping again.  They may emerge aboveground on mild winter days, but their below-ground hoard must get them through.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1157" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/chipmunk-perched-500x333.jpg" alt="" width="369" height="246" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/chipmunk-perched-500x333.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/chipmunk-perched-1024x682.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/chipmunk-perched-768x512.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/chipmunk-perched.jpg 1280w" sizes="(max-width: 369px) 100vw, 369px" /></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Their cheek pouches make them champion gatherers.  In <em>Naturally Curious</em>, Mary Holland describes a study in which a single chipmunk was observed carrying 116 acorns, roughly six at a time, across 200 feet to its burrow.  All in one hour.  That’s a lot for an animal that weighs five ounces (or less) and measures six to seven inches long (minus its tail).  A chipmunk may gather and eat up to half a bushel—over four and a half gallons—over the winter.  </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">How do they manage to stock their larders <u>and</u> avoid predators?  Though chipmunks are solitary and territorial, they warn one another of danger with chips, chucks, and trills.  When one chipmunk sounds the alarm, and others join in, they can swiftly spread a warning.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>It’s not surprising that chipmunks signal danger. </strong> Lots of animals do.  Different species may even join forces in a “defensive alliance,” as Rivka Galchen calls it in a recent article in <em>The New Yorker</em> about bird communication.  Early one morning in the woods, I heard a commotion and looked up.  Songbirds—a few chickadees, a sparrow, a titmouse, a cardinal—had gathered near a barred owl, and each bird in its own fashion was yelling “Owl, owl, owl!”  Certainly, they’d alerted all the birds in the vicinity (and me) that it was there.  The owl, which had settled on a branch, looked miserable and bothered—though I’m probably projecting.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Animals have a lot to say.  Researchers increasingly recognize that animals’ calls are more nuanced and convey more detailed information than we have recognized.  Of course, the animals have been making the same sounds all along; we’ve just been slow on the uptake.  Greylag geese honk, but that honk comprises ten different calls.  Vervet monkeys warn one another what kind of predator is approaching, and the other monkeys take distinct evasive action based on the information.  The same is true of chipmunks: their calls vary according to the type and severity of danger.  Is it a hawk or a coyote?  Close by?  </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>But there’s a twist: Not all chipmunk alarm calls are made alike.</strong></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Behavioral ecologist Charline Couchoux led a study of chipmunks in the forests just north of the Vermont-Québec border.  She and her colleagues found that some chipmunks are far more easily spooked than others.  Like Chicken Little, these chipmunks sound the alarm at the first distant drop of an acorn or snap of a twig and scurry for cover.  Some chipmunks, like some people, are highly vigilant, take fewer risks, and are easily startled.  We might call them catastrophists, though ecologists use more neutral language and call them shy.  Other chipmunks are bold.  They’re less vigilant, take more risks, and are slower to signal danger.  The researchers took other factors into account and determined that shyness and boldness are essentially personality traits.  Not so surprising: All of our nervous systems are wired differently.  I’m an optimistic-fatalist married to a catastrophist. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><img decoding="async" class="alignright wp-image-1158" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Chipmunk-acorn-466x700.jpg" alt="" width="269" height="404" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Chipmunk-acorn-466x700.jpg 466w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Chipmunk-acorn-682x1024.jpg 682w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Chipmunk-acorn-768x1152.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Chipmunk-acorn.jpg 853w" sizes="(max-width: 269px) 100vw, 269px" /></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Couchoux recorded the calls of a range of chipmunks—the shy, the bold, and those between—and played them for other chipmunks as they were foraging.  Here’s the twist: the chipmunks responded differently to the alarm calls depending on whether the caller was shy or bold.  They knew a Chicken Little when they heard one, and kept on searching for food (though shy chipmunks were more likely to pay attention).  They had work to do, and false alarms wasted energy and time. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">When a bold chipmunk signaled danger, however, <u>all</u> the chipmunks took notice.  It didn’t matter whether the other chipmunks were familiar with the individual caller or not; they could decode and interpret the vocalization itself and determine whether the information was likely to be reliable or unreliable.  They could hear the difference between the alarm call of a chipmunk who treated every startling shadow or sound as if it were a hawk or coyote and the call of a chipmunk who only yelled “hawk” when there was an actual hawk.  Luckily, my catastrophist at home has a more expansive vocabulary, so she doesn’t call a snapping twig a coyote, even if her “Oh, no!” sometimes makes it sound like there’s a coyote in the house when she can’t find the grocery list.      </span></p>
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	<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-size: 20px; font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><strong>References (in the order of their first appearance):</strong></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">“Mammals of the Adirondacks: Eastern Chipmunk (<em>Tamias striatus</em>).”  Adirondacks Forever Wild. wildadirondacks.org.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Mary Holland. <em>Naturally Curious</em>. Trafalgar Square Books, 2019.Rivka Galchen. “Pecking Order.”  <em>The New Yorker</em> (October 21. 2024).</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Zoë Schlanger.  <em>The Light Eaters: How the Unseen World of Plant Intelligence Offers a New Understanding of Life on Earth.</em>  Harper Collins, 2024.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Surprisingly, I found a description of Charline Couchoux’s chipmunk study in this book–an account of recent studies of plant intelligence, a highly controversial idea–in a chapter about ways that plants emit chemical signals (alarm calls!) when they are under attack.  </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Charline Couchoux, Jeanne Clermont, Dany Garant, and Denis Réale. “Signaler and Receiver Boldness Influence Response to Alarm Calls in Eastern Chipmunks.”  <em>Behavioral Ecology</em> 29:1 (January/February 2018).</span></p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">1154</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>The Once and Future Pug</title>
		<link>https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/the-once-and-future-pug/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[petspeopleandotheranimals_j22bm3]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 02 Jun 2024 16:42:56 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Animal Welfare]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/?p=1132</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Pug puppy: 3-month-old male, nicknamed S’more.  Born on Valentine’s Day, he’s ready to love you and your family!  One of a litter of 4.  He’s all pug: big brown eyes, button nose, adorable smushed face, and a perfect double corkscrew tail.  Fawn-colored coat, silky ears.  Pugs are famous for being affectionate and laid back.  Good&#8230;]]></description>
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	<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1134" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Pug_pup-500x667.jpg" alt="" width="314" height="418" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Pug_pup-500x667.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Pug_pup.jpg 750w" sizes="(max-width: 314px) 100vw, 314px" /></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><em>Pug puppy: 3-month-old male, nicknamed S’more.  Born on Valentine’s Day, he’s ready to love you and your family!  One of a litter of 4.  He’s all pug: big brown eyes, button nose, adorable smushed face, and a perfect double corkscrew tail.  Fawn-colored coat, silky ears.  Pugs are famous for being affectionate and laid back.  Good with kids, dogs and cats, and great for cuddling.  Playful but low maintenance.  Not barkers.  Great house or apartment dog!  $1800.  Puppies have been dewormed, received their first set of vaccinations, and will be microchipped.  Health documentation provided.  AKC registered parents.  Is S’more your new fur baby?</em></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Of course!  Who can resist a pug?  “I love pugs,” a veterinary behaviorist says in <em>The Animals Among Us</em>, but then adds, “That’s why I don’t own one.” </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">We’ve bred pugs to be cute.  They trigger the “cute response,” an inherent, positive, and unconscious reaction to babies.  (See <a href="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/your-brain-on-babies/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">“Your Brain on Babies.”</span></a>)  In evolutionary terms, this caretaking response makes great sense.  What’s surprising is that our brains respond to baby-like features even when they’re not human.  This helps explain the appeal of puppies and other baby animals.  In a shelter situation, the dogs with more—to use the scientific term—<em>paedomorphic</em> faces and expressions are more likely to get adopted.  Simply put, pugs are extra appealing to us humans.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">In the United States in 2023, the pug was the 35<sup>th</sup> most popular breed out of 200, according to the American Kennel Club.  That adds up to a lot of pugs.  As with any popular breed, there are national and regional pug clubs, pug breeders all across the country, and rescue organizations dedicated to pugs.  No surprise, kids’ books abound—<em>Captain Pug </em>(along with<em> Pirate Pug </em>and others<em>)</em>, <em>Pugs Are the Best</em> (as well as Dachshunds, Poodles, Golden Retrievers, and more), and a best-selling series about Pig the Pug.  All are available at my local library.  And, of course, there’s pug paraphernalia: greeting cards, tee-shirts, plush toys, fridge magnets, and more.  The website of the Pug Dog Club of America describes the pug as “eager to please, eager to learn and eager to love.  His biggest requirement is that you love him back.” </span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>Why would a veterinarian who loves pugs refuse to own one?  </strong>Because the breed’s in crisis.  The Royal Veterinary College sponsored a large cross-sectional study of data drawn from electronic primary veterinarian records across the United Kingdom.  It was the largest study of the health of pugs to date and compared and contrasted the health of pugs with all non-pugs in the study.  Pugs experienced significantly more health problems—especially eye, breathing, and skin disorders—than non-pugs.  This led the authors to conclude in 2016, that “Highly differing health profiles between Pugs and other dogs in the UK suggest that the Pug has diverged substantially from mainstream dog breeds and can no longer be considered as a typical dog from a health perspective.”  The pug has reached a tipping point: Breeding has created an adorable dog that is almost guaranteed to suffer.<strong>  </strong></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">In a chapter on the welfare of dogs in <em>The Domestic Dog</em>, the authors identify two kinds of “genetic welfare problems” created through breeding.  The first occurs “as consequences of deliberate selection for accentuated anatomical features.”  The second occurs when inbreeding allows an unhealthy recessive genetic mutation to become “prevalent” in a breed.  The pug is affected by both, but especially the first.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><img decoding="async" class="wp-image-1138 alignright" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Maggie_pug_left_L_Stannard-500x667.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="400" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Maggie_pug_left_L_Stannard-500x667.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Maggie_pug_left_L_Stannard-768x1024.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Maggie_pug_left_L_Stannard-1152x1536.jpg 1152w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Maggie_pug_left_L_Stannard.jpg 1200w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /> </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Precisely what we find so appealing about pugs—the large rounded head, pudgy cheeks, big eyes, little nose—damages their health.  They are flat faced, or brachycephalic (from the Greek, short + head; brah-kah-suh-<strong>fa</strong>-lik).  We have deliberately bred for a genetic mutation that keeps the skull from developing normally.  This is “selective arrested development,” as John Bradshaw explains in <em>Dog Sense</em>.  Without understanding the mechanism or consequences, breeders selected for this mutation because of its cute look.  As the muzzle skeleton changes, the rest of the soft tissue within the dog’s mouth, nasal passages, larynx, and windpipe develops more normally, with the end result that too much tissue is compressed into too little space.  Brachycephalic breeds—especially pugs, French bulldogs, and English bulldogs—frequently develop Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome (BOAS), and especially as they age.  A healthy young pug may become an unhealthy, miserable adult dog. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">In BOAS, the nostrils narrow or even collapse inward, as does soft tissue inside the nose; the soft palate extends into the airway itself, obstructing airflow; and other soft tissue is pulled into the windpipe where it also restricts the flow of air.  At the extreme, as a dog tries harder to pull air into its lungs, the airway collapses and the dog suffocates.  In Alexandra Horowitz’s <em>Our Dogs, Ourselves,</em> Amy Attas, a veterinarian who rescued a pug with BOAS, offers an analogy: “It’s like breathing through a straw.”  I tried it.  It’s exhausting, even for a few minutes.  Attas had to perform corrective surgery on her adopted dog’s nasal passages, soft palate, and sacs in the larynx to enable her dog to breathe more naturally. </span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1139" style="width: 330px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1139" class="size-full wp-image-1139" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/image.png" alt="" width="320" height="114" /><p id="caption-attachment-1139" class="wp-caption-text">The pug has by far the shortest head and muzzle.</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">In 2015 another study found that the risk of BOAS “increases sharply in a non-linear manner as relative muzzle length shortens.”  This puts the pug, with its radically foreshortened muzzle, at particular risk.  BOAS isn’t a bug in the system but a feature.  Owners get used to pugs’ wheezing, and often believe “it’s normal for the breed.”  But wheezing in any dog is abnormal, just as it is in a person.  Once we can hear a dog’s wheezing, the dog already has moderate BOAS.  Even a dog that isn’t diagnosed with BOAS may chronically get too little oxygen, with wider effects on its health. What’s amazing about pugs, and dogs in general, is that they carry on.  They don’t show their suffering unless it’s acute. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Pugs also have eye, skin, dental, and spinal issues.  According to the comparative 2016 study of veterinary records, in addition to BOAS, pugs are more likely than other dogs to suffer from ulcerations of the cornea (13 times), infections in their skinfolds (11 times), retained baby teeth (4.3 times), and obesity (3.4 times; this is attributed to their tendency to overheat due to difficulty breathing and so not to exercise as much).  The reshaping of the skull also affects the shape of their eye sockets, making their eyes prone to injury and even displacement.  Some have trouble closing their eyelids all the way. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Their shortened skulls are not the only problem.  Their corkscrew tails are produced by misshapen vertebrae at the base of the spine, and the genes that create this effect in the tail can also cause misalignment of the spine and misshapen vertebrae elsewhere.  This spinal condition can result in pain, unsteady walking, an abnormally shaped back, weakness, muscle deterioration in the back legs, and incontinence.  In a 2016 article in <em>The Guardian</em>, a veterinarian calls pugs “anatomical disasters.” </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>Humans and dogs have lived together for many, many thousands of years.</strong>  Early dogs may have resembled dingoes, which weigh 26-44 pounds, stand about 24 inches tall at the shoulder, have erect ears, long snouts, straight tails, and coats that range from sandy colored to black.  In other words, a pretty generic medium-sized dog.  Humans gradually found uses for this social, highly flexible species—tracking, guarding, hauling, herding, pointing, retrieving, ratting, and hanging out with humans.  Ancient breeding choices were driven by these functions, and the function gradually shaped the dog’s form—and some other characteristics, such as color or ear shape, came along as part of the genetic package.  An especially good guard dog, which was large, highly alert, and had a loud bark, might be crossed with another still larger dog.  Distinct types of dogs gradually developed.  For example, a large guard dog, called a mastiff, appears in English records starting the 15<sup>th</sup> century.  This historic mastiff shares characteristics with our modern mastiff breeds—large, powerful, and short-haired—but it was not a breed by our modern definition.  Horowitz describes a pragmatic process in the past: “These would have been breeds that formed more or less naturally, with humans merely keeping around and feeding the ones they liked and culling or casting off the ones they did not.”</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Some types of dogs go way back.  The ancient Greeks and Romans kept, pampered, and loved small white dogs.  Aristotle wrote about one he called a Melitaean dog.  Is this the Maltese?  For some, a few facts are all it takes to jump to big conclusions, as the American Kennel Club (AKC) does on its website: “The tiny Maltese…has been sitting in the lap of luxury since the Bible was a work in progress.”  Okay, it’s dopey language, but an appealing idea. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Is there actually a line that runs from Hollywood, the winner of the Westminster Kennel Club 2021 Toy Dog Group in 2021, all the way back to a dog in 330 BCE when Aristotle was alive?  James Gorman, a journalist at <em>The New York Times</em>, asked dog geneticists this question for a 2021 article.  The answer was no.  No DNA links Aristotle’s pup and Hollywood.  Elaine Ostrander, who has studied the dog genome extensively, emphasizes that “the concept of a breed did not exist” then.  (I’ll address what our concept of a breed is in a bit.)  The Greeks and Romans had little white dogs.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The AKC makes a similar grand claim about the pug’s lineage: “Once the mischievous companion of Chinese emperors, and later the mascot of Holland’s royal House of Orange…”   In the 16<sup>th</sup> century, a distinct type of dog called a Lo-Sze was brought to Holland by the Dutch East India Company.  It reportedly originated in China as a companion dog and was popular in the court of the Song dynasty (960-1279).  It became popular in the Dutch and British courts; in fact, it became popular all over Europe.  So far so good for the AKC description. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">This dog was short legged, short mouthed, and short haired.  In paintings from the 18<sup>th</sup> and 19<sup>th</sup> centuries, however, the dog is leaner all around than our current pug; it has longer legs, a thinner neck, a smaller head, fewer wrinkles, and a short but distinct muzzle.  It's adorable, but doesn’t conform to the current breed standards for the pug. </span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1140" style="width: 218px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1140" class="wp-image-1140" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/William_Hogarth_1745.jpg" alt="" width="208" height="270" /><p id="caption-attachment-1140" class="wp-caption-text">"The Painter and His Pug," 1745, William Hogarth.  </p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Imperial forces, such as the Romans, often brought their dogs, and their dogs’ genes, with them to remote outposts.  Later, as in the case of the Lo-Sze in the 16<sup>th</sup> century, global trade carried new types of dogs to new places.  Even when travel was arduous and slow, types of dogs moved around the world.  Until the middle of the 19<sup>th</sup> century, however, dog breeding remained largely local and hit-or-miss.  In general the rule was “best to best.”  Breeding tended to address a “breeder’s particular need,” as Horowitz puts it, and might involve crossing similar dogs to reinforce their abilities, or different types of dogs for their complementary strengths.  A dog with an especially keen nose might have been crossed with a dog with good speed and endurance.  People weren’t thinking about the dog’s looks but their function.  Horowitz also notes that “most puppies were the result of dogs being dogs,” so there was plenty of genetic variation. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Then breeding practices changed—not on a dime, but swiftly—as the purebred dog became a commodity in the world of fashion. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>The Victorians invented the “breed” as we now know it, as dog shows and purebred dogs became wildly popular.</strong>  In <em>Pit Bull</em>, Bronwen Dickey notes that “Roughly 75 percent of the more than four hundred dog breeds we recognize today are whimsical confections whipped up in the late nineteenth century.”  Breeders chose a handful of specimens of particular types—sometimes mixing and matching, sometimes keeping true to a traditional type of dog—and then bred puppies from that limited set of individuals.  They set the breed standards used to judge the dogs at shows and to determine commercial value and kept careful records of parentage in stud books overseen by national kennel clubs.  This is what we mean by <em>breed </em>now. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Breeders focused intently on what the dogs looked like—the perfect-looking Cocker Spaniel or Gordon Setter—and paid little or no attention to function and health.  At the same time, many breeders set out to create more distinctive-looking dogs to attract attention to their “products” and one-up their competitors.  The breed standards, strict as they were, paradoxically allowed for exaggerations over time.  For example, as Horowitz traces in one story, the Great Dane has grown bigger; in 1889 the AKC standard for the male was 120 pounds, and now it’s 140-175 pounds—putting strain on its joints and heart.  The only Great Dane I’ve known died young from a heart attack.</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1142" style="width: 275px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1142" class="wp-image-1142" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/400px-Pug_from_1915.jpg" alt="" width="265" height="250" /><p id="caption-attachment-1142" class="wp-caption-text">A pug in 1915</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The pug also began to morph.  During the Second Opium War (1857-59), a new type of dog that resembled the pug, called a happa dog, was seized as loot from China and brought back to Europe.  Stockier and with flatter faces, happa dogs, now extinct, were crossed with pugs.  By the time the pug breed was accepted by The Kennel Club, the UK’s slightly older version of the American Kennel Club, as a breed in 1883, pugs had begun their transformation.  They became stockier; their necks thickened (some look like tiny linebackers); their faces added more pronounced wrinkles; and their colors became more uniform.  In the 1910s and 1920s, their muzzles got still shorter, their heads rounder, and their eyes more prominent.  Today, some have grossly exaggerated features, what some people (I include myself) might no longer call cute but cute-ugly.   </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>By definition a pure-bred dog is an in-bred dog.  </strong>This originates with the genetic bottleneck created by selecting a small number of dogs as foundations for a breed.  Pedigree breeding then closes the gene pool, as dogs only mate with other dogs whose parentage is known, can be traced to the first dogs in the breed, and meet the breed standards for size, coloring, and shape.  Dogs, once bred for the work they could do, were chosen and bred instead for their looks: because they were a certain height and length; because they were pure black or spotted; because their ears were floppy or pointed.  The official breed standards, which define the ideal dog and are used in dog shows, are both comprehensive and specific.  The golden retriever’s AKC standards fill two pages.  The size allowed, for example, has little room for variation:  “Males 23 to 24 inches in height at withers; females 21½ to 22½ inches. Dogs up to one inch above or below standard size should be proportionately penalized. Deviation in height of more than one inch from the standard shall disqualify.”  No wonder golden retrievers look so much alike.</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1143" style="width: 530px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1143" class="wp-image-1143" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/GoldenReunion.jpg" alt="" width="520" height="346" /><p id="caption-attachment-1143" class="wp-caption-text">Golden Reunion, Scotland, July, 2023.  Roddy Mackay for "The New York Times"</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The point of modern breeding practices is to create consistency, which means eliminating genetic variation.  In the process of breeding dogs this way, which limits the partners, negative consequences can compound over time.  It’s straight-up Mendelian genetics.  Within a limited population, a recessive mutation in one dog is more likely to line up with a similar recessive mutation in another dog, so that the recessive gene will be expressed in the puppies.  In <em>Dog Sense</em>, John Bradshaw traces the long-term effects of pedigree breeding practices:</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify; padding-left: 40px;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The genetic isolation of each breed has brought about a dramatic change in the dog’s gene pool, massively reducing the amount of variation in each breed.  The less the variation, the more likely it is that damaging mutations will affect the welfare of individual dogs: In order for a potentially detrimental mutation to actually cause harm, it generally has to have been present in <em>both</em> parents—and this is likely to occur only if the parents themselves are closely related.  In some dog breeds today it is difficult to find two parents who are <em>not</em> closely related.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">In Gordon setters a particular recessive mutation can cause Progressive Retinal Atrophy, which leads to vision loss and blindness in older dogs.  There’s no treatment.  As many as 50% of the setters carry this gene.  