The Columbus Dispatch

Owners can share stress levels with dogs, study finds

- By Jeremy Rehm

NEW YORK — When dog owners go through a stressful period, they aren’t alone in feeling the pressure — their dogs feel it too, a new study suggests.

Dog owners experienci­ng long bouts of stress can transfer it to their dogs, scientists said in a study published last month in Scientific Reports.

The Swedish researcher­s focused on 58 people who own border collies or Shetland sheepdogs. They examined hair from the dog owners and their dogs, looking at the concentrat­ions of a hormone called cortisol, a chemical released into the bloodstrea­m and absorbed by hair follicles in response to stress.

Depression, excessive physical exercise and unemployme­nt are just a few examples of stress that can influence the amount of cortisol found in one’s hair, said Lina Roth of Linkoping University in Sweden.

Roth and her team found that the patterns of cortisol levels in the hair of dog owners closely matched that found in their dogs in both winter and summer months, indicating their stress levels were in sync.

She thinks that owners are influencin­g their dogs, rather than the other way around, because several human personalit­y traits appear to affect canine cortisol levels.

The researcher­s don’t know what causes the A study published in June suggests that dog owners experienci­ng long bouts of stress can transfer that stress to their dogs.

synchroniz­ation in cortisol levels between humans and their pups. But a hint might lie in the fact that the link is stronger with competitiv­e dogs than in pet pooches.

The bond formed between owner and

competitiv­e dogs during training may increase the canines’ emotional reliance on their owners, she said. That, in turn, could increase the degree of synchroniz­ation.

But why do people influence their dogs rather than vice versa? Perhaps people are “a more central part of the dog’s life, whereas we humans also have other social networks,” Roth said in an email.

The study results are no surprise, said Alicia Buttner, director of animal behavior with the Nebraska Humane Society in Omaha.

“New evidence is continuall­y emerging, showing that people and their dogs have incredibly close bonds that resemble the ones that parents share with their children,” she said in an email.

But she said there isn’t enough evidence to assume that the influence goes only one way; it may go both ways.

“It’s not just as simple as owner gets stressed, dog gets stressed,” she said.

Many other factors could affect a person or dog’s stress levels and possibly even dampen them, she said.

Buttner said cortisol levels don’t necessaril­y indicate “bad” stress. They instead can indicate a good experience, like getting ready to go for a walk, she said.

Roth and her team plan to investigat­e whether other dog breeds will react to their owners the same way.

In the meantime, she offered advice to minimize how much stress dog owners may be causing their pets. Dogs that play more show fewer signs of being stressed, she said.

So “just be with your dog,” Roth said, “and have fun.”

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