A.M. Taylor, D. Reby, K. McComb
Size communication in domestic dog, Canis familiaris, growls
Animal Behaviour, Volume 79, Issue 1, January 2010, Pages
205–210
Abstract
In many species, body size is a key
determinant of the outcome of agonistic interactions, and receivers are
expected to attend to size cues when assessing competitors' signals. Several
mammal vocalizations, including domestic dog growls, encode reliable
information about caller body size in the dispersion of formant frequencies. To
test whether adult domestic dogs attend to formant dispersion when presented
with the growls of their conspecifics, we played recordings of resynthesized
growls where the size-related variation in formant frequency spacing was
manipulated independently of all other parameters. Subjects from three
different size groups (small, medium and large dogs) were presented with
playbacks of growls where formant frequencies had been rescaled to correspond
to a dog 30% smaller or 30% larger than themselves. While large dogs
systematically displayed more motivation to interact when growls simulated a
smaller intruder, small dogs did not respond differentially to the playback
conditions. However, the small dogs responded significantly less than all other
size groups to both playback conditions. Our results suggest that domestic dogs
are able to perceive size-related information in growls, and more specifically
that they are able to adapt their behavioural response as a function of the
perceived intruder's size relative to their own.
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