Breeders can test for the gene and make sure only to cross a dog that carries the mutation with a dog that does not, but still half of their puppies are likely to carry the gene.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong> </strong></span><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>The American Kennel Club knows there’s trouble.</strong>  Its website features a health tab for every breed.  The pug’s page reads, in part:</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify; padding-left: 40px;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The pug’s dark, appealing eyes are one of his main attractions, but also one of his vulnerable spots.  Eye problems including corneal ulcers and dry eye have been known to occur.  Like all flat-faced breeds, Pugs sometimes experience breathing problems and do poorly in sunny, hot, or humid weather. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The carefully innocuous language they use here downplays the severity of the problems pugs face and verges on being disingenuous.  Below this description, there’s a list of four recommended health tests: a veterinary ophthalmologist’s eye exam, evaluations of the knees and hips, and a DNA test for Pug Dog Encephalitis (PDE).  Caused by a recessive mutation, PDE inflames the dog’s nervous system and causes seizures, depression, circling, and visual impairment—and occurs in 1% of pugs.  The people who run the AKC care about the health of dogs, but they’re primarily promoters.  The AKC Marketplace, “your puppy search partner,” provides links to breeders all over the country.                  </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The AKC’s Canine Health Foundation and breed clubs have teamed up with the Orthopedic Foundation for Animals (OFA) to support research and share information on the health issues faced by purebred dogs.  Together, the breed clubs and OFA have created health screening requirements and recommendations for specific breeds, a certification process for breeders through the Canine Health Information Center (CHIC) Program, and a publicly available database to share the outcomes.  As OFA states: “A dog achieves CHIC Certification if it has been screened for every disease recommended by the parent club for that breed <em>and </em>those results are publicly available in the database.”  This is good for dogs, breeders, and buyers.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The list of screenings for pugs on the OFA website is daunting.  The CHIC program requires only three screenings—of the knees (they’re prone to dislocate) and the eyes and the genetic test for PDE, requirements set by the Pug Dog Club—but it also recommends <u>seven</u> more: x-rays of the hips and elbows; a genetic test for Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency, a metabolic disorder caused by recessive genes that kills red blood cells and limits the supply of oxygen to the body; a serum bile acid test for puppies to assess liver function; an x-ray of the spine; an x-ray of the trachea, which may not develop completely; and a cardiac evaluation.  (Little related to BOAS appears on this list.)  That’s ten screenings in total, while the typical number of screenings recommended by the CHIC program for other breeds seems to be around four.  The pug is a vulnerable dog.  As the 2016 UK study concluded: the pug is no longer “a typical dog from a health perspective.”</span></p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1144" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/PugFawnColored.jpg" alt="" width="391" height="393" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/PugFawnColored.jpg 440w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/PugFawnColored-150x150.jpg 150w" sizes="(max-width: 391px) 100vw, 391px" /></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">In no way do I want to downplay the vulnerabilities of other breeds.  The pug may have reached a tipping point, but other breeds are also in trouble.  Eye, hip, elbow, and heart screenings are common.  Many recessive mutations give rise to disorders that range from annoying to fatal.  Alaskan Malamutes are vulnerable to two—polyneuropathy and autoimmune thyroiditis, what we also call Hashimoto’s disease in people.  Basenjis are also vulnerable to two—Progressive Retinal Atrophy, which causes night blindness, and Fanconi syndrome, which is a form of kidney dysfunction that interferes with the absorption of electrolytes and nutrients and can lead to kidney failure and death.  As many as 10-30% of the Basenjis in North America may develop Fanconi syndrome, according to an article from VCA Animal Hospitals, the national veterinary chain.  Reading through the CHIC program’s screening requirements is disheartening.  What are we doing to our dogs?</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>We’ve known about the risks and damage of inbreeding for many decades.</strong>  The AKC, OFA, breed clubs, and many breeders have made efforts to mitigate the worst effects with some success, but breeding is still inbreeding by its nature.  We also keep accentuating breed features—the sloped back of the German shepherd, the size and weight of the Great Dane, the shortened muzzle and facial wrinkles of the pug, the size of the English bulldog’s head (most can only give birth by C-section)—that cause dogs to suffer.  In a recent article in <em>The New York Times</em>, “This Quiz Will Change the Way You Think About Dogs,” Alexandra Horowitz argues that all purebred dogs have reached a crisis and advocates outcrossing, “the introduction of different genetic material,” for all breeds.  Pugs are the bellwethers of a broad problem.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">A 2021 study underscores Horowitz’s sense of urgency  The research determined that the average rate of inbreeding in dogs is now at a coefficient of 0.249.  That’s just under 0.250, the level for full siblings.  As the authors observe, “the majority of dog breeds displayed high levels of inbreeding well above what would be considered safe for either humans or wild animal populations.”  Considered safe?  That’s a startling fact.  They then compiled morbidity data—data about illness based on specific visits to the vet for an illness rather than, say, for a distemper shot—from a large Swedish pet insurance company and aligned that data with breeds and their levels of inbreeding.  The results show clearly that the more inbred the breed, the more veterinary care those dogs need during their lives.  Not surprisingly, they report “a significant difference in morbidity between brachycephalic breeds and non-brachycephalic breeds.”  They also found that larger breeds, such as Great Danes, suffer more health problems.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Following the major 2016 study of pugs, the British Veterinary Association (BVA) made forceful moves.  They “strongly” recommended that people not buy pugs unless breed standards changed, and partnered with The Kennel Club to educate the public, to systematically screen breeding dogs’ health, and to begin to revise breed standards.  The BVA also sought to combat the pug’s popularity and lobbied greeting card companies, for example, to stop using cute images of pugs (at least one company agreed).  The Kennel Club has dedicated a section of their website to the health of brachycephalic dogs, with informational videos and links to many of the veterinary studies I’ve used here.  As a result of the BVA’s focused campaign—and the active cooperation of the Kennel Club—fewer people are buying pugs in the UK.  Statista.com, a global data and business statistics platform, reports that after reaching a high point in 2017 pug registrations in the UK have steadily declined and in 2022 registrations were about two thirds off the peak (though it’s worth noting that, with the ongoing poor economy in the UK, dog ownership is down overall).</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1145" style="width: 398px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1145" class="wp-image-1145" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/earlier_pug-500x387.jpg" alt="" width="388" height="300" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/earlier_pug-500x387.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/earlier_pug.jpg 602w" sizes="(max-width: 388px) 100vw, 388px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1145" class="wp-caption-text">A pug from the 19th century</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>Does this mean the end of the pug?</strong>  There’s probably no way the breed survives in its current form.  If breed standards don’t shift, pugs face more illness and suffering, and what’s already bad will get worse.  If breed standards change enough to address BOAS, other health issues created by their body shape, and recessive genetic disorders, the pug will definitely look different.  Its flat face will be one of the first things to go. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">But will the pug really disappear?  Some breeders have started to outcross, breeding pugs with Jack Russell or Parson Russell terriers to create what they’ve dubbed the Retro Pug.  Pug Dog Passion, a Swedish website run by two people who really love pugs, proposes new breed standards that directly address the pug’s health concerns <u>and</u> include regular outcrossing to maintain genetic diversity in the long run.  A one-and-done approach to outcrossing won’t work, since “different genetic material” needs to be introduced regularly.  A 2018 study recommends an outcrossing rate of about 5% of new litters across 25 years to keep inbreeding to a safely low level.  The dogs that meet these new standards resemble the pugs of the 18<sup>th</sup> and 19<sup>th</sup> centuries, the small short-mouthed dogs that became so popular when they were first brought to Europe, before the Victorian purebred craze took hold.  <em>Retro</em> is right.</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1146" style="width: 341px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1146" class="wp-image-1146" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/retro-pug-withlong-neck-500x416.jpg" alt="" width="331" height="275" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/retro-pug-withlong-neck-500x416.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/retro-pug-withlong-neck-768x638.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/retro-pug-withlong-neck.jpg 1024w" sizes="(max-width: 331px) 100vw, 331px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1146" class="wp-caption-text">A retro pug with a longer neck and a snout</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>For 150-plus years breeders have shaped the pug to conform to human tastes.</strong>  We have made its body blockier, its neck shorter, its face flatter, its tail curlier, its head bigger, its pelvis narrower—and as a result many of them can barely breathe or walk.  Though we love pugs, we’ve put their welfare at risk.  The pug may no longer be genetically viable.  In fact, the larger project of pedigree breeding—which roughly dates to the founding of The Kennel Club in England, in 1873—has created many breeds that may no longer be viable.   </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The domestic dog is the most varied species on the planet—from the flat-faced pug to the pointy-nosed whippet, the low-rider Bassett hound to the towering Irish wolfhound, the six-pound teacup Chihuahua to the 230-pound mastiff, the spotted Dalmatian to the black-coated Labrador.  The variety of breeds is astonishing and appealing.  But we need to back up.  Despite what Mae West said, too much a good thing may <u>not</u> be wonderful, at least not for the dogs.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Dog breeds have never been static.  Old photographs and paintings of pugs make that clear.  It’s easy to think that the <em>pug </em>is the pug that trots down the sidewalk in 2024, but it’s only the 2024 version.  Pugs were pugs in 1974, in 1924, and in 1885, when they were first recognized by the AKC, and people loved them all.  We need to help pugs continue to evolve, but this time with an emphasis on their health and genetic diversity as well as their cute looks.  If we change breeding practices and start systematically outcrossing, we’ll lose the extreme qualities of many breeds, but we’ll gain something more important: healthier, happier, and longer-lived dogs. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400; text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Even well-meaning and responsible breeders, who follow the health protocols, cannot thwart the laws of genetics or alter the anatomical fact that dogs have muzzles not flat faces.  So go ahead and adopt an older pug who needs a home, but if you really can’t resist buying a pug puppy, buy a retro pug.  They’re great dogs! </span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1147" style="width: 435px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1147" class="wp-image-1147" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Retro-Pug-500x542.jpg" alt="" width="425" height="461" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Retro-Pug-500x542.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Retro-Pug.jpg 568w" sizes="(max-width: 425px) 100vw, 425px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1147" class="wp-caption-text">The once and future pug!</p></div></p>
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	<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-size: 18px; font-family: georgia, palatino, serif;"><strong>References (in the order of their first appearance):</strong></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">John Bradshaw.  <em>The Animals Among Us: How Pets Make Us Human.</em>  Basic Books, 2017.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Bridget M. Waller, et al.  “Paedomorphic Facial Expressions Give Dogs a Selective Advantage.”  <em>Plos ONE</em>, December 26, 2013.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Del Richards.  “What Is a Pug?”  Pug Dog Club of America.  “About the Pug,” June, 2013.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Dan G. O’Neill, et al.  “Demography and Health of Pugs Under Primary Veterinary Care in England.”  <em>Canine Genetics and Epidemiology</em> 3, #5 (June 10, 2016.)</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Dan G. O’Neill, et al.  “Health of Pug Dogs in the UK: Disorder Predispositions and Protections.”  <em>Canine Medicine and Genetics</em> 9, #4 (May 18, 2022).</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Royal Veterinary College.  “New Research Shows Pugs Have High Health Risks and Can No Longer Be Considered a ‘Typical Dog’ from a Health Perspective.”  <em>VetCompass News</em>, May 18, 2022. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Robert Hubrecht, et al.  “The Welfare of Dogs in Human Care.”  <em>The Domestic Dog: Its Evolution, Behavior and Interactions with People, </em>2<sup>nd</sup> ed.  James Serpell, ed.  Cambridge University Press, 2017.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">John Bradshaw.  <em>Dog Sense</em>.  Basic Books, 2011.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Alexandra Horowitz.  <em>Our Dogs, Ourselves: The Story of a Singular Bond</em>.  Scribner, 2020.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Rowena Packer, et al.  “Impact of Facial Conformation on Canine Health: Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome.”  <em>PLoS ONE</em> 10, 2015.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Rowena Packer.  “Spinal Problems in Brachycephalic Dogs.”  The Kennel Club. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Anonymous.  “Pugs Are Anatomical Disasters. Vets Must Speak Out—Even If It’s Bad for Business.”  <em>The Guardian</em>, September 22, 2016.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">James Gorman.  “How Old Is the Maltese, Really?”  <em>The New York Times</em>, October 10, 2021.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Bronwen Dickey.  <em>Pit Bull: The Battle Over an American Icon</em>.  Penguin Random House, 2016.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Krista Williams and Robin Downing.  “Fanconi Syndrome in Dogs.”  VCA Animal Hospitals. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Alexandra Horowitz.  “This Quiz Will Change the Way You Think About Dogs.”  <em>The New York Times</em>, May 9, 2024.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Danika Bannasch, et al.  “The Effect of Inbreeding, Body Size and Morphology on Health in Dog Breeds.”  <em>Canine Medicine and Genetics</em> 8, #12 (December 2, 2021).</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The Kennel Club.  “Tackling Health and Welfare Issues in Brachycephalic Dogs.”  </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">Therese Rodin and Mats Rundkvist.  “A Healthy Pug Standard.” Pug Dog Passion. </span><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">The photos of retro pugs come from this site.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">J.J. Windig and H.P. Doekes. “Limits to Genetic Rescue by Outcross in Pedigree Dogs.”  <em>Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics</em> 135, #3 (June, 2018).</span></p>
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<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>Requirements and recommendations for health and genetic testing</strong></span></p>
<p><a href="https://ofa.org/chic-programs/browse-by-breed/?breed=PG" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><span style="font-family: georgia, palatino, serif; font-size: 18px;">CHIC program</span></span></a></p>
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		<title>Horsepower: Rereading &#8220;Black Beauty&#8221;</title>
		<link>https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/horsepower-rereading-black-beauty/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[petspeopleandotheranimals_j22bm3]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Jan 2024 17:48:39 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Animal Welfare]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/?p=1108</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[An Orlov Trotter that looks a bit like Black Beauty I wasn’t crazy for horses like some girls, though in fourth grade my best friend and I made regular trips to Woolworths and collected a small herd of plastic ones.  I was crazy, however, for books about horses, novels like The Black Stallion, My Friend&#8230;]]></description>
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	<p><div id="attachment_1110" style="width: 417px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1110" class="wp-image-1110" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/OrlovTrotter.jpeg" alt="" width="407" height="305" /><p id="caption-attachment-1110" class="wp-caption-text"><span style="font-size: 14px;">An Orlov Trotter that looks a bit like Black Beauty</span></p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">I wasn’t crazy for horses like some girls, though in fourth grade my best friend and I made regular trips to Woolworths and collected a small herd of plastic ones.  I <u>was</u> crazy, however, for books about horses, novels like <em>The Black Stallion</em>, <em>My Friend Flicka</em>, and their sequels.  I loved the stories because of the bond that grows between the kid and the horse.  But they’re really human stories—with horses in them. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong><em>Black Beauty</em></strong><strong> is different, because it’s a horse story—with humans in it. </strong> Anna Sewell gives us “the life of a horse” and narrates things entirely from Black Beauty’s point of view.  As a colt, Beauty hears and sees a train for the first time: “with a rush and a clatter, and a puffing out of smoke—a long black train of something flew by, and was gone almost before I could draw my breath.”  He runs madly around the pasture trying to get away.  I realized for the first time that animals experience things really differently.  At nine, I hadn’t yet grasped this fact, though it instantly made sense, and I never thought of animals in quite the same way afterwards.  I loved the book. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><em>Black Beauty</em> was full of surprises when I read it as a kid.  As I reread it many years later, the book made me think about—and want to know more about—the early animal welfare movement, class and poverty in Victorian England, the role of the horse in the 19th century, and Sewell’s life.  There were more surprises to come.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">It turns out that <em>Black Beauty </em>wasn’t written for kids at all.  The beloved book of my childhood, and many other people’s childhoods, was a major social-protest novel that helped popularize the animal welfare movement.  Published in Britain in 1877, it became one of the most successful books of the 19th century and is described in the 1998 <em>Encyclopedia of Animal Rights and Animal Welfare </em>as “the most influential anti-cruelty novel of all time.” </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="wp-image-1115 alignleft" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Editions-of-BB-500x323.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="259" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Editions-of-BB-500x323.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Editions-of-BB.jpg 620w" sizes="(max-width: 400px) 100vw, 400px" /></span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>In the late 18<sup>th</sup> century, the philosopher Jeremy Bentham revisited the ancient issue of the ethical treatment of animals.</strong>  Would we include non-human animals in our moral consideration, on what grounds, and to what effect?  He concluded: “the question is not, Can they <em>reason</em>?, nor Can they <em>talk</em>? but, Can they <em>suffer</em>?”  His approach altered the debate about animal welfare, and the first protective laws to reduce suffering, mostly for livestock, passed in Europe in the 1820s.  The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the very first animal welfare organization in the world, was founded in Great Britain in 1824.  The organization received the young Queen Victoria’s blessing and became the <u>Royal</u> Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) in 1840.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Anna Sewell answered Bentham’s question emphatically: Horses suffer.  While she hoped that those who owned horses would pay attention to her book, she wrote primarily for the men and boys who worked in the stables and drove horses.  These readers weren’t abstractions to her, but were the men and boys whom she had taught in Sunday school and adult literacy classes throughout her adult life.  Her original title was <em>Black Beauty:</em> <em>His Grooms and Companions. The Autobiography of a Horse.</em>  The heroes of the book—along with Black Beauty and the other horses and ponies—are knowledgeable and kind grooms, drivers, riders, cabmen, stable hands, and farmers.  Sewell honors their labor and the powerful horse-human partnership that their knowledge makes possible.  Beauty observes an old man who delivers coal: “He and his old horse used to plod together along the street, like two good partners who understood each other; the horse would stop of his own accord, at the doors where they took coal off him; he used to keep one ear bent towards his master.”  Unfortunately, though, the humans in the story are often villains.  If you look around, Sewell tells us, you’ll see horses overworked, mistreated, and dying.  It could be different.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-size: 20px;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif;"><strong>The novel is part exposé and part horse-care manual from a horse’s point of view. </strong> Sewell wanted her readers not only to appreciate that horses suffer but to understand what causes their suffering and how their needs can be met.  She sought to “induce kindness, sympathy, and an understanding treatment of horses.”  The book can feel preachy (I didn’t notice this when I was a kid), but the fact that a horse is giving us the low-down makes the lessons more palatable.  Many of those lessons are straightforward and practical.</span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif;"><em> </em></span></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><em>Black Beauty</em> became a kid’s book because it’s compelling.  Sewell knew that a sympathetic hero and a good story would carry the reader through, so she wrapped up the didactic bits in action, kept the chapters short and focused, and wrote clean, clear prose.  It’s still highly readable in 2024.  She includes emergency late-night rides, a fire in the stable, long wet days pulling a cab through London streets, horse fairs when Beauty’s future is on the line, and the death of his “fast friend” Ginger from over-work. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1111" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/horses-500x500.jpg" alt="" width="325" height="325" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/horses-500x500.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/horses-150x150.jpg 150w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/horses-768x768.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/horses.jpg 800w" sizes="(max-width: 325px) 100vw, 325px" /></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">In his early years, Beauty has the best life a horse in his place and time could have.  After he  moves from his first home to a small estate nearby, he shares a stable with three other horses (including Ginger) and a pony, and “all who had to do with me were good, and I had a light and airy stable and the best food.”  Cruelty and mistreatment are only scary stories that the other horses tell him.  </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Then Beauty’s life takes a harsh turn.  Kind masters and grooms give way to ignorant, negligent, callous, and cruel ones.  The scary stories become reality.  He is sold and sold yet again; and each time he is sold, he becomes more worn out, “worth” less, and more vulnerable. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">He wins a three-year reprieve with a kind London cab driver, Jerry, who takes excellent care of Beauty and his other horse, Captain.  Beauty must work hard but knows that “for a cab horse I was very well off indeed.”  Beauty pities the plight of other horses, especially those hauling freight and working for the big cab companies.  Sadly, Jerry is nearly as overworked and vulnerable as Beauty is.  When he gets sick and can no longer drive his cab, Beauty’s life takes another bad turn.   </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Beauty is sold as a cart horse to a wheat dealer, and then to the dreaded cab company.  Constantly overloaded and overworked, he suffers like the horses he had pitied before.  His health deteriorates, and his spirit begins to break.  In the story’s climactic scene, he collapses and nearly dies, but luck brings him full circle to a safe, secure place back in the country.  “I have nothing to fear; and here my story ends.  My troubles are all over, and I am at home.”  I still feel the relief and pleasure of that happy ending.  As a kid, I would have been so torn up if Beauty had died.     </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong><em>Black Beauty</em></strong><strong> takes the reader on a tour of Victorian England as seen from the stable—a kind of <em>Downton Abbey</em> for horses.</strong>  It’s also a tour of the humans who control Beauty, since he’s entirely at their mercy.  He always reports on the character of his owners, grooms, and drivers; the work he does; and the quality of his stable and food.  Historian Ann Norton Greene notes that “Beauty’s life becomes a descent through the equine class system, from fashionable London carriage horse to livery horse, cab horse, and cart horse.”  Sewell makes it crystal clear, however, that no class of humans is better or worse to horses than any other.  The horse’s-eye view of humans, with heroic exceptions like Jerry, is pretty grim.  Sewell forgives ignorance—grooms and drivers can learn; that’s one hope of the book—but never cruelty or negligence.