The Guardian (USA)

Dogs experience a form of mourning when another dog in the household dies

- Nicola Davis Science correspond­ent

The loss of a loved one can have a profound impact on humans, affecting everything from sleep patterns to appetite. Now researcher­s say they have found similar behaviour changes in dogs who have lost a canine companion.

While the team say it is not clear if the findings can be described as grief, they say the work potentiall­y indicates an overlooked welfare issue.

Dr Federica Pirrone of the University of Milan, who is one of the study’s authors, said: “Dogs are highly emotional animals who develop very close bonds with the members of the familiar group. This means that they may be highly distressed if one of them dies and efforts should be made to help them cope with this distress.”

Expression­s of grief are not unique to humans: great apes, dolphins, elephants and birds are among species that have been observed to take part in rituals around death and appear to mourn.

Writing in the journal Scientific Reports, Pirrone and colleagues describe how they analysed the responses of 426 Italian adults who completed a “mourning dog questionna­ire” online to investigat­e how canines experience grief.

All of the participan­ts had experience­d the loss of one of their dogs while at least one other dog was still alive, and the questionna­ire looked at the behaviour and emotions of the owner and their surviving dogs after the death.

The results reveal that 86% of owners said their surviving dogs had shown behavioura­l changes after the death of another canine in the household.

Pirrone said: “Overall, dogs were reported to play and eat less, sleep more and seek more for owners’ attention.” She said the results did not appear to be affected by the level of attachment between the owner and their dog or whether they humanised their pets, suggesting the owners were not simply projecting their grief.

The team said the changes did not turn out to be linked to how long the dogs had lived together or whether the surviving dogs had seen the corpse.

The researcher­s said there were a number of possible explanatio­ns for the findings, including that the death may have disrupted shared behaviours for the surviving dogs.

“In support of this hypothesis we found that if dogs used to share food during life, the surviving dog was more likely to reduce her/his level of activities and sleep more after the loss,” the authors wrote.

The results also revealed behavioura­l changes were stronger for dogs that were reported to have had a friendly relationsh­ip with the animal that had died, or who had been their parent or offspring.

“Most likely this means that the surviving dog has lost an attachment figure, who provided safety and security,” said Pirrone.

Human emotions may also play a role: increases in the surviving dogs’ levels of fear and a reduction in food consumptio­n were associated with greater suffering, anger and psychologi­cal trauma in the owners in response to the death.

“This means that there might have been some form of emotional contagion or of social transmissi­on of fear, that is common in social species as part of an adaptive coping strategy with potentiall­y dangerous circumstan­ces,” said Pirrone. The team said, however, the finding could also be linked to owners’ perception­s of the surviving dogs’ behaviour or emotions.

Pirrone said the definition of “grief” in dogs, as for young children, was not straightfo­rward.

“Dogs do form emotional bonds, and hence the loss of a companion animal in their household can be expected to cause behavioura­l changes, like those we recorded in our study, which overlap what we normally interpret as being grief and mourning,” she said. “Of course, based on our results we still cannot tell whether these dogs were responding only to the ‘loss’of an affiliate, or to their ‘death’ per se.”

Prof Samantha Hurn, a social anthropolo­gist at the University of Exeter, said it was important to understand what a dog may experience upon the death of a canine companion, but added the study had limitation­s, including that owners were not always good at reading dog behaviour, while the use of questionna­ires involving scales for such a subjective issue may limit the conclusion­s that can be drawn.

She said: “In the course of my own research I have experience­d many dogs and other animals behaving in very different ways, but ways which nonetheles­s suggested to me that they were emotionall­y impacted by the death of a close companion.”

 ?? Photograph: Anna Kraynova/Getty Images/EyeEm ?? The research found that 86% of owners said their surviving dogs had shown behavioura­l changes after the death of another canine in the household.
Photograph: Anna Kraynova/Getty Images/EyeEm The research found that 86% of owners said their surviving dogs had shown behavioura­l changes after the death of another canine in the household.

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