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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bold personality in shelter dogs linked to fewer diseases

By Corsetti, Sara et al.·Published in PloS one·2018·Biology and Biotechnology Department, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Bold personality makes domestic dogs entering a shelter less vulnerable to diseases.

Species:
dog
Behaviour & energyDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 28 shelter dogs was studied to see how their personalities affected their health after entering a stressful environment. The dogs were observed for behaviors that indicated whether they were bold or shy. Over a month, the bolder dogs showed better health and fewer disease symptoms compared to the shyer ones, who were more vulnerable to illness. This suggests that a bold personality may help dogs cope better in shelters and avoid getting sick.

People also search for: why is my dog sick after shelter · dog personality and health · shelter dog immune system · bold dog behavior · shy dog health issues

Abstract

It is widely recognised that for vertebrate species, personalities vary along an axis with extremes represented by 'proactive' and 'reactive' individuals. The aim of this study was to verify whether there is a relationship between personality and disease vulnerability in domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) exposed to an intensely stressful situation such as entering a shelter. Twenty-eight shelter dogs participated in the study. The ethogram consisted of approximately 100 behavioural patterns. Behavioural observations of dogs in their new environment, a Novel Object and a T-maze test were used to evaluate the personality of the dogs captured as strays and entering the shelter. A blood sample from each dog was obtained at admission into the shelter and after a month to evaluate their immunological state. Based on PCA analyses of observational combined with experimental data, the dogs were ordered along the boldness-shyness axis, with the first being the boldest. Excluding one (the 6th), the first 10 dogs showed an improved health status: absence of disease symptoms during the 30 days of monitoring and improved immunological parameters; the opposite was found for shy dogs. The results of this research seem to confirm findings in other vertebrate species, i.e., bold and shy dog vulnerability to diseases might be different, especially when they must cope with a stressful and highly infectious environment such as a dog shelter.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29596432/