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="alignright wp-image-1112" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/HorsesinStable-500x372.jpg" alt="" width="350" height="260" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/HorsesinStable-500x372.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/HorsesinStable.jpg 600w" sizes="(max-width: 350px) 100vw, 350px" /></span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Late in the novel when Beauty has become a cart horse, but before he works for the big cab company, he is struggling to haul a load up a steep hill.  When the carter keeps whipping him, a lady asks the man to stop “in a sweet, earnest voice” and offers to help.  (According to her niece, Sewell stepped in when she saw helpless people or animals treated badly, but was more likely to use “burning words” than sweet ones.)<strong>  </strong>When the man laughs at her offer, she persists, “‘You see,’ she said, ‘you do not give him a fair chance; he cannot use all his power with his head held back as it is with the bearing rein; if you would take it off, I am sure he would do better—<em>do</em> try it,’ she said persuasively.”  Throughout the book, Sewell targets <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overcheck" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>the bearing rein</u></a>.  It forced the horse’s head into an unnaturally high and tight position, restricted its breathing, caused pain and long-term damage, and limited a horse’s ability to lower its head to pull loads.  What’s sadder, the rein was fashionable, especially among the wealthy, not for any practical reason but only for the look it created: it made the horse hold its head up and froth at the mouth.  Beauty comments, “Some people think it very fine to see this, and say, ‘What fine, spirited creatures!’”  But, he adds, “it is just as unnatural for horses as for men to foam at the mouth.”   </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">When he is released from the bearing rein, Beauty lowers his head, throws his full weight into the collar, and hauls the heavy cart the rest of the way up the hill.  The lady tries to persuade the man to leave the rein off for good.  He resists because he fears becoming “the laughing-stock of all the carters.”  Once the lady leaves, however, the man partly comes around, as Beauty observes: “I must do him the justice to say that he let my rein out several holes, and going uphill after that he always gave me my head.”  People can learn.  </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>Another hero of this story is Anna Sewell herself. </strong> The more I learned, the more I admired her.  For one thing, she must have been tenacious.  <em>Black Beauty</em>, her first and only novel, was written across a span of six years as she grew sicker and weaker.  At times, she was too weak physically to write–but she kept composing in her head anyway.  She could so easily have lost confidence and given up.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Further, she was an independent and creative thinker.  The novel was original in at least three ways.  First, she flouted gender norms by writing about horses, which were the domain of men.  Second, she flouted class norms by writing the book for those who worked with horses, rather than for those who owned them.  Horse-care manuals at the time targeted owners, especially hunters.  Third, she treated Beauty with honor and respect and created an autobiographical portrait befitting a person. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Today, the novel no longer seems that original.  We no longer feel how bold it was to go against gender and class norms the way she did.  Moreover, we take this fictional perspective for granted—that an animal has a distinct story—but that’s in part <em>because</em> of this book. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1113" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Maya_Redwings.jpg" alt="" width="194" height="258" /></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-size: 20px;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif;"><strong>Anna Sewell’s life (1820-1878) gave me a sobering sense of how financially precarious even middle-class people’s lives were in England in the 19<sup>th</sup> century. </strong> Like Beauty, her family descended through the class system.  Anna’s mother, Mary, had grown up on a thriving family farm in the English county of Norfolk and attended school.  They were landowners in a small town and relatively secure.  During the economic upheavals created by the Napoleonic Wars of 1800 to 1815, however, her father was forced to sell the farm.  As a result, Mary had to go to work as a teacher until she married a fellow Quaker, Isaac, more out of necessity than love.  </span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif;">But she didn’t find financial security; Isaac’s work life was unstable, the family’s income uneven and unreliable.  </span></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">When Anna was really young, Isaac went bankrupt.  Mary couldn’t afford books for her children, Anna and her younger brother, Philip, so she wrote her own primers, sold them to a publisher, and used the money she earned to buy books.  Anna didn’t go to school until she was 12 because they couldn’t afford the school fees (Philip started earlier, when he was nine), but Mary taught her children thoughtfully and well. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">The family moved frequently as Isaac changed jobs.  Though Anna experienced periods of stability and comfort, she learned early that life could change radically.  This was especially true for her physically.  As a child, she was bold and independent; but when she was about 12, she fell, badly twisted both ankles, and had to rely on crutches afterward.  Then, at 19, she developed chronic fatigue, pain in her muscles and joints, tenderness in her lymph nodes, and headaches.  Anna lived with limited mobility and the ups and downs of an mysterious chronic disease for the rest of her life.  She remained single and dependent on her family.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>How did an original novel come out of this unsettled and seemingly pinched life?</strong>  And  how did Anna Sewell learn so much about horses?</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">When Anna and Philip were young, Isaac and Mary were working so hard that they sent the children to spend time with relatives who still owned and worked a farm.  There, Anna learned to ride (sidesaddle) and to drive a carriage.  After she injured her ankles, she returned to the farm to recuperate and again rode frequently.  During one period years later, Anna drove her father each day to and from the train station in a light one-horse carriage.  For about six years the family lived on an isolated farm and Anna rode out on her own, with her horse essentially serving as her chaperone.  Riding gave her, a single woman whose walking was limited, freedom of movement and a chance to get exercise.  Her biographer Adrienne Gavin believes that riding always gave Anna “a sense of power and independence.”  At times, however, the family couldn’t keep a horse at all. </span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1114" style="width: 186px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1114" class="wp-image-1114" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Anna_Sewell.jpg" alt="" width="176" height="210" /><p id="caption-attachment-1114" class="wp-caption-text">Anna Sewell</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">When it came to writing, Anna had a creative model in her mother.  In the 1850s, Mary returned to writing and published a number of books of verse for children, and Anna served as her editor.  One, <em>Mother’s Last Words</em> (1865)<em>,</em> sold over a million copies in the United Kingdom, Europe, and the United States.  Her books’ success earned her some fame and the family a bit of financial cushion. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>Anna began to work on <em>Black Beauty</em> when she was in her early 50s, at the same time that her illness forced her to give her pony away. </strong> She remained housebound for the rest of her life.  Was writing the book a way to keep engaging with the world?  To express her gratitude to horses?  Both, I’d guess.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Her brother and her mother wholeheartedly supported her project.  Anna spent a lot of time talking with Philip about horses in general and about his horse Bessie, possibly the model for Black Beauty, in particular.  Both Philip and Mary read and commented on drafts.  Mary made fair copies and took dictation when Anna was too weak to write.  In 1877, Anna completed the manuscript.  Her mother took it to her own publisher, who bought it for £40, the equivalent of $5,700 in 2024.</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1123" style="width: 222px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1123" class="wp-image-1123" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/BlackBeautyCoverFirstEd1877-423x700.jpeg" alt="" width="212" height="350" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/BlackBeautyCoverFirstEd1877-423x700.jpeg 423w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/BlackBeautyCoverFirstEd1877.jpeg 440w" sizes="(max-width: 212px) 100vw, 212px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1123" class="wp-caption-text">A first edition of "Black Beauty"</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Insecure as the Sewell family was, their lives were far easier than the lives of most of their neighbors.  Awareness of poverty and its profound challenges runs throughout <em>Black Beauty</em>.  The fictional drivers and cabmen are forced to overwork themselves and their horses.  The character Jerry dramatizes these pressures and their cost.  Jerry collapses, possibly with pneumonia, and can no longer drive his cab.  Happily,  he finds a groom’s position in the countryside, but only by chance—just as chance later saves Beauty. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Everywhere they lived, Mary and Anna served others.  Anna was a teacher, a social activist, and a social worker, though never in a paid position.  Primarily, she taught reading and writing to children and working adults in Sunday schools and night courses.  In addition, she and her mother helped out those who were poor or sick, founded a community library, created a Working Men’s Hall, campaigned for temperance, and collaborated with others to create an alternative to the local poorhouse for orphans.  They formed a team, a “pair of twin souls” in the words of a family friend, who sought to make their community better.  Although Anna was ill and housebound when she wrote <em>Black Beauty</em>, the novel emerged from an active, purposeful life. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>In the 19<sup>th</sup> century, horsepower kept the industrial economy moving.</strong>  While steam power drove factories, boats, and locomotives, horses did everything that cars, trucks, vans, buses, and light rail do now, and more.  Horses moved people and goods; pulled ambulances, fire wagons, freight wagons of all sizes, canal boats, cabs, buses, and trolleys; and powered construction machinery such as cranes, pumps, and excavators.  They linked parts of the economy together—moved raw materials to and from boats and freight trains, food and manufactured goods to market and then to people’s homes.  As the economy grew and more goods were produced, more and more horses were needed. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Their numbers peaked at the end of the 19th century.  In Great Britain, at the time of the 1901 census, there were an estimated 3.25 million horses in a country with 41 million people.  About half worked in farming and the other half in transportation, shipping, and mining, according to the National Archives.  Horses moved more goods by weight than trains did.  Across the country, over a million horses were used for transporting goods and people, with the greatest concentration, an astronomical 300,000, in London, with its population of 6.5 million people.  (By contrast, in 1900 the much larger United States had many more horses.  There were approximately 21.5 million horses–including ponies, mules, and donkeys–and 76.3 million people, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.)</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1116" style="width: 460px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1116" class="wp-image-1116" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/StreetScene-500x367.jpg" alt="" width="450" height="330" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/StreetScene-500x367.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/StreetScene.jpg 600w" sizes="(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1116" class="wp-caption-text">London street scene</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">The next time you’re stuck in traffic, imagine that every car, van, bus, and truck is pulled by horses, singly or in teams.  Take away most of the rules.  Take away the smooth road surfaces, and replace them with cobbles, dirt, or mud.  Take away stop signs and traffic lights.  There were some right-of-way conventions and some one-way streets, but not much else.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Beauty describes a street that he and Jerry must navigate as they rush to make a train:</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-size: 20px;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif;">I had a very good mouth—that is, I could be guided by the slightest touch of the rein, and </span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif;">that is a great thing in London, amongst carriages, omnibuses, carts, vans, trucks, cabs, and great waggons creeping along at a walking pace; some going one way, some another, some going slowly, others wanting to pass them, omnibuses stopping short every few minutes to take up a passenger, obliging the horse that is coming up behind to pull up too, or to pass, and get before them, but just then something else comes dashing in through the narrow opening, and you have to keep in behind the omnibus again; presently you think you see a chance, and manage to get to the front, going so near the wheels on each side that half an inch nearer and they would scrape.</span></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Increasingly during the 19<sup>th</sup> century, horses pulled not only single cabs such as Jerry’s but also buses and trams, and were owned by large corporations.  The first horse bus in London, which began to operate in 1829, launched a revolution in public transportation.</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1117" style="width: 276px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1117" class="wp-image-1117" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/LondonHorseBus2-500x401.jpg" alt="" width="266" height="213" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/LondonHorseBus2-500x401.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/LondonHorseBus2.jpg 600w" sizes="(max-width: 266px) 100vw, 266px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1117" class="wp-caption-text">A London horse bus, with more people on top than inside</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Within three years, 400 horse buses were running.  Within 25, the London General Omnibus Company (LGOC) bought out three quarters of London’s horse buses and, by 1860, was carrying 40 million passengers a year.  Horse tramlines were added in parts of the city, and since the trams rolled more easily on tracks, it became possible to move more people with the same number of horses.  In the 1860s, London began to build and operate the Underground to ease the congestion in the streets, but buses, trams, and cabs were still needed where the lines didn’t reach.  In the 1890s, some 25,000 horses were hauling 2000 horse buses. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">The immense demand for horsepower created thousands and thousands of jobs–for stable hands, coachmen, cabmen, bus drivers, teamsters, smiths, farriers, saddlers, trainers, veterinarians, and horse breeders.  While human knowledge about horse behavior and care had accumulated over centuries, many of the new owners and workers were ignorant and inexperienced.  There was neither time nor resources for apprenticeships.  Workers were also under intense and constant pressure to move more goods, pick up more passengers, drive more hours, and meet deadlines.  <em>Black Beauty </em>chronicles the consequences for horses and drivers alike.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="wp-image-1118 alignleft" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/LondonStable-500x368.jpg" alt="" width="339" height="250" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/LondonStable-500x368.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/LondonStable.jpg 600w" sizes="(max-width: 339px) 100vw, 339px" /></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">For a time, Beauty is owned by a company that rents out horses and carriages.  Many of the drivers are inexperienced, and the worst treat him like a machine: “They always seemed to think that a horse was something like a steam-engine, only smaller.  At any rate, they think that if only they pay for it, a horse is bound to go just as far, and just as fast, and with just as heavy a load as they please.”  </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Horses frequently collapsed or died in the streets and at work sites.  Not surprisingly, animal welfare advocates zeroed in on the mistreatment of horses.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>Published in late November, 1877, <em>Black Beauty</em> hit a nerve.</strong>  It was reprinted five times in its first year and 35 times within the next ten.  By 1891, about one million copies had been sold.  A century later, some 40 million copies in multiple languages had been sold.  And the book keeps on selling.  I picked up a Puffins Classics edition from my local bookstore, with no need to special order it.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="wp-image-1119 alignright" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Black_Beauty-487x700.jpg" alt="" width="244" height="350" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Black_Beauty-487x700.jpg 487w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Black_Beauty-713x1024.jpg 713w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Black_Beauty-768x1103.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Black_Beauty.jpg 1044w" sizes="(max-width: 244px) 100vw, 244px" /></span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">The book’s huge global success can largely be attributed to an American animal welfare activist.  In the United States, the animal welfare movement came into existence right after the Civil War.  In 1866, the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) was founded in New York, followed in 1868 by the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (MSPCA).  The ASPCA, led by Henry Bergh, actively and provocatively intervened in cruelty cases—stopping overloaded horse trolleys in the streets, breaking up dog-fighting rings—and lobbied hard for anti-cruelty laws and the power to enforce them.  By contrast, the MSPCA focused on preventing cruelty through education.  George Angell, the founder of the MSPCA, built a large network of community leaders, school principals, and teachers across the country.  Angell and his allies sought to foster sympathy for animals by showing, according to Henry Bergh’s biographer, “how very human a beast could be.”</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">In 1890, Angell discovered <em>Black Beauty</em> with its very appealing hero, promptly pirated the book, and became its biggest champion and publicist.  Sewell’s intentions to “induce kindness, sympathy, and an understanding treatment of horses” aligned perfectly with his mission.  Angell raised money to print and distribute the novel to owners, stable hands, drivers, and school children throughout the United States for free or for pennies.  He commissioned translations into German, Italian, Spanish, Swedish, and Japanese over the next couple of years (it had already been translated into French)—and later into Dutch, Hindustani, Greek, Chinese, Turkish, Armenian, and Braille.  Between 1890 and 1910, the MSPCA and its allies gave away 2 to 3 million copies.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>Sadly, Sewell died five months after her book was published.  </strong>Although she didn’t witness its wide success, she lived long enough to know that it was receiving enthusiastic reviews and selling well.  The RSPCA endorsed it as “one of the best books recently published in support of our principles.”  Edward Fordham Flower, a leading anti-cruelty campaigner and author of the exposé <em>Bits and Bearing Reins </em>(1875), admired <em>Black Beauty</em> and hoped to meet Sewell if she ever came to London (she couldn’t, of course). Along with other readers, he marveled that a woman knew so much about horses.  A friend of Sewell’s wrote to her, “One would think you had been a horse-dealer, or a groom, or a jockey all your life.”  This was unthinkable in her day.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><em>Black Beauty</em> reached readers who would never have picked up <em>Bits and Bearing Reins</em> or a horse-care manual.  Sewell helped millions of people see through a horse’s eyes and empathize.  Each new reader encounters Beauty for the first time and realizes that a horse is not an object but a being with a life and a story–and that a horse suffers, just as we do.  </span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1120" style="width: 360px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1120" class="wp-image-1120" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Ann-Lindo-in-1886.jpg" alt="" width="350" height="260" /><p id="caption-attachment-1120" class="wp-caption-text">Ann Lindo at the Home of Rest for Horses</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>For some readers, this realization led to significant action. </strong> <em>Black Beauty</em> inspired Ann Lindo to create what’s considered to be the first horse sanctuary and charity in the world in 1886.  She founded the Home of Rest for Horses to serve the twofold purpose of helping the working cab horses of London and their driver-owners.  Like Sewell, Lindo understood that the drivers had to work long hours if they hoped to support themselves and their families–and that this frequently meant overworking their horses.  The Home of Rest for Horses took in a sick, exhausted horse; loaned the driver a healthy replacement, along with a supply of food, for a reasonable fee; and after the horse had rested and regained its health and strength, returned the owner’s horse.  The system was ingenious–and an immediate success, as the Home of Rest for Horses attracted both users and donors.  I think it’s safe to say that Anna Sewell would have loved it.  Others followed Lindo’s example soon after in the United Kingdom, the United States, and elsewhere and created horse sanctuaries.  </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Years later, reading <em>Black Beauty</em> as a boy moved the writer Cleveland Amory (1917-1998) to become a life-long activist for both wild and domestic animals.  In 1979 he created an animal sanctuary on 1400 acres of land in Texas and named it Black Beauty Ranch.  It is now home to some 650 animals–from horses to kangaroos, pigs to zebras–that have been rescued from research labs, roadside zoos, exotic pet traders, and other dangerous situations.  Amory’s <em>New York Times</em> obituary in 1998 noted that he believed that “if everyone thought about what it would be like to be in an animal's place, there might be more compassion in the world.”</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Now, there are an estimated 200 horse sanctuaries in the United Kingdom and 600 in the United States.  They range from small farms that take in a few horses, ponies, donkeys, and mules to large sophisticated operations.  (My research about horse sanctuaries took me down quite a few rabbit holes.  If you like rabbit holes, too, see the very end of this.  There are some notes on sanctuaries, shelters, and rescues after the list of references.)</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>George Angell made sure that <em>Black Beauty</em> reached millions of readers all over the world.  </strong>By putting the book in the hands of so many schoolchildren, his campaign also helped transform a social protest novel into a children’s classic.  The word <em>classic </em>suggests that the novel also became a historical artifact.  Indeed, by the time I read <em>Black Beauty</em> in the mid-1960s, the world of the novel was gone, though it still lingered in my grandparents’ and even my parents’ memories.  The word <em>classic</em> also means that the book packs emotional and imaginative power.  Books don’t become children’s classics unless they’re meaningful and authentic and unless children, who are demanding readers, want to read them. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><em>Black Beauty</em> raised public awareness, but what finally, fully transformed the lives of millions of working horses was technological innovation.  In 1899, the London General Omnibus Company introduced motorized buses, and within 15 years Londoners were riding in motor vehicles rather than horse-drawn carriages and buses.  That’s a swift change.  Horses still hauled individual cabs and freight carts and, according to The National Archive, outnumbered tractors on British farms until 1950.  But the age of the working horse in industrialized countries was at an end. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>This story has sweet endnotes</strong>.  In 2022, Anna Sewell’s birthplace in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, officially became the Anna Sewell House.  It is now run as an education center by Redwings Horse Sanctuary, the largest horse sanctuary in the United Kingdom. </span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Redwings teamed up with the University of East Anglia to publish a special edition of <em>Black Beauty</em>, released on November 24, 2023, the anniversary date of its original publication.  Half the proceeds will go to support the work of Redwings.  As far as the staff at Redwings know, this is the first time that <em>Black Beauty</em>’s sales will directly support horse welfare.  To celebrate the publication, Redwings sponsored a writing competition for young people, ages 7-12 and 13-18, to write a story from the point of view of an animal.  One of the judges remarked, “We were blown away by the number of entries we received, which were staggeringly good. It was both a joy and a heartbreak to read the moving work by these young writers.”  Anna Sewell’s spirit lives on.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="wp-image-1121 aligncenter" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/HorseFriend-500x443.jpg" alt="" width="425" height="377" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/HorseFriend-500x443.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/HorseFriend-1024x907.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/HorseFriend-768x680.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/HorseFriend-1536x1361.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/HorseFriend-scaled.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 425px) 100vw, 425px" /><br />
