Temperament test
Encyclopedia
Temperament tests assess dogs for breed-specific behaviors or suitability for adoption from an animal shelter
Animal shelter
An animal shelter is a facility that houses homeless, lost, or abandoned animals; primarily a large variety of dogs and cats.Parrots, for example, are the third most common pet owned by people...

 by observing properties such as aggressiveness (see dog aggression
Dog aggression
Dog aggression is a term used by dog owners and breeders to describe canine-to-canine antipathy.Aggression itself is usually defined by canine behaviorists as "the intent to do harm"...

) or shyness.

Shyness

Temperament testing in wolfhound
Wolfhound
Wolfhound can refer to various breeds of dogs that have been bred to hunt wolves or to established lines of wolf-dog crosses that retain significant characteristics of wolves. Wolf-dog hybrids crossed in recent generations are often referred to as wolfdogs, wolf-dog hybrids or wolf crosses, but...

s is an old and proven form of a mild dog fighting used in young dogs to test their temperament. For example, an American standard for an Irish Wolfhound is defined as "a large, rough-coated, greyhound-like dog, fast enough to catch a wolf and strong enough to kill it." It states that "the breed's well-being demands strong, gentle hounds, never aggressive or shy, not even "edgy" ones. Edgy hounds are presently under control, but without their handler's constant control would surely at least retreat, or perhaps manifest worse characteristics of the weak temperament."

Typically it is practiced with larger breeds known in Russia
Russia
Russia or , officially known as both Russia and the Russian Federation , is a country in northern Eurasia. It is a federal semi-presidential republic, comprising 83 federal subjects...

 as волкодав (literally: dogs meant for the hunting of wolves). These large breeds (such as Caucasian Shepherd) in Russia undergo the testing called тестовые испытания волкодавов (i.e. testing/examination of dogs meant for hunting wolves). The breeders believe that males used for breeding have to have preserved fighting ability and dominant tendencies because it is a typical mark of their breed. They also believe that weak dogs without fighting abilities will cause a decrease in quality of the breed.

As part of the test, breeder
Breeder
A breeder is a person who practices the vocation of mating carefully selected specimens of the same breed to reproduce specific, consistently replicable qualities and characteristics....

s release two young dog
Dog
The domestic dog is a domesticated form of the gray wolf, a member of the Canidae family of the order Carnivora. The term is used for both feral and pet varieties. The dog may have been the first animal to be domesticated, and has been the most widely kept working, hunting, and companion animal in...

s and let them behave naturally even if they begin to fight. If the fight looks dangerous, the breeders pull the dogs off each other to prevent their injury. If one of the participating dogs shows fear from the other dog and displays no dominant tendencies, he is removed from breeding to ensure his weak nature is not passed on to his descendants.

Aggressiveness

Recently in the United States temperament testing has been associated mostly with efforts to screen out potentially dangerous dogs from adoption by standardized testing. All tests of this type are subject to some level of local controversy because they can lead to euthanasia of dogs, because some pet owners say their own dogs would fail, and because shelters can report lower overall euthanasia rates by counting only "adoptable" animals.

Assess-A-Pet

This test involves use of the "Assess-A-Hand", a vinyl or latex mock hand and arm mounted on a wooden dowel, used to avoid bites to the tester who uses it to approach, pet, and then pull away a bowl or toy from the dog. The device was invented by Sue Sternberg, a longtime worker at a nonprofit animal shelter in New York. The test is typically given after a certain number of days at a shelter, with retesting after a failure and additionally after resolution of illness. In one widely publicized example, the ASPCA promoted an incident involving a dog, Oreo, found thrown from a rooftop in New York. The News reports were accompanied by photos of the brown and white dog with her front legs in casts. This triggered a flood of adoption offers and financial donations to help pay for her medical care. After accepting countless donations for Oreos care the ASPCA announced it would euthanize Oreo after she bit the "Assess-A-Hand" in repeated tests and lunged at another dog from a five-foot distance, all common in the stress of a shelter environment. The dog had received surgery to repair its broken forelegs and 59 45-minute sessions intended to reduce aggressiveness, but after several months it was found, by the ASPCA, too dangerous ever to be placed in a home. Although many reputable rescues and reputable trainers begged to take Oreo to rehabilitate her in a stress free environment the ASPCA declined and walked with its donations in her name.

SAFER Test

A test under development by the San Francisco SPCA seeks to establish more rigorously standardized measurements - for example, how many seconds a dog takes to approach a handler or growls, and at what distance a response occurs at. A test in Kansas found that owners surveyed three weeks after adoption reported aggressive tendencies in 36 dogs not screened and 8 from a group screened by the procedure.
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK