Uni of Qld: why city-living dogs bark

By Annabel McGilvray for ABC Science Online
Posted Fri Oct 16, 2009

Australian animal welfare researchers have uncovered why city-living domestic dogs may be prone to nuisance barking.

In this month's issue of Australian Veterinary Journal, a team from the University of Queensland's Centre for Animal Welfare and Ethics report a case-control survey of 150 dog owners, including 72 dogs whose owners had sought treatment for nuisance barking.

Barking can be classified as being a nuisance when it causes distress or interruption to the life of the dogs' owners or neighbours.

The results suggest dogs most likely to become nuisance barkers are young dogs from herding breeds such as collies and kelpies, those bred in a home environment, and those that have access to the indoors or live with other dogs.

The co-author of the report, Professor Clive Phillips, says the work was prompted by the high number of public complaints and inquiries about nuisance barking, with studies suggesting approximately a third of dog owners possess at least one nuisance barker.

Professor Phillips says barking may be caused by separation anxiety, perceived threats in the environment and can sometimes be simple social interaction, canine-style. But human actions and responses also play a role.

In sub-tropical Brisbane, "more people may be outside and so it may be that they are more likely to notice dogs barking," Professor Phillips said.

Young exuberance

The survey showed the greatest risk factor was the age of the dog. More than a quarter of those dogs that had been classified as nuisance barkers were less than a year old.

Professor Phillips says this is not surprising as at that age many dogs use barking as part of the learning process. The preponderance of young barkers may also occur because those dogs who are nuisance barkers at a young age do not remain in the home into old age.

The fact that herding dogs were more likely to bark also fits with the character of those breeds. Cattle dogs, German shepherds, border collies and other 'herding' dogs generally require more stimulation than other breeds.

Separation anxiety

In many cases dogs are very loyal to their owners, increasing the likelihood of separation anxiety, the study's authors write.

The researchers were surprised to find that dogs bred at home were more prone to be nuisance barkers.

"We had thought that dogs from shelters would be more likely to be nuisance barkers because they often arrive in shelters because of behavioural problems," Professor Phillips says.

"It may be that homebred dogs are greater barkers because of greater separation anxiety."

Animal behaviour specialist and author of A Modern Dog's Life, Dr Paul McGreevy of the University of Sydney, has studied canine separation anxiety and says barking is the most common way dogs have of coping when owners leave the house.

"People worry and recognise them as problematic if the neighbours are complaining. That's the key step," he said.

"A dog that's quietly melting in distress in the backyard, or in the home, is rarely identified as a dog suffering separation anxiety."

Dr McGreevy says while the sample size of the study affects the wider relevance of the results, it is a much-needed addition to research on the topic, which is responsible for the most dog-related complaints to local councils.

RMIT: Neighbourhood din can make you sick

October 09, 2009
Daily Telegraph

... Scientists have found that noise has a physiological effect, including a potentially dangerous change to the heart's activity.

The neighbourhood racket also has people picking up their phones, with 25 per cent more calls about noise made to the Environment Department's hotline in the past four years.

Airconditioning, pool pumps, alarms, animals, power tools and traffic were the most common causes of complaint.

And with good reason, according to RMIT Associate Professor of Biosignals Dinesh Kumar whose research linked noise to physical changes.

"Even though the noise level may not seem very high, it has an impact on the body," he said.

One of Professor Kumar's PhD students measured the responses of 20 participants to white noise, a mixture of individually unidentifiable sounds, ranging between 60dB and 95dB.

Professor Kumar said the controlled conditions experiment showed long periods of low-level noise had the same effect as much higher levels of noise.

The as-yet unpublished research will be presented at a conference in Brazil in 2010.