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	<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>References (in the order of their first appearance):</strong></span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Adrienne E. Gavin.  <em>Dark Horse: A Life of Anna Sewell</em>.  Sutton, 2004.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">This book provided me with biographical background and quotations from Sewell and her contemporaries.  It also provided information about Black Beauty's composition, publishing history, reception, and success.  You can also find encyclopedia entries on both Anna and Marty Sewell.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Anna Sewell.  <em>Black Beauty</em>. 1954.  Introduced by Meg Rosoff, illustrated by Charlotte Hough.  </span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Puffin         Classics, 2015.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Bernard Unti.  “Sewell, Ann.”  Marc Bekoff and Carron A. Meaney, eds.  <em>Encyclopedia of </em></span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><em>Animal Rights and Animal Welfare</em>.  Routledge, 1998. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Anne Norton Greene.  <em>Horses at Work: Harnessing Power in Industrial America.</em>  Harvard </span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">University Press, 2008.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">This book focuses on the horse in the United States starting with early colonial history and shows how our reliance on the horse shaped land use, historical development, and industrialization.  It helped me understand the work of horses in the industrial economy and city.  It includes a section on <em>Black Beauty</em>. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">The National Archives, United Kingdom, “<a href="https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/pathways/census/living/move/horse.htm" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Living in 1901</span></a>.”</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">London Transport Museum. “<a href="https://www.ltmuseum.co.uk/collections/stories/transport/londons-horse-bus-era-1829-1910" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">London’s Horse Bus Era, 1829-1910</span></a>.” </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Ernest Freeberg.  <em>A Traitor to His Species: Henry Bergh and the Birth of the Animal </em></span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><em>Rights Movement</em>.  Basic Books, 2020.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">This biography of Bergh and his founding of the ASPCA included sections on George Angell, his emphasis on humane education, the work of the MSPCA, and <em>Black Beauty</em>.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">The Horse Trust, “<a href="https://horsetrust.org.uk/our-story/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Our Story</span></a>.”  </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><a href="https://www.humanesociety.org/blackbeautyranch" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Black Beauty Ranch</span></a>  </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Enid Nemy. “<a href="https://www.nytimes.com/1998/10/16/arts/cleveland-amory-dies-at-81-writer-and-animal-advocate.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Cleveland Amory Dies as 81; Writer and Animal Advocate</span></a>.”  <em>New York Times</em>, Oct. 16, 1998.  </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">“<a href="https://www.redwings.org.uk/news-and-features/anna-sewell-house-announcement" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Redwings Takes on Historic Anna Sewell House</span></a>” (July 21, 2022),</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">“<a href="https://www.redwings.org.uk/news-and-features/winners-black-beauty-inspired-writing-competition-revealed" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><span style="color: #000000; text-decoration: underline;">Winners of</span> <em>Black Beauty</em>-inspired Writing Competition Revealed</span></a>” (Dec 6, 2023), </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">To learn more about the the new edition of <em>Black Beauty</em>, the Anna Sewell House, and Anna </span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Sewell herself, you can listen to <a href="https://www.redwings.org.uk/news-and-features/sounds-sanctuary-anna-sewells-legacy" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">this audio posting</span></a> from Redwings Horse Sanctuary:</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>And Down Some Rabbit Holes…<br />
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<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">T<strong>he Home of Rest for Horses</strong> still exists, though it has moved a number of times and changed a lot.  After cabs were motorized, they cared for cart horses.  During World War I, the Home took in and treated injured Army horses.  After the war, they  began to take in veteran Army horses.  During World War II, the Home sheltered and treated horses (and other animals) injured or displaced in air raids.  Renamed in 2006, The Horse Trust now focuses on the welfare of horses in general and supports scientific research and education.  They take in horses that have retired from public service with the police, the military, the royal stables, and public charities, as well as neglected and abused rescues.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><a href="https://horsetrust.org.uk/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Horse Trust</span></a>   </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">In Philadelphia in 1888, the first horse sanctuary in the United States, <strong>Ryerss Infirmary for Dumb Animals</strong>, was founded by a family of animal rights activists, who in 1867 had helped found the Pennsylvania SPCA.  Originally located on the family’s farmland within Philadelphia’s city limits, they cared for working horses and ponies after they were too old to work.  They still take in retired horses, but have had to move several times.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><a href="https://www.ryerssfarm.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Ryerss Farm for Aged Equines</span></a>    </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">In 1907, the <strong>Animal Rescue League of Boston</strong> founder Anna Harris Smith bought property in Dedham as a sanctuary for Boston’s working horses and other homeless animals.  The property is also a pet cemetery, Pine Ridge Pet Cemetery, which only recently stopped new burials.  I wrote earlier about pet cemeteries, including this one, in “<a href="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/our-sydney-born-a-dog-lived-like-a-gentleman-died-beloved/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Our Sydney: Born a Dog, Lived Like a Gentleman, Died Beloved</span></a>.”  There is still an animal shelter at the site in Dedham.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><a href="https://www.arlboston.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Animal Rescue League of Boston</span></a>   </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">In 1984 in the United Kingdom, <strong>Redwings Horse Sanctuary</strong> was started after a small group of people rescued a single pony.  The charity now cares for some 1500 horses, ponies, donkeys, and mules at 11 sites across England and Scotland.  They have a specialized horse hospital and a staff of 300, including equine veterinarians, nurses, behavior and welfare specialists, and farm managers.  About 500 of their horses have been placed in individual homes, while Redwings provides support and retains legal ownership.  I haven’t found anything comparable to it in the U.S.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><a href="https://www.redwings.org.uk/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Redwings Horse Sanctuary</span></a>   </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">One of the largest sanctuaries in the United States is <strong>Freedom Reigns Equine Sanctuary</strong>, with about 500 rescued horses living on a 4000-acre ranch in Los Gatos, CA.</span></p>
<p><a href="https://www.freedomreignsequinesanctuary.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Freedom Reigns Equine Sanctuary</span></span></a></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1125" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Fox-Redwings.jpg" alt="" width="352" height="500" /></span><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>Closer to Home</strong></span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">In Vermont, there are about 15 rescues and sanctuaries ranging in size and mission.  Horses come to these organizations for three main reasons: first, an owner needs to surrender the horse the way we surrender cats and dogs to a shelter (this may include old horses); second, the horse is seized by the police because of abuse or neglect; and third, the horse is being sold at auction and is probably headed to the slaughterhouse.  In 2007, the slaughter of horses for human consumption was banned in the U.S., but the law did not expressly forbid shipping horses out of the country, to Canada or Mexico, for slaughter.  Many rescue organizations seek to save these horses.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>Gerda’s Equine Rescue</strong> in West Townshend rescues horses, ponies, and donkeys bound for slaughter.  Since they were founded in 2005, GER has rescued, rehabilitated, and found homes for about 1000 horses. </span></p>
<p><a href="https://www.gerdasequinerescue.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Gerda’s Equine Rescue</span></span></a></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Founded in 2012, <strong>Dorset Equine Rescue</strong> in East Dorset accepts owner-surrendered horses, ponies, and donkeys, and rescues others from kill pens and from abuse and neglect.  In 2021, they went through a rigorous accreditation process with the Global Federation of Animal Sanctuaries.  As of 2021, they had rescued, rehabilitated, and found homes for about 200 horses.   </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><a href="https://dorsetequinerescue.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Dorset Equine Rescue</span></a>   </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;">Founded in 2016, the <strong>Merrymac Farm Sanctuary</strong> in Charlotte cares for more than 100 abandoned, surrendered, or abused farm animals.  They shelter about 20 horses, ponies, and donkeys; along with ducks, turkeys, chickens, rabbits, sheep, pigs, goats, and a couple of cats.  In the summer of 2023, they took in two severely malnourished horses from Leicester, VT, that had been seized by the police. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: times new roman, times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><a href="https://www.merrymacfarmsanctuary.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Merrymac Farm Sanctuary</span></a>  </span></p>
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		<title>The Three Bears</title>
		<link>https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/the-three-bears/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[petspeopleandotheranimals_j22bm3]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jun 2023 16:48:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/?p=1088</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Fast asleep with her cubs tucked in On April 6th, they left around 8:00 in the evening.  The two cubs’ heads were snuggled up against their mother’s belly as if they had fallen asleep while nursing.  The bigger cub stirred, began to squirm, and then clambered over its sibling and on top of its mother. &#8230;]]></description>
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	<p><div id="attachment_1090" style="width: 510px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1090" class="wp-image-1090 size-medium" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Fast-Asleep-500x269.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="269" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Fast-Asleep-500x269.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Fast-Asleep-1024x551.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Fast-Asleep-768x413.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Fast-Asleep-1536x827.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Fast-Asleep-scaled.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1090" class="wp-caption-text">Fast asleep with her cubs tucked in</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">On April 6th, they left around 8:00 in the evening.  The two cubs’ heads were snuggled up against their mother’s belly as if they had fallen asleep while nursing.  The bigger cub stirred, began to squirm, and then clambered over its sibling and on top of its mother.  The cubs did this all the time—using their mother’s big body like a log—but this time she heaved up, sending both cubs rolling, and walked straight out of the den.  The bigger cub righted itself and trotted after her.  The smaller one wobbled for a minute or two.  <em>Go</em>, I urged, <em>catch up</em>. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The three of them had left the den before, but this was different.  The mom moved with purpose, as if she had somewhere else to be.  This turned out to be true; she was leaving the den for good.  I felt let down and sad that I wouldn’t be able to keep watching the bears, but also immensely grateful.  For a few weeks, I’d had an opportunity to peer into a bear den–an unknown world.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>Back in November, a mother bear made her den beneath a deck in the Poconos in northeastern Pennsylvania.</strong>  With lots of varied food sources, Pennsylvania is excellent bear country.  An estimated 15,000 to 16,000 bears live in the state, mostly along the wooded Appalachian chain and especially in the northeast.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The homeowners had planned to replace their side porch, but when the carpenters arrived, they found the bear fast asleep in one corner.  They let her be.  The state Game Commission set up a wildlife camera and microphone, and a lot of people started to watch.  I learned about it in March and as soon as I spotted a cub, I was hooked.  I showed my wife, and she was hooked.  We shared the link with family and friends, who shared it with their family and friends, and many of them got hooked, too.  With infrared lighting, the bears were visible night and day.  I checked in a lot.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The mother bear was groggy, sluggish.  When the cubs nosed into her side, she arranged herself to let them nurse and fell back to sleep.  At times, she propped herself up against the wall, but her head soon lolled to one side.  She expanded her hole, settled in, and fell back to sleep.   When the bigger cub climbed on her head and chewed her ear, which happened more and more, she shook it off and sometimes set a big paw on it, and fell back to sleep.  Noises, however, woke her right up.  She’d go on alert and then slowly lower her head.  For a time, she kept her eyes open, but then fell back to sleep.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The cubs were easy to tell apart.  One was larger, a darker color, active, and bold.  This cub pounced on its sibling; climbed up its mother’s side, tumbled off, and climbed again; and balanced atop her back and clawed at the rafters (the joists, really).  When one of its claws snagged in the wood, it would teeter, dangle, and then fall.  We dubbed this one Ramona, in honor of Ramona the Pest, the lead character in the children’s book of that name.  The other was smaller, about two thirds the size, and a lighter color.  It was not as strong and much shakier on its feet.  This one tended to stay tucked up against its mother.  When Ramona pounced, it would try to hold its ground.  It didn’t wrestle much.  We dubbed this one Mr. Beasley—just because.  Later, from a post on the comments thread, we learned that we had by chance gotten the sexes right.</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1091" style="width: 455px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1091" class="wp-image-1091" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BeasleyandMom-500x406.jpg" alt="" width="445" height="361" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BeasleyandMom-500x406.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BeasleyandMom-1024x831.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BeasleyandMom-768x623.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BeasleyandMom-1536x1246.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BeasleyandMom.jpg 1570w" sizes="(max-width: 445px) 100vw, 445px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1091" class="wp-caption-text">Mr. Beasley snuggled up, right where he liked to be.</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Ramona steadily grew more active and adventurous.  She spent more time perched atop her mother’s back stretching for the rafters.  She roughed up her brother.  She poked into the corners and started to venture outside.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Mr. Beasley, though slowly and tentatively, played and explored, too.  Occasionally, he even jumped Ramona and initiated their play.  I realized that Ramona’s pesty qualities weren’t pesty at all.  She was not only learning and getting stronger as she rolled her little brother, but she was helping him learn and get stronger, too. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The bears must have heard the camera.  It’s not surprising, since bears’ hearing is twice as sensitive as ours and picks up a wider frequency of sounds.  The mother bear often looked right at the camera, more than by chance.  Ramona nosed and pawed it.  Several times, when I opened the link, the camera was pointing up at the boards or down at the ground, until someone readjusted it from afar. The bolder Ramona became, the more frequently this happened.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">As the cubs grew more active, so did their mother.  She seemed less inclined to fall fast asleep whenever she could, though she still slept plenty.  She started to leave the den and forage in the local trash cans.  Cans, jars, wrapping, and plastic bags littered the space.  Trash wasn’t exactly part of my image of a bear’s den.  I realized it was time to go learn more about bears.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>The first thing I had to rethink was the den.</strong>  <em>Den</em> connotes shelter, a cozy retreat, a nice dry cave.  Far from it.  In late fall, though exactly when depends on climate and food supply, bears find a den.  Black bears den in all sorts of places—in cavities under the roots of fallen trees, hollowed out logs, holes dug into banks, indentations in the ground, and, yes, even caves.  They’ll excavate if necessary and line the space with leaves, bark, and twigs.  This mother bear dug a bear-size hole against a foundation wall and chewed into the joists directly above her hole to expand her space.  (Good thing the homeowners had already planned to rebuild the deck.)  The cold poses less of a problem than I’d assumed, because when bears curl up, only their thickly furred backs are exposed.  But what about the cubs?  Their mother’s body is their den within the den, offering warmth, shelter, and protection.  Some commenters on the web-cam site worried about the cold and the snow and rain getting in on the bears.  But really this mother had found luxury digs, spacious and well drained–even though her denning under a deck is a sign of habitat loss.     </span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1092" style="width: 370px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1092" class="wp-image-1092" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/bear_den.jpg" alt="" width="360" height="247" /><p id="caption-attachment-1092" class="wp-caption-text">A more typical den. Photo: North American Bear Center</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Next was hibernation.  The mother bear’s behavior didn’t look like hibernation as I have always thought about it: A deep suspension that carried a creature through the whole winter.  That clearly wasn’t the case here.  Was she really hibernating?  What state was the mother bear in when she gave birth?  Could she really be alert enough to care for her newborns?  If she was awake, did she need food or water?  Did she pee and poop in the den?</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Here’s what I found.  For mammals, hibernation is broadly defined as a seasonal reduction in metabolism that enables a species to survive the cold and lack of food, with an emphasis on <em>broadly</em>.  It covers a range of adaptations from the continuous hibernation of a woodchuck, whose metabolic rate and body temperature plummet and stay low; to the phased hibernation of a chipmunk, which wakes every few days to raise its body temperature, eat from its store of food, move around, and pee, before going back to sleep. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The bear falls in the middle of this range.  A bear’s metabolic rate drops but not extremely.  Instead of taking six to ten breaths per minute, it takes one every 45 seconds; its heart rate dips from 40 to 50 beats per minute to eight to 19 beats.  No wonder the mother bear kept nodding off!  A bear’s body temperature also drops, but only about 12 degrees and never falls below 88.  Her core stays warm, which enables her to warm her cubs.  She also retains enough brain function to care for them.  The temperature change can actually vary den by den.  If a mother bear’s den is in the open, her body temperature stays close to normal. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>For bears, the problem is lack of food.</strong>  A New England black bear doesn’t eat—though it may occasionally wake, leave the den, and drink—between November and late March or early April, but lives off its stored fat.  A Minnesota black bear, where winters last longer, dens from September or October until April.  It depends, too, on variable food supply; in years when fewer tree nuts are available, bears hibernate earlier.  They can lose 15-30% of their body weight, and nursing mothers as much as 40%.  As Mary Holland reports in her book <em>Naturally Curious</em>, a nursing mother loses from about a third to over half a pound a day. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">To make it through, bears need a lot of fat.  In the late summer and early autumn, they enter the first phase of hibernation, a period of insatiable hunger called hyperphagia, and build fat.  This layer of fat can become several inches thick.  While chipmunks store as much food as they can in their burrows, bears store as much food as they can in their bodies.  During hyperphagia, they may consume over 20,000 calories a day.  That means eating whatever they can find wherever they can find it, and eating pretty much all the time.  Check out the “Fat Bear Week” contest in early October, sponsored by Katmai National Park in Alaska, when they track how impressively large some of the grizzlies grow by catching salmon along the Brooks River.  In 2022, a bear numbered 747–I thought he was named for the jumbo jet–won the adult bracket. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Bears have another extraordinary adaptation: delayed implantation.  While they mate in May and early June, the fertilized egg only implants in the uterine wall around the time the bear dens.  Whether a bear’s pregnancy will take or not depends on her weight.  The typical litter is two to three cubs.  The North American Bear Center in northern Minnesota reports that, in that region, mother bears weighing 176 pounds or more give birth in January and have enough milk to support their cubs. Female bears weighing less than 148 pounds don’t give birth at all.  Those weighing between 148 and 176 pounds may or may not give birth, and the cubs may or may not make it.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">We wondered if the mother bear peed or pooped in her den.  No.  When a bear hibernates, her system forms an intestinal plug made up of feces, hair, and dead cells.  She processes her wastes by reusing them.  The urea, which is produced as she burns her fat and becomes dangerous as it builds up in the blood, gets broken down.  One of the products of that process, nitrogen, builds protein that supports her muscles and organs.  Remarkably, bears leave their dens in the spring with about as much muscle as they had in the fall.  The first poop of the spring is the fecal plug.  Since food isn’t plentiful in the early spring, she still lives off her stored fat to sustain herself and her babies.  In the early weeks of moving around, her gut and metabolism gradually return to normal. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>We missed Ramona and Mr. Beasley’s earliest days.</strong>  Of course, there wasn’t a whole lot <em>to</em> miss, since they did little but sleep, nurse, and grow.  The mother bear slept when they slept, and roused in her groggy way when they needed her.  At birth, they were tiny and helpless.  They weighed eight to 12 ounces, were seven to eight inches long, couldn’t see or hear, and had little fur.  Their mother, despite her lowered metabolism, cleaned them, nursed them, warmed them, protected them, and licked their genital area and anus so they would pee and poop--and consumed their stools to get any nutritional benefit.  So she does eat, though it can’t count for much.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The cubs grew a lot.  During a mother bear’s early lactation, her milk’s fat content can be as high as 30%.  That’s as rich as whipping cream.  By the time a cub leaves the den, depending on its mother’s milk production and the size of the litter, it is between four and 10 pounds.  Cubs stay with their mother through the year and hibernate with her their first full winter.  By the time the family hibernates the following fall, a cub weighs close to 80 pounds.  They are usually weaned in the fall, but sometimes not until the spring.  Then, their mother runs them off, and she mates again. </span></p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="size-medium wp-image-1093 alignright" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Beasley-Eye-500x314.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="314" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Beasley-Eye-500x314.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Beasley-Eye-1024x643.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Beasley-Eye-768x483.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Beasley-Eye-1536x965.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Beasley-Eye.jpg 2034w" sizes="(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">I loved watching the mother bear.  Even half asleep, she moved her big body carefully so she wouldn’t crush her babies.  There was something familiar, tender, and comic in her attempts to sleep while Ramona, and increasingly even Mr. Beasley, clambered up her side and perched atop her head.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>The</strong> <strong>cubs were irresistible.  </strong>Humans invented teddy bears for good reason, since bear cubs might as well be puppies, kittens, and human babies wrapped into one.  Underneath our sentimental goofiness about cubs, there’s a biological imperative called the <em>cute response</em>.  Many mammals, including human ones, have evolved attention and caretaking responses to certain features of baby animals, which are called the baby schema.  Simply put, sections of the brain reflexively kick into gear at the sight of these features.  As an adaptation this makes good sense, since the animals most attuned to their young's needs are more likely to pass on their genes.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">I wrote about the cute response earlier in the article “Your Brain on Babies,” so I’ll borrow from myself for the rest of this paragraph to describe the baby schema:  First, there’s babyfacedness: a proportionally large round head and prominent forehead; big eyes, facing forward and positioned slightly lower on the face; and a small nose, small mouth, receding chin, and round cheeks.  Next, there’s the soft round body, with short pudgy legs and arms and soft flexible skin. In other words, your classic cute baby.  The “cutest” babies, the ones who fit these patterns most closely, have the most intense effects on our brains, whether we’re conscious of it or not.  Finally, the cute response comprises more than looks, but the whole baby package.  We respond to the clumsy movements, wobbling, playfulness, and helplessness of infants, toddlers, and small children.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">But why do I have the cute response to a bear cub?  Apparently, the brain doesn’t distinguish between baby bears and baby humans.  Mr. Beasley, wobbly and uncertain, paused before toddling after his mother and sister into an unknown future, and the whole baby package elicited my attention and urge to take care of him.  And here’s Ramona looking especially endearing, with Mr. Beasley a bit out of focus in front.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong><img decoding="async" class="size-medium wp-image-1094 alignleft" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Family-Photo-500x318.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="318" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Family-Photo-500x318.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Family-Photo-1024x652.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Family-Photo-768x489.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Family-Photo-1536x978.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Family-Photo.jpg 1658w" sizes="(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" />The bear watchers were all under the spell of the cute response.</strong>  Whenever I opened my computer and started to follow Ramona and Mr. Beasley, I entered a time warp, the way it feels to hang out with human babies.  An hour could slip by before I knew it. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">I became curious about my fellow bear watchers, as well.  At first, I ignored the comment thread, but then started to read and appreciate it.  I’d watch the bear cam and, when the mom and cubs settled, scroll down.  Comment threads often degenerate, but this one was warm and generous.  Once or twice, a curmudgeon tried to burst the sweet bubble, but without success.  I suspect the cute response helped shape the community around a positive interest and cause: the welfare of the bears.  No snark allowed!  People admired the mother bear, identified with her sleepy patience, and out and out loved the “little bear family.”  They anthropomorphized like crazy, but I’m pretty sure they knew they were doing it.  They also posed questions about the mother’s and cubs’ behavior and bears in general, and thanked one another for information.  After Ramona knocked the camera off kilter, they thanked the technician who readjusted it.  If the den was empty and someone worried “Oh, no–have they left for good?” someone else would respond that they’d seen them shortly before and send a screenshot. Finally, lots of people expressed their gratitude to the homeowners for making the bears welcome and the experience possible. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">After the little cub trundled after his sister and mother and the three bears left the den for good, the bear watchers grieved.  Some admitted crying, one wrote poems, and many suffered bear-cam withdrawal.  I only know this because I kept checking the website: Maybe the bears hadn’t <em>really</em> left yet (I knew better).  I also wondered about my fellow humans.  What were they saying now?  Some posted screenshots and video clips as gifts for the rest of us.  I’ve used some of those screenshots here. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The last time I checked, on May 4th, a few bear watchers were still posting comments to the site. The camera was down, the Game Commission had posted an informative wrap-up video, and the homeowner reported that the bear family was still in the area and that both cubs were “healthy and thriving.”  Sadly, that post also included news that a different mother bear in the area had been shot and killed.  Her cubs had stayed near her body before being rescued by game wardens.  The hopeful news: these cubs were probably left with other mother bears with newborn cubs, who usually accept orphans and raise them as their own.  Most foster bears make it.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">One creative, technically savvy person posted an idyllic forest scene with the bear family photoshopped into it.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><img decoding="async" class="alignright wp-image-1095" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Testing-123-bears-500x338.jpg" alt="" width="546" height="369" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Testing-123-bears-500x338.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Testing-123-bears-1024x692.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Testing-123-bears-768x519.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Testing-123-bears-1536x1038.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Testing-123-bears.jpg 1826w" sizes="(max-width: 546px) 100vw, 546px" /></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">This is a crazily unrealistic view of nature, of course, even leaving humans out of it.  But I still love it.  If only this lovely green world were real, and the three bears safe.  Especially Mr. Beasley.  Though the homeowner said the little bear’s gaining weight and catching up with his sister, I worry about him.    </span></p>
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	<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 20px;"><strong>Want to know more about bears?</strong></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">My research led me to terrific sources.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Mary Holland.  <em>Naturally Curious: A Photographic Field Guide and Month-by-Month Journey through the Fields, Woods, and Marshes of New England</em> (Trafalgar Square Books, 2010, revised 2019). </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">I already owned this book and had consulted it about peepers and newts, owls, wildflowers and trees.  It’s an engaging guide to what is happening in the woods where I walk in different seasons.  Holland has a lot of material on bears. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The author has a great blog, also called <strong>Naturally Curious </strong></span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><a href="https://naturallycuriouswithmaryholland.wordpress.com/category/naturally-curious-blog/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://naturallycuriouswithmaryholland.wordpress.com/category/naturally-curious-blog/</a></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">She posts photographs with short focused articles that are relevant to the season.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Check out the website for the <strong>North American Bear Center</strong>, based in Ely, in the northeastern part of Minnesota: <a href="https://bear.org/bear-facts/black-bears/basic-bear-facts/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://bear.org/bear-facts/black-bears/basic-bear-facts/</a> </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Not only is there a lot of information on this site, but also many photographs and videos.  This includes a video of a mother bear in her den with her cubs.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The <strong>Kilham Bear Center</strong> in western New Hampshire takes in orphaned bear cubs from New Hampshire, Vermont, and Massachusetts.  For thirty years, they have raised and prepared cubs for reintroduction to the wild as yearlings, in collaboration with the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.  Many of the bears have thrived and had many of their own cubs.  Here’s their link: <a href="https://kilhambearcenter.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://kilhambearcenter.org/</a></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The <strong>Pennsylvania Game Commission</strong> posted a short video about the bears–hibernation, denning, and cubs–featuring one of their bear biologists, Mark Ternent:</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><a href="https://hdontap.com/index.php/video/stream/pennsylvania-bear-den-live-cam?fbclid=IwAR3G2bVqpLpeuPLJcOKvkX7BetxSCLjAve8m7yhEtRKju1utomRTEN9yUm0" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://hdontap.com/index.php/video/stream/pennsylvania-bear-den-live-cam?fbclid=IwAR3G2bVqpLpeuPLJcOKvkX7BetxSCLjAve8m7yhEtRKju1utomRTEN9yUm0</a></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The Game Commission also produced <em>Pennsylvania Black Bear Den 2023 Wrap Up</em>, a 30-plus-minute video with Emily Carrollo, a black bear biologist, and Bryan Mowrer, a game warden, both from the agency.  It’s fun and really informative.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><a href="https://hdontap.com/index.php/video/stream/pennsylvania-bear-den-live-cam?fbclid=IwAR3G2bVqpLpeuPLJcOKvkX7BetxSCLjAve8m7yhEtRKju1utomRTEN9yUm0" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://hdontap.com/index.php/video/stream/pennsylvania-bear-den-live-cam?fbclid=IwAR3G2bVqpLpeuPLJcOKvkX7BetxSCLjAve8m7yhEtRKju1utomRTEN9yUm0</a></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Just in case the mother bear returned, no one entered the den for over a week after the bears left. The film opens as Carrollo and Mowrer crawl into the den and ends as they crawl back out, hauling cans, jars, and wrappers with them. They use the film as an opportunity to respond to people’s questions directly, to educate the public about bears in general, and to minimize dangerous interactions between bears and people. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">They recommend a website about safely sharing our habitat with bears: <a href="https://bearwise.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://bearwise.org/</a></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">This site also offers a lot of excellent information about bear biology.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>The National Park Service</strong> provides information that is largely geared to park visitors in order to keep both people and bears safe.  Here’s their main information page: <a href="https://www.nps.gov/subjects/bears/index.htm" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://www.nps.gov/subjects/bears/index.htm</a></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Individual parks where bears are common, such as <strong>Yellowstone National Park</strong>, have information specific to their own bears and region.  <a href="https://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/grizzlybear.htm" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> </a><a href="https://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/grizzlybear.htm">https://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/grizzlybear.htm</a></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">I found this thoroughly researched article on grizzlies in Yellowstone on the park website:</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Mark J. Biel and Kerry A. Gunter, “Denning and Hibernation Behavior.”  INFORMATION PAPER No. BMO-10.  Bear Management Office, Yellowstone National Park.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><a href="https://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/denning.htm" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/denning.htm</a></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">And, finally, there’s “Fat Bear Week”–a playful way to educate us humans about bears.  <strong>Katmai National Park and Preserve</strong>, located at the base of the long peninsula that separates the Gulf of Alaska from the Bering Sea and home to an abundant salmon run in the Brooks River, sponsors “an annual celebration of success” in early October. <a href="https://www.nps.gov/katm/learn/fat-bear-week.htm" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://www.nps.gov/katm/learn/fat-bear-week.htm</a>.</span></p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">1088</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>&#8220;Eavesdropping on the Human World&#8221;</title>
		<link>https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/eavesdropping-on-the-human-world/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[petspeopleandotheranimals_j22bm3]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 May 2022 21:01:46 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Animals and Psychology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/?p=1054</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Clever Hans with board for tapping More Reflections on Animals, Humans, and Being Smart. People flocked to see Clever Hans.  He wasn’t an acrobatic Lipizzaner or the Secretariat of his day.  But when his owner asked “What is 4 + 8?” the horse tapped his hoof twelve times.  Hans could count the number of people&#8230;]]></description>
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<p><div id="attachment_1056" style="width: 467px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1056" class="wp-image-1056" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cleverhans.gif" alt="" width="457" height="340" /><p id="caption-attachment-1056" class="wp-caption-text">Clever Hans with board for tapping</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>More Reflections on Animals, Humans, and Being Smart.</strong></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">People flocked to see Clever Hans.  He wasn’t an acrobatic Lipizzaner or the Secretariat of his day.  But when his owner asked “What is 4 + 8?” the horse tapped his hoof twelve times.  Hans could count the number of people in the audience.  He could count how many of the men were wearing hats.  He could subtract, multiply, divide, and figure fractions.  He could tell time.  He could spell words by tapping out the letters (one for A, two for B, etc.).  He could see a painting and tap out the artist’s name, hear a melody and tap out the composer’s.  He was the next best thing to a talking horse.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Or so people, including his owner, believed.  If you’ve run across the name Clever Hans before, it was probably in a psychology text or encyclopedia. What’s astounding about this horse’s story is how it encapsulates the weird ways that people have overvalued, undervalued, and generally misconstrued animal intelligence.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">In 1871, Darwin argued that the theory of evolution meant that “The difference in mind between man and the higher animals, great as it is, certainly is one of degree not of kind.”  The claim was highly controversial, but many scientists were open to the possibility and even, as the primatologist Frans de Waal says, “eager to find higher intelligence in animals.”  Some people, including Hans’s owner, were more eager than others.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Starting in the 1890s, Wilhelm Von Osten, a retired math teacher, adapted the teaching methods he had used with his human pupils (plus carrots, pieces of bread, and lumps of sugar) to teach two horses math, and more.  The second one excelled.  Excited by Hans’s apparent mental gifts, von Osten began to show the German public what his horse could do–and what he could do was astonishing.  In addition to math, Hans could tell time, read a calendar, and tap out the interval between two notes.  No surprise, Clever Hans became a national and <a href="https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1904/09/04/101396572.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>international sensation</u></a>.  He was the subject of vaudeville songs, Hans toys were sold, and his image appeared on postcards and liquor bottles.  (Von Osten did not profit from all of this.)  Even the Kaiser stopped by to see him.  Von Osten must have dedicated his life to this work and to his horses, between the years spent training them and then exhibiting and promoting Clever Hans’s intelligence.</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1057" style="width: 505px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1057" class="wp-image-1057" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/HansandvonOsten.gif" alt="" width="495" height="360" /><p id="caption-attachment-1057" class="wp-caption-text">Wilhelm von Osten with Clever Hans</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Also no surprise, many people claimed it was all a clever trick, but not even horse trainers could catch von Osten out.  Some skeptics came up with alternative explanations—thought-waves, magnetism, hypnotic suggestion—that were more outlandish than any claims about Hans’s ability to do math or tell time.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>The story gets stranger.</strong>  In 1904, German officialdom got involved.  The Board of Education commissioned a group of experts—including a psychologist, a physiologist, a veterinarian, zoo-keepers, teachers, doctors, retired cavalry officers (including a count), and a circus manager—to weigh in on “whether or not there is involved in the feats of the horse of Mr. von Osten anything of the nature of tricks.”  The group was stumped, just like everybody else, and concluded that the case was unlike any “hitherto discovered.”  Then, they punted and recommended a follow-up investigation.   <em>The London Standard</em> trumpeted: “‘Clever Hans’ Again: Expert Commission Decides That the Horse Actually Reasons.”</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Oskar Pfungst, a comparative biologist, psychologist, and protégé of the chair of the panel, took on the challenge.  He ran hundreds of careful experiments.  He ruled out secret assistance from von Osten by having neutral parties pose the problems when von Osten wasn’t present.  Still, the horse could tap out the answer.  He ruled out assistance from bystanders by keeping them away when questions were asked.  Still, the horse could answer.  Pfungst himself asked the questions and must have been perplexed when the horse answered.  Finally, he determined that Hans failed in two situations, when the horse couldn’t see the questioner and when the questioner didn’t know the answer.  “Hans can neither read, count nor make calculations,” Pfungst declared in his 1907 book, <em>Clever Hans: The Horse of Mr. von Osten </em>(translated into English in 1911).  “He knows nothing of coins or cards, calendars or clocks, nor can he respond, by tapping or otherwise, to a number spoken to him but a moment before.  Finally, he has not a trace of musical ability.”</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The horse, it turned out, wasn’t responding to what people asked but reading the body language of the questioners, even though the questioners, including von Osten himself, had no idea they were doing anything.  Using subtle physical cues—a tiny shift in posture, a relaxation of tense muscles, a raised eyebrow—<em>that all human observers had missed</em>, the horse could tell when he had reached the correct answer and stop tapping.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The Clever Hans sensation was over.  As far as the public was concerned, there was nothing extraordinary or intelligent about Hans.  As far as scientists were concerned, the whole affair was an embarrassment.  Though von Osten wasn’t a conman, many people, including some prominent scientists, felt fooled–and foolish.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>The story might have ended there but didn’t.</strong>  In debunking claims about Hans, Pfungst had made an important discovery—unconscious cueing—that has shaped the design of experiments ever since.  This is why Clever Hans shows up in psychology textbooks and on Wikipedia.  Psychologists dubbed it the Clever Hans Effect: when an experimenter unintentionally and unwittingly conveys a desired answer or behavior, and the subject, animal <em>or </em>human, reads and interprets the signal and thus skews the experiment’s results.  Today, when a researcher asks a dog to fetch a toy by name, the toys are always placed out of the researcher’s sight.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The case of Clever Hans also fueled resistance to Darwin’s thinking about animal intelligence and slowed the study of animal cognition for decades.  Scientists considered the field soft—anthropomorphic and amateur, like von Osten—and discouraged younger scientists from exploring animal intelligence, steering them toward behaviorism instead.  Behaviorism frames animals as mechanistic, rather than as beings with flexible minds.  According to this line of thought, animals respond to stimuli, seek rewards, and avoid pain and punishment; or they behave entirely according to instincts that are programmed by genetics.  De Waal, who was one of those young scientists at the beginning of his career but became one of the world’s leading researchers into how animals think, decries this “paralyzing skepticism” toward animal intelligence.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">While Von Osten overvalued Hans’s intelligence because he thought it resembled ours, the generation or two of scientists after von Osten undervalued animal intelligence because they thought it didn’t resemble ours.  The animal behaviorists tested animals in areas of human strength and noted their shortcomings.  They failed to imagine, much less test, animals’ other areas of cognitive strength.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">But the beauty of science is that people keep asking questions, gathering and examining evidence, and asking more questions.  Over time, a new understanding emerged.  Scientists began to conceive of a species’ intelligence in relation to its particular biology, ecological niche, and evolution.  What are an animal’s anatomy and sensory abilities?  What are its physical needs?  What is the animal’s environment, how does it interact with that environment, and what kind of problems must it solve to survive?  Each species, de Waal explains, “deals flexibly with the environment and develops solutions to the problems it poses.  Each one does it differently.”  Intelligence, like everything else, evolves within an ecological framework and takes many forms.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>This evolutionary story started with <em>Eohippus</em>, also known as the Dawn Horse, roughly 45 million years ago.</strong>  This animal was so different from our idea of a horse that it took paleontologists years to realize there was any relationship at all.  The Dawn Horse stood 17 to 20 inches high.  It had an arched flexible back, raised hindquarters, thin legs, feet with toes (four padded hooves in front and three in back), a shorter muzzle, and a much smaller, simpler brain.  It actually looked more like a dog—with a dash of miniature deer thrown in—than a horse.  It lived on leaves and fruit in a dense tropical forest habitat, where it browsed, scurried, and hid from predators.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">How did this creature become the animal we know?  The world around it changed, and it changed with the world.  Starting about 18 million years ago, the climate cooled and dried, and the lush tropical forest gave way to grass.  Although fossils of <em>Eohippus</em> have also been found in Europe and North America, <em>Equus</em> evolved on open plains in what is now Montana and spread across the world from there.  According to Niobe Thompson, the creator of the PBS Nature series <em>Equus: Story of the Horse</em>, “grass shaped the horse.”  Two factors were at play.  First, grass was plentiful, though much less nutritious than leaves and fruit, so the horse had to spend a great deal of time grazing.  And, second, open grasslands provided no cover from predators.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Passing through many distinct phases (speeding through evolutionary dead ends, successes, and millions of years!), the horse adapted.  To crop and chew the grass, it added teeth and its muzzle grew longer.  Since it could no longer hide, it had to outrun predators, so the horse grew bigger, stronger, and faster.  Its legs lengthened, and its toes fused to form single hooves that served as shock absorbers as it ran.  By essentially running on tiptoes, the horse minimized contact with the ground and maximized speed.  Its leg ligaments evolved so it could run without having to bulk up on leg muscle.  The horse specialized for speed.</span></p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1059" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Horse-meadow4-500x375.jpg" alt="" width="476" height="357" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Horse-meadow4-500x375.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Horse-meadow4-1024x768.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Horse-meadow4-768x576.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Horse-meadow4-1536x1152.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Horse-meadow4-scaled.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 476px) 100vw, 476px" /></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The horse’s sensory perception adapted, too.  Its eyes, the largest of any land animal, are set high on the head and on top of a long neck.  This means that the horse can scan its surroundings even while its long muzzle dips down in the grass.  It can’t see directly in front or behind, but its vision covers 350-degrees.  Its eyesight is keen: in daylight, it’s comparable to ours, and in the dark, better.  Its lips, with nerve endings like our fingers, and whiskers are highly sensitive and enable the horse to explore what it can’t see right in front of its nose, while keeping an eye out for danger.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The horse evolved another kind of protection as well: the community of other horses.<strong>  </strong>The predators the horse faced were not only large and fast but cooperative.  In response, it became a cooperative defender, and a social being.  The basic unit is the band: an intensely social, complex group that averages between 4 and 18 individuals, but can include as many as 35.  A number of bands inhabit overlapping home ranges; share some resources such as waterholes, mineral licks, and wind breaks; and form a herd.  In winter, the herd is more likely to gather for shelter and mutual self-defense.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">The band is a long-term alliance among related and unrelated individuals.  It includes a group of mares, their young, and an adult stallion.  The stallion defends the mares and the young, not territory.  There is some coming and going from the band, as the young mature and leave to join other bands in the larger herd, new mares join, or a new stallion displaces the old one. <strong> </strong>There are also bachelor bands, made up of young stallions and occasionally an older stallion who has lost his harem.  Within a band, competition and bonding coexist.  A dominance hierarchy determines which horses get first access to resources and avoids outright fights.  A mare, though not necessarily the biggest or strongest, or the stallion is the band leader.  Within the band, mares form smaller alliances of two to four individuals, who approach and follow one another, cooperate and share tasks, rest together (one may lie down to sleep while another stands watch nearby), make physical contact, and groom each other.  Most intimate of all is the relationship of a mother and her offspring.  Thus, horses live within circles of interwoven and increasingly close alliances: herd, band, partnership, family.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">For prey animals, fear dominates, so horses are high strung and always alert to threats.  They are equally alert to members of their band.  Claudia Feh, who has spent years studying horses in the wild, observes: “The retraction of a nostril, the twitch of an ear all appear to have meanings to their social partner, and from the point of their nose to the tip of their tails, horses seem to communicate continuously.”  Like some other species, they also attend to the alarm calls of other species around them.  Their alertness and communication with one another turn the band into a finely tuned surveillance system that greatly increases the chances of survival for the individuals within it—with strength in numbers and multiple sets of eyes and ears.  A lone horse is a horse in danger.</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1060" style="width: 480px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1060" class="wp-image-1060" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Brian_Smale_Smithsonian-500x333.jpg" alt="" width="470" height="313" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Brian_Smale_Smithsonian-500x333.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Brian_Smale_Smithsonian-1024x683.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Brian_Smale_Smithsonian-768x512.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Brian_Smale_Smithsonian.jpg 1072w" sizes="(max-width: 470px) 100vw, 470px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1060" class="wp-caption-text">Photo: Brian Smale</p></div></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>All this helps explain how smart horses are.</strong>  First, complex needs and problems demand complex solutions.  The Dawn Horse’s jungle habitat was by no means simple, but food, water, and hiding places were abundant.  By contrast, the horse’s grassland habitat posed a variety of complex and variable problems, concerning nutrition and grazing sites, water sources, mineral licks, wind breaks, places to escape bugs, seasonal changes, and dangerous cooperative predators—and the horse’s intelligence evolved to meet these challenges.  Second, scientists theorize that social animals, especially long-lived ones like horses, develop higher intelligence.  Perhaps social interactions pose their own complex and variable problems, demand solutions, and further stimulate the evolution of intelligence.  Social life also creates conditions in which individuals can learn from one another.  The results: horses evolved large complex brains, acute sensory perception, a strong sense of direction, good visual and auditory memory, and social and emotional intelligence.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Karen McComb, who studies both horses and elephants, points out that horses have “acute emotional awareness.”  They are intensely social, emotionally alive, and curious.  With mobile faces—seventeen facial expressions have been identified—they express feelings that other horses read and interpret.  And like dogs, they turn their social, emotional, and curious awareness on us.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Experiments, published in 201</span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">0 and 2018, help explain the Clever Hans Effect–even though this was not the researchers’ goal.  (Naturally, the experiments accounted for the Clever Hans Effect in their protocols!)  In one, researchers established that horses track human attention, including subtle eye cues as well as body and head orientation.  The researchers concluded that “horses are highly skilled at reading human cues to attention” and compare well with dogs.  In other experiments, horses not only read and accurately interpreted happy and angry human facial expressions—from large head shots, no less—but also remembered the emotions expressed in the photos when they met the actual people, now showing neutral expressions, three to six hours later.  McComb, who participated in these studies, explains in </span><em style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Equus</em><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">: “They have enough understanding to interpret not only emotion in the faces of their species but emotion in our faces.”  Horses are “eavesdropping on the human world all the time.”</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>In 1907, the dramatic revelation of what Hans <em>could not do</em> had dramatically overshadowed what he <em>could do</em>.</strong>  Instead of learning how to multiply or recognize a piece of music when he spent hours upon hours with von Osten, Hans had honed his “eavesdropping” skills: he learned how to focus on and follow barely perceptible human signals, and to do so in novel and distracting circumstances.  What’s more, he transferred what he learned about von Osten’s cues to other people who questioned him, generalizing knowledge about human behavior–something we consider higher order thinking.  The psychologist and animal scientist Douglas Candland comments, “Pfungt’s experiments and observations did not make Hans less clever, but clever in ways that Pfungst did not comprehend.”</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Even as we have grudgingly accepted that other animals also think, we have clung to a dualistic view: there’s <em>our</em> kind of intelligence (superior) and <em>their</em> kind of intelligence (inferior).  Our assumption that we’re at the top of the intelligence hierarchy gets in the way of our perceiving the evidence of animal intelligence that’s all around us, just as Pfungst failed to perceive the ways that Hans really was clever.  We haven’t been imaginative enough about how to think about intelligence.  In the title of his 2016 book, Frans de Waal asks a crucial question: <em>Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are?</em>  To date, our record has not been so good, but we are finally opening up to new possibilities.</span></p>
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<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1061" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/horsegrazing-500x344.jpg" alt="" width="480" height="330" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/horsegrazing-500x344.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/horsegrazing-1024x704.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/horsegrazing-768x528.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/horsegrazing-1536x1056.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/horsegrazing.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 480px) 100vw, 480px" /></span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><strong>Postscript: What happened to Oskar Pfungst, Wilhelm von Osten, and Hans?</strong>  Pfungst did no more research with animals but returned to his studies of human psychology.  Von Osten’s life was upended.  There were no more demonstrations in front of amazed crowds, no more journalists, no more visits from the Kaiser, and, most disappointing of all, no more scientific interest in his work.  Did he fear he’d wasted nearly twenty years?  He felt betrayed—but by the horse rather than by Pfungst—and threatened to sell Hans to a funeral director so he would have to pull a hearse the rest of his days.  Adding suffering to public disgrace, von Osten was diagnosed with cancer, and died in 1909.  Initially, Hans’s fate was better.  A friend of von Osten’s moved Hans into his stable.  But in 1914, World War I erupted and, like horses and young men across Europe and the world, Hans was conscripted to serve in the war.  After that, there’s no record of what became of him.</span></p>
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<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">In writing about Clever Hans, Wilhelm von Osten, and Oskar Pfungst, I drew on these sources, along with the contemporary news article (linked in the article).</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Douglas Keith Candland.  <em>Feral Children and Clever Animals: Reflections on Human Nature</em>.   Oxford University Press, 1993.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Frans de Waal.  <em>Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are?  </em>Norton, 2016.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Oskar Pfungst. <em>Clever Hans (The Horse of Mr. von Osten): A Contribution to Experimental Animal and </em></span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><em>Human Psychology</em>. Trans. by Carl L. Rahn. Henry Holt, 1911. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Laasya Samhita and Hans Gross.  “The ‘Clever Hans Phenomenon’ Revisited.”  <em>Communicative </em></span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><em>and Integrative Biology</em>.  Vol 6, #6 (November, 2013).</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">In writing about horses—their environment, evolution, social lives and mental abilities—I drew on these sources.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">“Evolution of the Horse.”  <em>Encyclopedia Brittanica</em>, brittanica.com.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Daniel Mills and Sue McDonnell, eds. <em>The Domestic Horse: The Origins, Development and Management of </em></span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><em>Its Behaviour</em>.  Cambridge University Press, 2005. </span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Leanne Proops and Karen McComb.  “Attributing Attention: The Use of Human Given Cues </span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">by Domestic Horses (<em>Equus caballus</em>).”  <em>Animal Cognition</em> (2010) 13: 197-205.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Leanne Proops, Kate Grounds, Amy Victoria Smith, and Karen McComb.  “Animals </span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Remember Previous Facial Expressions that Specific Humans Have Exhibited.”  <em>Current </em></span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;"><em>Biology</em> (2018), 1428-1432.</span></p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Niobe Thompson, writer and director<em>.  Story of the Horse: Episode 1, Origins</em>.  Public Broadcasting </span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 18px;">Service, Nature, 2018.</span></p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">1054</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>Who&#8217;s the Smartest of Them All?</title>
		<link>https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/whos-the-smartest-of-them-all/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[petspeopleandotheranimals_j22bm3]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Dec 2021 20:02:16 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Animals and Psychology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dogs]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/?p=1018</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Digby. Not a border collie, but a Duck Tolling Retriever. Some Reflections on Dogs, Humans, and Being Smart. First there was Rico.  In 2004, researchers reported that a border collie had learned the names of over 200 objects.  What’s more, Rico could recognize a new word and retrieve a new object from among a group&#8230;]]></description>
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	<p><div id="attachment_683" style="width: 728px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-683" class="wp-image-683" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/NCCHeaderDigby-1024x346.jpg" alt="" width="718" height="242" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/NCCHeaderDigby-1024x346.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/NCCHeaderDigby-500x169.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/NCCHeaderDigby-768x259.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/NCCHeaderDigby.jpg 1795w" sizes="(max-width: 718px) 100vw, 718px" /><p id="caption-attachment-683" class="wp-caption-text">Digby. Not a border collie, but a Duck Tolling Retriever.</p></div></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><strong>Some Reflections on Dogs, Humans, and Being Smart.</strong></span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">First there was Rico.  In 2004, researchers reported that a border collie had learned the names of over 200 objects.  What’s more, Rico could recognize a new word and retrieve a new object from among a group of familiar objects, inferring the name of the new object through the process of elimination, seven out of ten times, and retain the knowledge for a month.  Pretty smart!</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Then came Chaser in 2011. When John Pilley, a retired professor of psychology, heard about Rico, he wondered: Could the number of words be higher if the researcher really knew how to train a dog?  He adopted a puppy and set to work.  A high-octane border collie, Chaser learned the names of 1,022 objects, and appeared not only to grasp the words for categories of objects but also to distinguish between a noun and a verb.  She might have kept on expanding her vocabulary, but, like many a border collie before her, she wore out her human, and he stopped teaching her new words.  Chaser became known as <a href="https://www.pbs.org/video/worlds-smartest-dog-2oyqqk/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>the smartest dog in the world</u></a>.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">In 2019, Whisky, another border collie, proved remarkable in a different way.  While Rico and Chaser were deliberately trained, Whisky learned the names of the toys in the course of playing much the way children learn—through social interaction—and kept playing, and playing, and playing. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Whisky became part of the <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJFRqlfwIKk" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>Genius Dog Challenge</u></a>, a study conducted remotely in 2020 by Claudia Fugazza, a dog trainer and researcher in the Department of Ethology at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest (home base for some of the world’s best research on dogs).  Six super-smart dogs from around the world, most but not <em>all</em> border collies, were given the same challenge: Learn six new names for six new toys in a week.  Then, the six toys were laid out, mixed in with a few of the dog’s other toys.  The dogs were asked to fetch objects by name.  Four of the dogs got all six names right, while the other two got five.  In phase two, the dogs learned the names of 12 new toys.  Two aced the test and got all 12 right, while the others got 11.  Like Rico and Chaser, these dogs also had good recall after the toys were put away, a month and even two months later.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">These feats prompt big questions: Do these genius dogs use words the way we use them?  Can a word be a symbolic representation to a dog?  Researchers tentatively say yes.  Pilley believed that Chaser “acquired referential understanding of nouns, an ability normally attributed to children.”</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">I’m thrilled by the stories of these dogs.  I’m always thrilled when I hear that an animal is smarter than we thought. When my assumptions get upended.  When our collective claims to human exceptionalism turn out to be wrong.  And most important, when it becomes clear that animals have a richer understanding of the world than we give them credit for. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">But why are we obsessed with the “smartest” dog?  And why focus on language?  We seem to think that the more like humans dogs are, the smarter they must be.  I’m much more curious about how smart dogs are on their own terms and what those terms might be, and not just the Ricos, Chasers, and Whiskys of the dog world, but your run-of-the-mill dog.</span></p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1021" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/SadieWoodyEdie-500x375.jpg" alt="" width="450" height="338" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/SadieWoodyEdie-500x375.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/SadieWoodyEdie-1024x768.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/SadieWoodyEdie-768x576.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/SadieWoodyEdie-1536x1152.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/SadieWoodyEdie-scaled.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px" /></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><strong> </strong></span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><strong>The key to canine “smarts” appears to be their flexible social intelligence.</strong>  Evolutionary anthropologist and dog researcher Brian Hare has studied thousands of average dogs—beloved household pets, shelter dogs, puppies, and even tame wolves, used as controls—and has carefully demonstrated that dogs can read the communicative intentions of humans (and wolves cannot).  Importantly, other researchers have independently replicated his results many times over.  This ability seems so obvious that we barely notice it.  It isn’t just that they come when we call or sit as a result of operant conditioning.  They perceive our signals and make inferences about what we mean.  (I wrote about some of the ways they read us more specifically in an earlier article, “Canine ESP.”)  Of course, all social species read the signals of others of their own kind.  That’s what social means.  But dogs understand the signals of another species, as well.  In this mental ability dogs resemble humans—or should I say humans resemble dogs?  Hare describes this as evolutionary convergence, when two species evolve along separate tracks but converge on the same adaptation.  Usually, the adaptation is a physical trait, but dogs and humans independently evolved a similar cognitive ability.  In this regard, dogs resemble us even more than chimpanzees do, though chimps and humans are much more alike genetically.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Since I’ve been working on this article, I’ve paid closer attention to my everyday communication with my dog Zola.  On a recent morning walk, she and I reached a fork in the path.  She was well ahead of me and started to trot to the left.  I wanted to take the right fork and said a soft, upbeat “Hey,” which is not a word we use as a command, such as “Here.”  Without even glancing back, she cut right.  This is a simple moment, on a path we often take, but she read my signal and intention almost instantaneously.  Of course, human-canine communication isn’t always so simple.  It helps (a lot) if your intention and the dog’s intention line up, at least to some extent.  If there’d been a squirrel in sight—in whatever direction—she would have sped off in hot pursuit and caught up with me later. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Humans have lived with dogs for so long that we take these interactions and our dogs’ social intelligence for granted.  I’m not sure it even registers with most of us <em>as</em> intelligence.  It should, though, because in evolutionary terms their social smarts have enabled their species to be spectacularly successful.  As ethologist and founding director of the Dog Cognition Lab at Barnard College Alexandra Horowitz describes dogs, they are “social opportunists…attuned to the actions of others, and humans turned out to be very good animals to attune to.”</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">This brings me, a bit sheepishly, back to language.  Maybe human language does matter to your average canine social opportunist.  Though many scientists argue that dogs key in to the emotion rather than the meaning of our words, the recent work with Rico, Chaser, and other dogs suggests that dogs <em>can</em> understand words symbolically.  Using linguistic tests designed for little kids, researchers found that your average dog can learn about 165 words and gestures and has the mental abilities akin to those of a two- or two-and-a-half-year-old human.  Genius dogs such as Rico and Chaser are more like three-year-olds.  Psychologist Stanley Coren, who led these studies, claims that “Evidence from testing dogs suggests that language is not an ability possessed only by humans.” </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Those used to be fighting words, and still are in some quarters, but close observation of social species in the wild complements this claim.  The Gunnison’s prairie dog, for example, has a rich descriptive language, with specific vocabulary used to identify a predator’s type, size, and behavior.  They have calls for colors and for certain shapes.  They may even produce new “words” using the constituent parts of other calls.  It’s <a href="https://www.npr.org/2011/01/20/132650631/new-language-discovered-prairiedogese" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>Prairiedogese</u></a>!  This discovery was impossible with the naked ear.  Only with computers to slow and break down the parts of their chee-chee-chee calls could researchers detect fine distinctions and connect them with things in the environment.  Then there are sperm whales.  Calling across large underwater distances, the whales rely entirely on acoustic communication in patterns of clicks called codas.  What meanings are relayed in these codas?  In 2020, an international interdisciplinary group of scientists—including marine biologists, computer scientists, robotics engineers, and linguists, among others—launched <a href="https://www.projectceti.org" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>Project CETI</u></a> (Cetacean Translation Initiative) to use robots and machine learning to parse their clicks.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><strong>I’m calling this article “Who’s the Smartest of Them All?” not so much to refer to Rico, Chaser, and Whisky, but more to invoke the wicked queen of the fairytale.</strong>  We humans are an awful lot like her and always want the answer to be: “We are.”  Of course we are in a host of ways, but, like the queen who obsessively asks her magic mirror for reassurance, we seem painfully insecure.  One of our main claims to exceptionalism has been our monopoly on language.  The evidence suggests, however, that human intelligence is simply another variety of animal intelligence. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Until recently, almost all philosophers and theologians in the mainstream Western tradition have defined <em>human</em> in opposition to <em>animal</em>.  Two big questions arise again and again: What are humans in relation to animals?  What is the right treatment of animals, and especially animals on whom humans depend?  Plato entertained the possibility that animals had reason, and therefore souls, but Aristotle rejected that idea and constructed an elaborate ladder of life on which all living beings were hierarchically ranked.  He granted neither reason nor souls to animals, and judged humans to be not just better than animals but altogether different, as if we can only <em>be</em> human by virtue of <em>not being</em> animal.  For millennia, we’ve drawn a bold line between us and them—with reason, goodness, and the soul on one side; and instinct, brutishness, and physicality on the other. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">In the Judeo-Christian creation story, God created man in his image (and woman in man’s image, more hierarchical thinking).  The rest of nature, created separately, exists expressly for the benefit of humans.  In the 4<sup>th</sup>century CE, Augustine integrated the Greek ladder of life into Christian theology and so conferred divine meaning and authority on a secular philosophy.  Even in the face of the robust evidence of evolution, this paradigm has had remarkable staying power, influencing the way we in the West have thought about animals ever since.  It has made it easier, morally, to mistreat and destroy animals and their habitats.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">I use <em>we in the West</em> carefully, since this has not been true in all cultures or times.  Even in the West, many people have seen, and see, all of nature within large webs rather than in an instrumental hierarchy.  The thinking and patient research that inform this article clearly wouldn’t exist otherwise.  Ecology, the study of the relations of organisms to one another and to their physical environment, describes our complex interdependence.  The word <em>ecology</em> itself, coined in the late 19<sup>th</sup>century, and originally spelled <em>oecology</em>, comes from the Greek root <em>oikos</em>, which means house or household.  We all live in this house together.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><strong><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1023" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Tica-sprawlRS-500x667.jpg" alt="" width="281" height="375" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Tica-sprawlRS-500x667.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Tica-sprawlRS-768x1024.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Tica-sprawlRS-1152x1536.jpg 1152w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Tica-sprawlRS-scaled.jpg 1536w" sizes="(max-width: 281px) 100vw, 281px" />How can we enlarge our understanding of intelligence? </strong>In <em>Other Minds</em> (2016), Peter Godfrey-Smith, a philosopher, science historian, and scuba diver who studies octopuses and cuttlefish, describes our limited perception of other animals’ minds: “we often wind up visualizing scaled-down versions of ourselves.”  In a word, we anthropomorphize.  When we think a dog is as smart as a human toddler, the analogy clicks.  Since for us language <em>is </em>thinking, we test animals for their abilities to understand language and rate their intelligence accordingly.  Similarly, we are used to seeing ourselves in mirrors, so we use a mirror test to determine if an animal has the ability to associate itself with the animal in the mirror.  Does this species have a sense of self or self-consciousness like we do?  Great apes and dolphins figure out that they are seeing themselves in the mirror, and even study themselves.  We identify with their self-scrutiny.  Dogs flunk the mirror test, but what have they failed to do?</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">It may be impossible to escape our own heads when we think about thinking.  Anthropomorphism at least sympathetically likens animals to humans and provides an entry point to other minds.  But it creates problems, too.  As we project ourselves into an animal’s experience, we may see kinds of intelligence that aren’t there and fail to see ones that are, and so miss remarkable kinds of intelligence altogether.  Which “mirror tests” are we flunking?</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><strong>Another answer to the question of how smart dogs are in dog terms is surely their superlative sense of smell.</strong>  Dogs gather immense amounts of information about the world through their noses, but we humans don’t give much credit to smell as intelligence.  It’s “just” a sensory ability, one we’ve even bred dogs for because it’s so useful, but <em>intelligence</em>?  Our Aristotelian bias kicks in: Other animal minds are always less-than-human rather than different-than-human.  Besides, we’ve treated our own sense of smell as lower, even animalistic, and practically irrelevant for centuries.  </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">I’d like to think more expansively about smell as a distinctive form of intelligence.  When I walk Zola in the woods, she and I clearly have radically different experiences.  I pick up the smell of the forest and even details within the smell-scape, but with little sophistication.  My olfactory experience is largely judgmental and emotional.  One thing smells delicious and something else repulsive, another triggers a memory, and each scent grows less perceptible as I grow habituated to it.  Zola, by contrast, takes in specific information with great acuity and does not grow habituated to a scent.  She doesn’t have my emotional reactions, whether she’s sniffing shit or daffodils.  In fact, she’s probably more interested in the shit because it may contain nutrients and relevant social information.  What’s more, she can smell the difference between the present, the recent past, and the past.  She can tell which direction a dog or squirrel was moving based on the relative freshness, or erosion, of its scent.  This means that, as she sniffs her way through the woods, she lives not only in the present but also in layers of time, because, for her, any given space emanates its own recent history.  The closest analogy I can come up with, one that makes sense to my human brain, is visual: a photograph of a space that projects new images, while preserving the old ones in progressively fainter shades.  But I have no idea if this analogy does justice to Zola’s olfactory experience.</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">I’ve downplayed human abilities here.  Actually, we make millions of fine distinctions among scents: vanilla, wood smoke, ginger, freshly cut grass, ammonia, peanut butter, fresh bread, chile pepper, gasoline, olive oil, and the list goes on and on.  You may have just experienced a montage of scents!  We use scent as a source of information all the time. Sommeliers, coffee tasters, and parfumiers develop encyclopedic knowledge of scents, and their acute well-trained sense of smell is a bankable form of intelligence.  Like dogs, humans can also smell recent history, such as traces of a cologne a person leaves behind or the onions and garlic that flavored last night’s dinner.  Smell may be a bit like proprioception, our sense of where the body is and how it moves in space. Without trying or paying much attention, we continuously use both senses to orient ourselves to our surroundings.  Neuroscientists believe that smell helps us build mental models of our environment, so we can monitor our surroundings and respond.  Mostly, we take smell for granted, but, as many people with COVID lost their sense of smell, they felt the loss keenly.  </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">But I haven’t exaggerated canine abilities.  Dog noses outdo even the most highly trained human noses by an order of thousands.  The dog’s olfactory system includes the surface of its moist nose; the structure of its nostrils, including the side slits, that enable a dog to exhale and continue to draw in new scent at the same time; its muzzle, full of folds and folds of nasal tissue; its long floppy tongue; and its saliva.  In hounds, even their long ears play a part by stirring up scent from the ground.  Finally, a dog doesn’t just have millions more receptor cells than we have, but more kinds of receptor cells, so dogs don’t simply smell what we can smell better and at much lower thresholds, but smell things we never smell at all.  We marvel at a dog’s ability to sniff out cancer.  Isn’t that intelligence? </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><strong><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-1022" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Black_dog_face-500x547.jpg" alt="" width="265" height="290" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Black_dog_face-500x547.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Black_dog_face.jpg 608w" sizes="(max-width: 265px) 100vw, 265px" /></strong></span><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><strong>How do we measure how “smart” an animal is, much less compare it with another? </strong> Godfrey-Smith describes the problem this way: “When we try to compare one animal’s brainpower with another’s, we also run into the fact that there is no single scale on which intelligence can be sensibly measured.  Different animals are good at different things, as makes sense given the different lives they live.”  He compares the brain with a tool kit.  All animals have a basic collection of mental tools—sensory perception; the capacity to do things; the ability to match their actions to the environment; the ability to learn, remember, and apply the past to the present; the ability to solve problems—but after that there’s an awful lot of variety.  He sums it up: “Different tool kits go with different ways of making a living.”  Brian Hare also uses a tool metaphor, with a fun twist: “Asking if a dolphin is smarter than a crow is like asking if a hammer is better than a saw.”  In other words, what’s an animal’s particular intelligence for?</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Many people insist that dogs are wolves dumbed down by domestication.  Indeed, on a number of physical problem-solving challenges wolves clearly outperform dogs.  In one well-known test, food is placed in a closed box that is challenging to open.  The wolves keep at it until they get the lid off, while the dogs give up working on the box pretty quickly.  This doesn’t mean, however, that the dogs give up on solving the problem.  Instead, they recruit help from nearby people.  In this kind of test, Horowitz observes that dogs are hampered by their particular brand of smarts.  They’ve learned to “cleverly look to us” to open the box (and save themselves some trouble in the bargain).  Yes, you can argue that domestication makes dogs dumber than wolves, or look at it from another perspective: Dogs’ social intelligence enables them to use humans as tools to get what they want.  Pretty smart!!</span></p>
<p><div id="attachment_1024" style="width: 510px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1024" class="wp-image-1024 size-medium" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Z-atWhalesTails-500x333.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="333" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Z-atWhalesTails-500x333.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Z-atWhalesTails-1024x683.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Z-atWhalesTails-768x512.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Z-atWhalesTails-1536x1024.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Z-atWhalesTails-scaled.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /><p id="caption-attachment-1024" class="wp-caption-text">Zola with "Reverence," a sculpture by Jim Sardonis, in the background.</p></div></p>
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	<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-size: 20px; font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><strong>References (in the order of their first appearance):</strong></span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Nicholas Wade. “Sit. Stay. Parse. Good Girl!”  <em>The New York Times</em>, January 17, 2011.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Brian Hare and Vanessa Woods.  <em>The Genius of Dogs: How Dogs Are Smarter Than You Think</em>. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">     Plume, 2013.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Alexandra Horowtiz.  <em>Inside of a Dog: What Dogs See, Smell, and Know.</em>  Scribner, 2009.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Stanley Coren.  “In the Minds of Dogs: Think <em>Cat in the Hat</em> for Talking to Dogs.” <em>Psychology </em></span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><em>     Today</em>, September/October 2017.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;">Peter Godfrey-Smith.  <em>Other Minds: The Octopus, the Sea, and the Deep Origins of </em></span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', times, serif;"><em>     Consciousness.</em>  Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2016.</span></p>
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		<title>A Summer of Owls</title>
		<link>https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/a-summer-of-owls/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[petspeopleandotheranimals_j22bm3]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Oct 2020 15:59:54 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Animals Etc.]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/?p=901</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[&#160; They’re gone now, and have been for a while.  But through much of the summer, Emily and I kept encountering two owls in the park where we walk our dog.  Much to our delight, we watched them grow up. An owl’s territory is usually at least twice the size, but this 100-acre forest offers&#8230;]]></description>
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	<p style="text-align: justify;"><img decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-903" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Lookingatyou-451x700.jpg" alt="" width="419" height="650" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Lookingatyou-451x700.jpg 451w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Lookingatyou-660x1024.jpg 660w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Lookingatyou-768x1192.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Lookingatyou-990x1536.jpg 990w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Lookingatyou-scaled.jpg 1320w" sizes="(max-width: 419px) 100vw, 419px" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">They’re gone now, and have been for a while.  But through much of the summer, Emily and I kept encountering two owls in the park where we walk our dog.  Much to our delight, we watched them grow up.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">An owl’s territory is usually at least twice the size, but this 100-acre forest offers good owl habitat, with mature white and red pines, hemlocks, oaks, maples, hickories, and more.  The old trees have cavities that owls use for nests.  To the south, cliffs overlook a bay, and to the west, stone ledges slope steeply down to Lake Champlain.  Even though the park gets a lot of use and has suburban neighborhoods on two sides, it supports an array of wildlife.  Over the years—in addition to crows, squirrels, rabbits, and chipmunks—I’ve seen foxes, the occasional deer, two moose (amazing!), a mink, an ermine, and fishers.  Some well-hidden wildlife cams have even caught bobcats there.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">The owls were a blessing, and any and all blessings were welcome, because this was the summer of 2020 and of COVID.  How can I begin to say what that meant?  Everything uncertain, the world and country in turmoil, the future a gray unknown.  That gray was shot through with dread and promise—and still is.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Despite the uncertainty—and weirdly, because of it, too—life felt entirely predictable and stunted.  Though it isn’t really true, it has seemed as if my life is tethered to a three-by-five-foot table in a single room, as I’ve taught, had phone and Zoom meetings, done research, and written (emails, shared docs, and—thank goodness—even articles).  There’s good sense in the notion that, in addition to home and a workplace, we need a “third place,” somewhere we can go regularly and be known.  Mine is a coffee shop, where I frequently read, write, and prepare classes, but I haven’t been there since mid-March.  What happens when you don’t have a second place, work, much less a third?  Life contracts.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">The owls dropped into my life as if from a larger mysterious region, one untouched by the pandemic.  We were in the same forest, but our experiences of that shared space were different to the core.  Theirs is a world of air and trees, of dusk and darkness, and we met at an edge where our distinct realities overlapped.  Though owls are no wilder than crows or foxes, they seem stranger, more surprising.  In some traditions owls convey wisdom, in others they foretell death or change.  Either way, they’re different than other flying things.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Sometimes we saw them, sometimes not.  Sometimes we found them in one part of the park, sometimes another.  The element of chance was part of the pleasure.  One of the things I have missed about being out and about in the world is that I might see someone I know.  Or not.  Along with wonder and delight, the owls brought anticipation back into my life when I really needed it.  I looked forward not just to seeing them, but to the possibility of seeing them.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><img decoding="async" class="alignleft wp-image-904" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/owlsovertheirshoulders-500x480.jpg" alt="" width="401" height="385" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/owlsovertheirshoulders-500x480.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/owlsovertheirshoulders-1024x982.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/owlsovertheirshoulders-768x737.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/owlsovertheirshoulders-1536x1473.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/owlsovertheirshoulders-scaled.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 401px) 100vw, 401px" /></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">We’ve given quirky collective nouns to many groups of animals and birds, even those who are largely solitary, like owls.  Pack, school, gaggle, skulk, murder—we tend to use only a few of them, but they’re fun for word lovers like me.  The most common one for owls is <em>parliament</em>, as if somewhere deep in the forest large groups of owls convene and deliberate on matters of state.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">This was a parliament of northern barred owls.  The two we saw were juveniles.  The other members of this mini-parliament, their parents, didn’t appear, though we sometimes heard their fluid melancholy hoots in the distance: <em>Who-cooks-for-you, who-cooks-for-you-all</em>.  There’s a second collective noun for owls, a <em>stare</em>, and the word suited these two to a t: They stared down at us as with their big dark eyes as we stared up at them.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Early in the spring, we had spotted an adult owl a couple of times—an impressive fleeting vision of motion and wing.  Though an adult barred owl is 16 to 20 inches long, is shaped like a barrel, and has a wingspan of 39 to 44 inches, it moves silently, sweeping along flyways among the trees.  Soft feathers serve as baffles and ensure stealth.  Unless you’re looking in just the right spot, you can miss a flying owl altogether.  I know I have at least a couple of times—and many more than I will ever know.  The owl’s there, then not there.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">We heard from birders—hardy folk who appear to be born with patience, binoculars or cameras strung around their necks, and the fortitude to sit still in the wet cold or in the middle of a cloud of blackflies—that two owlets had hatched.  Some weeks later, we heard a high-pitched, rising raspy sound—somewhere between a cat’s hiss and a rusty whistle (<a href="https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Barred_Owl/sounds" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>click here</u></a> and scroll down to Juvenile Calls to hear it).  We looked up and spotted one, then two owls sitting on separate branches about twenty feet up in adjacent white pines.  It was thrilling.  Emily crept closer to take pictures with her less-than-up-to-date iPhone.  You can picture me doing a quick happy dance after we walked away.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">As the summer progressed, we saw them as often as three times a week.  We frequently ate dinner at nine o’clock because we had stayed in the park to watch the owls until it was too dark to see them anymore.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">We found the owls, who often stayed near each other, in one of four ways.  First was dumb luck, when we’d round a corner and startle one on the ground or flush one from its perch.  Second was when songbirds, sometimes joined by a red squirrel, gathered in the branches near them and made a racket.  This behavior, called mobbing, seems counterintuitive.  Why get close to a dangerous predator and advertise your presence?  Why not just tuck yourself in a safe spot and keep an eye on the owl?  Third was when a small band of humans would come to a standstill on the trail and gaze fixedly up into the trees.  A quiet, polite form of mobbing?  We weren’t the only ones thrilled by this pair.  We all adjusted our masks and helped one another locate the owls, though it’s awkward to point something out when you’re six feet apart.  <em>See that big hemlock trunk?  A little more to the left.  Yeah, that one.  Look up about four branches.</em>  Fourth and most frequent was when we heard the juvenile hiss.  We’d scan the trees, listen, and creep toward the sound until we found one or both of them.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">The owls grew and developed fast.  When we first saw them, they were no longer fluffy owlets because once barred owls fledge at about six weeks, they look a lot like adults.  They did what growing owls must do: observe. Mostly, at least when we were around, they sat on a branch and took everything in.  To become proper owls, they had a lot of learning to do in a few months.  This may explain why we got to see them so often and, because their territory is on the small side, were more likely to cross paths.  One of the delightful things was that we were interested in each other; they sized us up as we watched them—though I’m sure I’d have felt differently about being inspected by an owl if I were a smaller mammal.  In June and early July, they bobbed and weaved their heads and bodies as they watched us—hardly the serious owlish behavior you’d expect.  This is pure speculation, but I think they were testing and exercising their amazing powers of hearing and binocular vision, using us as focal points.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">We often saw them where the trees are tall and the undergrowth sparse, excellent places to practice flying and hunting.  They’d fly from perch to perch, from perch to ground, and from ground to perch.  But most of the time, they occupied their airy stations and intermittently hissed.  At us?  To let their parents know where they were?  Begging for dinner to be delivered?</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">This year, dinner probably included plenty of chipmunks.  Last summer and fall produced a healthy crop of mast—hard tree nuts like acorns, beechnuts, and butternuts—that fueled the chipmunks as they wintered over, and enabled them to give birth to abundant litters.  In Vermont this spring and early summer, chipmunks were everywhere and even <a href="https://www.vpr.org/post/its-not-just-you-there-actually-are-lot-more-chipmunks-out-there#stream/0" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>made the news</u></a>.  But by late summer, the chipmunks grew scarcer—many, no doubt, having vanished down the gullets of the owls and other predators.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">After a trip to Maine to visit my father and stepmother in mid-August, I took my first walk in the park and wondered if the owls would still be there.  After four or five months, the parents stop feeding the juveniles, and the young ones have to leave to find their own home territories.  The time had probably come.  This must be a difficult and dangerous transition for an owl—to find a new stretch of forest that will sustain it—especially in a time of habitat fragmentation and loss.  But as we headed down toward the lakeshore, we spotted a fellow dog-walker who had stopped on the trail and was looking into the trees.  A good sign!  About twenty feet away, the owl sat still and alert.  It swiveled its head when a sound got its attention but only glanced down at us occasionally.  No more bobbing and weaving, no more stare.</p>
<p><div id="attachment_905" style="width: 530px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-905" class="wp-image-905" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/PauliTansley-500x334.jpg" alt="" width="520" height="347" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/PauliTansley-500x334.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/PauliTansley-768x512.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/PauliTansley.jpg 799w" sizes="(max-width: 520px) 100vw, 520px" /><p id="caption-attachment-905" class="wp-caption-text">Photo Credit: Kyle Tansley</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">And then, no more owls.  Over the next few weeks, we kept listening and scanning the trees, but heard no hiss, spotted no familiar camouflaged shape on any branch.  The owls had gone.  It’s the right order of things, but I still miss their particular presences and wonder how they’re doing.  Add it all up—twenty minutes, half an hour, fifteen minutes—and we didn’t spend that much time watching them, seven or eight hours total maybe.  But the time we spent watching the owls dilated, the way pupils dilate when you gaze at a brilliant dark pink azalea in full bloom.  The owls filled and stretched the summer and allowed me to glimpse a world that exists alongside and outside the limits of mine.  Because of them, I experience forests a little differently now.  Is this a place where a young owl might make a home?   And if I hear an owl call, I wonder if it could be one of “ours.”</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><em>Thanks to Kyle Tansley, a wildlife photographer who lives in Burlington, Vermont. He has been watching this particular owl for over a year. You can find more of his photographs at <a href="https://www.kyletansley.com" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>Kyle Tansley Photography</u></a>.</em></p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">901</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>A Few Words About Numbers</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[petspeopleandotheranimals_j22bm3]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Aug 2020 16:39:33 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/?p=870</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[ Count off!  Photo: Rachel Bilodeau Ribis Sometimes, I just want to know.  How many pets are there in the United States?  How many people have a pet?  How many dogs are there?  How many cats? According to one source, in 2017-2018, 68% of American households kept at least one pet of some kind (from guppies&#8230;]]></description>
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	<p><div id="attachment_872" style="width: 535px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-872" class="wp-image-872" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/twelvedogsinarow-500x375.jpg" alt="" width="525" height="394" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/twelvedogsinarow-500x375.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/twelvedogsinarow-1024x768.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/twelvedogsinarow-768x576.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/twelvedogsinarow-1536x1152.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/twelvedogsinarow.jpg 1600w" sizes="(max-width: 525px) 100vw, 525px" /><p id="caption-attachment-872" class="wp-caption-text"> Count off!  Photo: Rachel Bilodeau Ribis</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Sometimes, I just want to know.</strong>  How many pets are there in the United States?  How many people have a pet?  How many dogs are there?  How many cats?</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">According to one source, in 2017-2018, 68% of American households kept at least one pet of some kind (from guppies to budgies to palominos), including 94.2 million cats and 89.7 million dogs.  What’s more, the percentage of pet-owning households had climbed 12% since 1988.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">But another source has a startlingly different set of numbers.  During the same period, 56.8% of households had a pet, including 58.4 million cats and 76.8 million dogs.  According to this organization, the percentage of pet-owning households had fluctuated slightly but remained pretty steady.  That’s still a lot of pets, but dramatically fewer.  The percentage of households varies by over 11%, and the difference in cats alone is a whopping 35.8 million.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">So what’s going on?  The truth is no one knows how many pets Americans own.  Even the lower numbers are probably too high.  It’s so easy to accept and believe numbers like these that I suspect we’re geared for it.  Statistics seem like facts; their crisp certainty inspires confidence and feels satisfying.  But actually these numbers offer a lesson in gullibility (mine, certainly) and critical thinking (the need for it).</p>
<p><div id="attachment_873" style="width: 435px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-873" class="wp-image-873" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Dogsandhay-500x375.jpg" alt="" width="425" height="319" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Dogsandhay-500x375.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Dogsandhay-768x576.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Dogsandhay.jpg 800w" sizes="(max-width: 425px) 100vw, 425px" /><p id="caption-attachment-873" class="wp-caption-text">Photo: Rachel Bilodeau Ribis</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">How can we get an accurate count of how many pet animals, and what kinds, live in American homes?  Through sampling, of course, and then extrapolating, but I didn’t stop to think about the challenges involved.  How can you ensure a close-to-representative sample and get accurate answers that then enable you to extrapolate with confidence?  That’s a daunting task that calls for extensive surveying and demographic analysis. Who would do all this, and why?  A pet census is hardly on par with the U.S. Census, with Congressional seats and federal funding at stake—though there <em>are</em> markets to assess and target, animal welfare planning to do, and public policies to be made.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">The two sets of numbers I’ve used here come from the American Pet Products Association (APPA) and the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA).  If you search online, these are the numbers that pop up.  (For some quick side-by-side comparisons, see <a href="https://www.animalsheltering.org/page/pets-by-the-numbers" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>here</u></a>.)  Though I hesitate to lump them together, the APPA and the AVMA are both trade organizations.  The APPA, which surveys 22,000 people every two years in the <a href="https://www.americanpetproducts.org/press_industrytrends.asp" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>National Pet Owners Survey</u></a>, assesses the market for products and services.  And the AVMA, which surveys 41,000 people every five years for its <a href="https://www.avma.org/resources-tools/reports-statistics/us-pet-ownership-statistics" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>U.S. Pet Ownership and Demographics Sourcebook</u>,</a> wants to know how many animals, and what kinds, need veterinary care.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Why such a disparity in their findings?</strong>  The APPA may actually have a bias toward reporting high numbers to help foster national enthusiasm for pet-keeping, and that could lead them to err on the high side.  Further, they may not need precise figures so much as a sense of the big picture and consumer trends.  By contrast, the AVMA serves veterinarians and veterinary schools, which all need to plan.  Does a suburban veterinary practice need to add a new vet with a specialty in chickens?  Does a school expand its curriculum to include ferrets and other smallies?  The AVMA may have a greater need for accuracy and, as professionals who weigh in on many issues about animal health, welfare, behavior, and policy, they may feel a greater sense of responsibility to the general public.</p>
<p><div id="attachment_874" style="width: 435px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-874" class="wp-image-874" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rachel-Ribis-3-dog-photo-500x375.jpg" alt="" width="425" height="319" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rachel-Ribis-3-dog-photo-500x375.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rachel-Ribis-3-dog-photo-1024x768.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rachel-Ribis-3-dog-photo-768x576.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rachel-Ribis-3-dog-photo-1536x1152.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rachel-Ribis-3-dog-photo.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 425px) 100vw, 425px" /><p id="caption-attachment-874" class="wp-caption-text">Photo: Rachel Bilodeau Ribis</p></div></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In January 2019, Karin Brulliard and Scott Clement from <em>The Washington Post</em> took <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/science/2019/01/31/how-many-americans-have-pets-an-investigation-into-fuzzy-statistics/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>a critical look</u></a> at these surveys and found their methods wanting.  Both groups have switched to simpler online approaches that invite people to participate in their targeted surveys.  Two things in particular may skew their numbers: the opt-in method and the special focus.  Experts on polling worry that pet owners are more likely to choose to do a survey about pets than those who don’t own pets, and so boost the numbers, even if the organizations seek to adjust for demographics.  In contrast, other methods are randomized and use mail, telephone, or in-person contacts to conduct surveys, and are considered more reliable. They’re also time-consuming and more expensive.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">The U.S. Census Bureau conducts a comprehensive biennial <a href="https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/ahs.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>American Housing Survey</u></a> that covers everything from household demographics, to housing costs, to the physical condition of homes, to heating methods, to commuting habits.  The samples are random and the surveys of 30,000 households are conducted in person.  The methodology doesn’t get much better.  Pets became part of this survey in 2013.  The Bureau’s interest is not in the animals themselves but in the ability or willingness of people to evacuate in case of disasters.  The 2013 survey found that 48% of households had pets, and this number rose only slightly, to 49%, in 2017.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><img decoding="async" class="wp-image-875 alignleft" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/orangeandtortoiseshell-500x337.jpg" alt="" width="425" height="287" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/orangeandtortoiseshell-500x337.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/orangeandtortoiseshell-1024x691.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/orangeandtortoiseshell-768x518.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/orangeandtortoiseshell-1536x1036.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/orangeandtortoiseshell.jpg 1776w" sizes="(max-width: 425px) 100vw, 425px" /></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>So what does this all add up to? </strong> Pet-keeping is common but not as widespread as pet-lovers might think.  It suggests that the numbers are high but not so dramatic after all, and remain pretty steady over time.  When you’re calculating numbers in a nation of roughly 330 million, the differences between 49%, 56.8%, and 68% of households are significant.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">All of this reminds me to stay on my critical toes.  I’ve seen the numbers from the APPA used in articles, even scholarly ones, and well-researched books.  Because of those citations, I used them, too.  At this point, I’ve got to wince: I was ready to accept such high numbers in part because they corroborated my impressions that most Americans keep pets and that the number keeps growing.  Confirmation bias, anyone?  The fact that cats outnumbered dogs simply made me happy.  (And about time, too!)  When I encountered the lower numbers from the AVMA, and realized that the APPA numbers were probably inflated, I was inclined to accept them instead.  The AVMA is a professional organization, after all.  Again, I figured—without knowing anything about the methods behind the data—they must be solid.  But even the AVMA’s numbers are adjusted estimates based on shaky methodology.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>So back to my question.</strong>  How many pets are there in the U.S?  Millions.  Probably, about half of American households have at least one.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">As Brulliard and Clement report, another consumer research group, the Simmons National Consumer Study, conducts a more rigorous annual survey on a wide range of topics (and sells the data, so it doesn’t appear in a Google search).  In 2018, they set the pet-owning household percentage at 53%, dogs at 77 million, and cats at 54 million—numbers that fall in the same range as the AVMA numbers.  Nevertheless, their household figure of 53% is higher than the American Housing Survey’s 49%.  So knock Simmons’s numbers down a few (million) notches, and we may have something like an answer—as long as we treat all the numbers as estimates, and even though the answer's not quite as satisfying.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">
<p><div id="attachment_876" style="width: 348px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-876" class="wp-image-876" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rory-nose-500x667.jpg" alt="" width="338" height="450" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rory-nose-500x667.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rory-nose-768x1024.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rory-nose-1152x1536.jpg 1152w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Rory-nose-scaled.jpg 1536w" sizes="(max-width: 338px) 100vw, 338px" /><p id="caption-attachment-876" class="wp-caption-text">Keep a nose out for numbers that confirm your biases! (Rory)</p></div></p>
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	<p><strong>References (in the order of their first appearance):</strong></p>
<p>“Pets by the Numbers.” <em>Animal Sheltering Online</em>, Spring 2020. Humane Society of the United States.</p>
<p>Karin Brulliard and Scott Clement. “How Many Americans Have Pets? An Investigation of Fuzzy Statistics.” <em>The Washington Post</em>, January 31, 2019.</p>
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		<title>Your Brain on Babies</title>
		<link>https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/your-brain-on-babies/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[petspeopleandotheranimals_j22bm3]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Jul 2020 15:22:07 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Animals and Psychology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Domestication]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/?p=853</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[&#160; Look at that face!  The instant we catch sight of a photograph like this, much less an actual baby, our brains get to work.  We might smile a little, even if we don’t mean to.  Of course, our brains respond to any face—young or old, known or unknown—but we respond to babies in a&#8230;]]></description>
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	<p><img decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-855 size-medium" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/cutenessH-500x586.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="586" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/cutenessH-500x586.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/cutenessH-873x1024.jpg 873w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/cutenessH-768x901.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/cutenessH-1309x1536.jpg 1309w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/cutenessH.jpg 1711w" sizes="(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /></p>
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<p><strong>Look at that face!</strong>  The instant we catch sight of a photograph like this, much less an actual baby, our brains get to work.  We might smile a little, even if we don’t mean to.  Of course, our brains respond to any face—young or old, known or unknown—but we respond to babies in a particular, and particularly powerful, way.  It’s known as the cute response.</p>
<p>This deep-seated response to babies probably lay the groundwork for our keeping pets.  You may think of pet-keeping as a relatively modern, sentimental, and even frivolous Western phenomenon.  Surely our distant ancestors didn’t waste time and food on animals that weren’t useful.  As Hal Herzog points out in his 2010 book, <em>Some We Love, Some We Hate, Some We Eat</em>, “From an evolutionary point of view, pets are a problem.  Why should humans invest so much time, energy, and resources on creatures with whom we share no genes and who do no useful work?”</p>
<p>But we do, and we did.</p>
<p>In fact, it’s likely that the first animals that humans kept weren’t useful at all but were cute baby animals—possibly the babies of animals killed by hunters—brought back to the community and nurtured, tamed, and raised.  They were pets.  Much later, those species best suited to life with humans began to have babies, adapted genetically to their new ecological niche, and gradually became the domesticated animals we know.  Dogs came first, by thousands of years.</p>
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<p><div id="attachment_856" style="width: 510px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-856" class="wp-image-856 size-medium" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moka-as-a-baby-500x334.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="334" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moka-as-a-baby-500x334.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moka-as-a-baby-768x514.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moka-as-a-baby.jpg 1024w" sizes="(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /><p id="caption-attachment-856" class="wp-caption-text">Photo: Julie Skoler</p></div></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>The cute response starts with two related cognitive processes: associative activation and the priming effect.</strong>  As we move through daily life, our minds monitor and model the world, making as much sense as possible of every situation.  Our minds swiftly and automatically summon all relevant information—conscious and unconscious connections—through a robust process called associative activation, which psychologist Daniel Kahneman describes as “a cascade of activity” in our brains.  This cascade rolls into a process called priming.  We are primed, mostly at an unconscious level, for whatever may come next.  This explains why we sometimes react to a danger before we even consciously know it’s there.  Our unconscious has got our back, so to speak.</p>
<p>While the priming effect is amazing, it can also be unnerving because it happens so fast and mostly outside of our conscious awareness.  We’d like to think we make our own decisions, but we’re primed in ways we frequently don’t, and can’t, recognize or control.</p>
<p>One of these ways is how we respond to babies.  When I see the photograph at the top of this article, my response is personal because I know this particular baby, but it’s more than that, too.  It rises above and beyond the personal.  Our unconscious calls up associations that appear to be pre-programmed, to use an awfully mechanistic term, and primes us to pay attention to and feel protective of any baby, not just the babies we know and love.</p>
<p>People’s responses aren’t identical, of course, but researchers have found commonalities.  As John Bradshaw describes in <em>The Animals Among Us</em>, functional MRI scans reveal the activation of dozens of specialized areas in the brain when a subject sees a baby’s face.  These areas are located all over the brain: on the left side and the right, in the cortex and the thalamus, in the more recently developed parts and the ancient ones.  They include some you’d expect, such as those dedicated to attention and facial recognition, but also areas dedicated to reward, attachment, empathy, emotion, and mentalizing, the process that enables us to suss out the mental states of others.  Not surprisingly, some areas are also connected with hormones, including oxytocin and vasopressin, which are part of the brain’s emotional and social systems; and dopamine, which is part of the brain’s reward system.  The sight of babies even activates areas in the motor cortex that prime us for moving and speaking.  This happens to women more than men, and more to some people than others, but nearly all of us fall for cute babies to some extent.</p>
<p>In the 1940s, the animal behaviorist and zoologist Konrad Lorenz first described the cute response as an evolutionary adaptation in mammals.  It makes sense.  Parents—whether bonobo, human, or red fox—who responded more positively to their babies and cared for them were more likely to pass on their genes, and the cute response became a genetic feature of mammals.</p>
<p>In us humans, the extreme helplessness of our young may have fostered a highly charged response.  Our big brains give us extraordinary advantages, but they complicate childbirth and early childhood.  Even after a long gestation, our babies must be born before they’re really ready.  Unlike other mammals, whose brains don’t grow much after birth, humans’ brains keep on growing and developing.  A puppy will learn how to stand at two weeks, and at four weeks will walk, run, and play.  By contrast, a human baby has nine to fifteen months to go before beginning to toddle.  In the meantime, they have cuteness.</p>
<p><strong>This isn’t run-of-the-mill cuteness.  </strong>We fall for certain kinds of cuteness more than others, and in remarkably consistent ways.  Lorenz identified the key features, which he called <em>Kindchenschema</em>, or baby schema, that are “innate releasing mechanisms” for caretaking behavior in adults.  First, there’s babyfacedness: a proportionally large round head and prominent forehead; big eyes, facing forward and positioned slightly lower on the face; and a small nose, small mouth, receding chin, and round cheeks.  Next, there’s the soft round body, with short pudgy legs and arms and soft flexible skin. In other words, your classic cute baby.  As Bradshaw notes, the eyes may matter most. They’re proportionally large and set below the midline of the head.  The “cutest” babies, the ones who fit these patterns most closely, have the most intense effects on our brains, whether we’re conscious of it or not.</p>
<p>Finally, the cute response comprises more than looks, but the whole baby package.  We respond to the clumsy movements, wobbling, playfulness, and helplessness of infants, toddlers, and small children—and to the sounds of babbling, cooing, laughing, and crying.</p>
<p>Cuteness triggers affection and delight.  Our cute response is lavish, extravagant, and sometimes foolish.  <a href="https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0121554" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">It crosses boundaries</span></a>—including between races and ethnicities, and between species.  It finds baby schema anywhere and everywhere.  Stephen Jay Gould, a paleontologist and evolutionary biologist, in a whimsically serious article called “Mickey Mouse Meets Konrad Lorenz” (more on Mickey in a bit), writes: “We are…fooled by an evolved response to our own babies, and we transfer our reaction to the same set of features in other animals.”  We react to pets and baby wild animals alike, even to animals we should have the good sense to fear.  As a kid, I was smitten by the lion cub Elsa in the film <em>Born Free</em>; and even though the lesson of the story was that Elsa needed to live in the wild, I still wanted to adopt her.  (Really, I wanted to scoop her up and hug her.)  Lorenz saw the cross-species response in humans as evidence of the power and consistency of the <em>Kindchenschema</em>. It makes little evolutionary sense to respond to kittens or lion cubs, but the amped-up cute response in humans doesn’t make fine distinctions.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-857 size-medium" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/kittens-500x336.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="336" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/kittens-500x336.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/kittens-1024x689.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/kittens-768x517.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/kittens-1536x1033.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/kittens.jpg 1756w" sizes="(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Classic cute babies!</strong>  They have proportionally large heads and foreheads; small noses, small mouths, receding chins, and round cheeks; and large eyes, set slightly lower on their faces.  Their big ears accentuate their foreheads and make their heads seem even larger.  The classic tabby markings, the M on their foreheads and the streaks beside their eyes, highlight their eyes.  And there’s the baby’s body—rounded, with short chubby legs, and loose skin and soft fur.</p>
<p>Here’s another classic cute baby.  The man who was trying to take this puppy for a walk wasn’t making much progress since each new passerby had to stop, admire, and pet her.  (And one of them had to snap a few pictures for this article.)</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="aligncenter wp-image-858" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/May-collage-500x167.jpg" alt="" width="588" height="196" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/May-collage-500x167.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/May-collage-1024x341.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/May-collage-768x256.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/May-collage-1536x512.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/May-collage-scaled.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 588px) 100vw, 588px" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The cute response may help answer the cat conundrum.  Why do we keep cats as pets?  They’re a bit of a puzzle as the pet of choice for millions and millions of people.  They can be persnickety and changeable, many are not particularly friendly, and some are so skittish that they avoid everybody.  They don’t take to our training.  They may disappear for weeks at a time, find a better home down the road and move in, or go wild.  An affectionate and playful kitten may turn into an adult who wants little or nothing to do with the person it snuggled up to before.  Their faces, lacking muscles, are impassive and hard (for humans) to read.  For no apparent reason, they scratch or bite or both.  And lots of people are allergic to them.</p>
<p>Don’t get me wrong.  I love cats and have always loved cats.  Many people, including me (see my articles “Cat People” and “Here’s Looking at You, Felis Catus”), would argue with almost every point I’ve just made.  Some of their appeal may lie in the fact that cats evoke the cute response right into adulthood.  Adult cats don’t fully outgrow their baby faces and may keep on tapping our “innate releasing mechanisms” for attention and care-taking.  What’s more, domestic cats, who evolved as solitary and largely silent creatures in the wild, have developed a cry that sounds eerily like a baby.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><div id="attachment_859" style="width: 444px" class="wp-caption alignnone"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-859" class="wp-image-859" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/orangecatback-468x700.jpg" alt="" width="434" height="650" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/orangecatback-468x700.jpg 468w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/orangecatback-684x1024.jpg 684w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/orangecatback-768x1149.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/orangecatback-1027x1536.jpg 1027w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/orangecatback.jpg 1185w" sizes="(max-width: 434px) 100vw, 434px" /><p id="caption-attachment-859" class="wp-caption-text">The cat down the block.</p></div></p>
<p>The head’s relatively big and rounded.  The forehead’s prominent.  The cheeks are round, the nose and snout small, the chin receding, and the mouth small.  Most important, the eyes are proportionally big and set low on the face.  This cat hardly evokes the response that a kitten would, but still meets the cuteness criteria in many ways.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><div id="attachment_860" style="width: 542px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-860" class="wp-image-860" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Pilot1-500x375.jpg" alt="" width="532" height="399" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Pilot1-500x375.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Pilot1-1024x768.jpg 1024w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Pilot1-768x576.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Pilot1-1536x1152.jpg 1536w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Pilot1.jpg 2016w" sizes="(max-width: 532px) 100vw, 532px" /><p id="caption-attachment-860" class="wp-caption-text">Pilot, a Pembroke Welsh corgi                                            Photo: Rogers Marquess</p></div></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Then there’s this adorable puppy.  Some breeds of dog—short-legged dogs like corgis, small ones like terriers, pugs, and toy breeds—seem to have been designed to take advantage of the cute response.  I say <em>designed</em>, but the process must have unfolded in a more organic way, since small dogs have been part of human communities as both working dogs and pets for a very long time.  The short legs (of corgis, dachshunds, basset hounds, and others) stem from a <a href="https://www.nih.gov/news-events/nih-research-matters/gene-insertion-underlies-origin-dogs-short-legs" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>single genetic mutation</u></a> that is nearly as old as dogs are.  Pet lap dogs, including something like the Maltese, were popular in ancient Greece and Rome.</p>
<p>The best-known corgis, Queen Elizabeth’s Pembroke Welsh corgis, reputedly trace their line back to the early 12<sup>th</sup>century when their short-legged ancestors were brought to Wales from mainland Europe.  For centuries, corgis worked as cattle and sheep herders in Wales.  (Some probably still do.)  Those corgis, though low slung, may not have looked quite like the current breed.  Early breeding was looser and focused on function.  A farmer would cross the best herder with the best herder.  What the dogs looked like didn’t matter much.</p>
<p>In the late 19<sup>th</sup> century, as dog breeding in Great Britain became a craze (one that spread across the Atlantic and elsewhere), was formalized, and shifted from function to looks and from working farms and fields to markets for the growing middle class, breeders responded to what people wanted, and many people wanted cute.  At some point, breeders started to make certain breeds look more like babies—pugs—or retain puppy-like features—with their small size and short legs—even when they were adults.  They may not have known the name for it, but they were using the cute response.  Not surprisingly, the outcomes are hard to resist.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><div id="attachment_861" style="width: 423px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-861" class="wp-image-861" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/FrankRS-500x667.jpg" alt="" width="413" height="551" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/FrankRS-500x667.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/FrankRS-768x1024.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/FrankRS-1152x1536.jpg 1152w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/FrankRS-scaled.jpg 1536w" sizes="(max-width: 413px) 100vw, 413px" /><p id="caption-attachment-861" class="wp-caption-text">Frank, a coton de Tulear                          Photo: Courtney Kiernat</p></div></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Then—in what may seem like a tangent, but isn’t—there’s Mickey Mouse.</strong>  Mickey made his public debut in 1928 in <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BBgghnQF6E4" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><em><u>Steamboat Willie</u></em></a>, a cartoon that ran before a feature film at a New York theater.  It was a hit.  It takes clever advantage of synchronized film sound, which was still brand new, with Mickey and Minnie “playing” the animals on a steamboat as musical instruments in a goofy rendition of “Turkey in the Straw.”  It’s an anarchic little film.  Mickey’s a trickster—the deckhand to a beast (literally) of a boss—who’s out to avoid work and have fun, and trouble be damned.</p>
<p>Stephen Jay Gould’s 1979 article marked Mickey’s fiftieth birthday.  Since Gould was a scientist writing a column in <em>Natural History</em>, his subject was not really a cartoon mouse.  Rather, he wanted to teach readers about Konrad Lorenz’s theory and how readily the cute response works “in biologically inappropriate” ways<em>.</em>  He used Mickey to show this in action.  As Mickey became the symbol of the growing Disney empire and one of the most recognizable figures in the country, the company tamed his trickster ways and made him politer and more palatable.  Gould notes that “his appearance changed in tandem” with his personality, and changed in very particular ways.</p>
<p>The Disney animators gradually “grew” Mickey in reverse, from adulthood toward babyhood.  Maybe this was conscious, maybe not.  The original anthropomorphized Mickey hardly resembled a real-life mouse, but more so than he later did.  He also looked more like an adult: smaller head, face, and eyes (beady, actually), and longer skinny arms and legs. Gould, using his “best pair of dial calipers,” carefully measured Mickey’s transformations.  His eyes grew from 27 to 42 per cent of the length of his head.  What had been his whole eye in the early days became merely the pupil of his new eye, and the whites of his eyes steadily expanded.  His head grew, too, though only from 42.7 to 48.1 per cent of the length of his body.  Instead, they moved his ears back in order to make his forehead appear substantially larger—and more like a baby’s.  Gould noticed other changes, as well: Mickey’s skinny limbs thickened and shortened, and he acquired joints so he could move more “floppily.”  His snout broadened to make it look shorter.  Knowingly or not, the animators kept emphasizing the baby schema <a href="https://www.dix-project.net/item/2742/natural-history-magazine-issue-88-5-mickey-mouse-meets-konrad-lorenz" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><u>as they altered Mickey’s look</u></a>, increasing his cute appeal.  Gould sums up the changes: Mickey “assumed an ever more childlike appearance as the ratty character of <em>Steamboat Willie</em> became the cute and inoffensive host to a magic kingdom.”</p>
<p>We don’t need science to tell us that we’re suckers for cute baby animals, human or otherwise.  We already knew that.  Advertisers know that.  But what fascinates me is that we’re not simply sentimental fools.  Our susceptibility to roly-poly puppies and our addiction to YouTube videos of kittens actually grow out of serious, ancient business.  As John Bradshaw explains, our “instinctive reaction to cuteness is a part of our mammalian heritage that ensured the survival of our offspring, going back millions of years.”  So the next time you get sucked into a vortex of cute kitten videos—or meet an adorable baby, smile, lean forward, and start babbling—you can thank evolution.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><div id="attachment_862" style="width: 460px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-862" class="wp-image-862" src="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Lefty-500x479.jpg" alt="" width="450" height="431" srcset="https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Lefty-500x479.jpg 500w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Lefty-768x736.jpg 768w, https://www.petspeopleandotheranimals.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Lefty.jpg 1014w" sizes="(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px" /><p id="caption-attachment-862" class="wp-caption-text">Lefty, a basset hound mix</p></div></p>
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	<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-size: 20px;"><strong>References (in the order of their first appearance):</strong></span></p>
<p>Hal Herzog.  <em>Some We Love, Some We Hate, Some We Eat: Why It’s So Hard to Think Straight About Animals</em>. Harper, 2010.</p>
<p>Daniel Kahneman. <em>Thinking, Fast and Slow</em>. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011.</p>
<p>John Bradshaw. <em>The Animals Among Us: How Pets Make Us Human</em>. Basic Books, 2017.</p>
<p>Stephen Jay Gould.  “Mickey Mouse Meets Konrad Lorenz.” <em>Natural History</em>, May 1979, 30-36.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>More about the photographs</strong></p>
<p>Photo of Pilot.  Pilot has her own Instagram handle: _Pilot_Jones_322</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Photo of Frank.  Find more photos</p>
<p>of dogs at Courntey Kiernat’s Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/B7g_bQbFfx6/?igshid=1fdwk95gjkj2z" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Threeandaquarterdogs</span></a></p>
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