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Free-ranging dog

A free-ranging dog is a dog that is not confined to a yard or house.[1][2] Free-ranging dogs include street dogs, village dogs, stray dogs, feral dogs, etc., and may be owned or unowned. The global dog population is estimated to be 900 million,[3][4] of which around 20% are regarded as owned pets and therefore restrained.[5]

An Indian street dog
Two urban free-ranging dogs outside Moscow, Russia

Origin

Dogs living with humans is a dynamic relationship, with a large proportion of the dog population losing contact with humans at some stage over time. This loss of contact first occurred after domestication and has reoccurred throughout history.[6]

The global dog population is estimated to be 900 million and rising.[3][4] Although it is said that the "dog is man's best friend"[7] for the 17–24% of dogs that live as pets in the developed countries,[5] in the developing world pet dogs are uncommon but there are many village, community or feral dogs.[8] Most of these dogs live out their lives as scavengers and have never been owned by humans, with one study showing their most common response when approached by strangers is to run away (52%) or respond aggressively (11%).[9] Little is known about these dogs, or the dogs in developed countries that are feral, stray or that are in shelters, as the majority of modern research on dog cognition has focused on pet dogs living in human homes.[10]

Categories of dogs

There is confusion with the terms used to categorize dogs. Dogs can be classed by whether they possess an owner or a community of owners, how freely they can move around, and any genetic differences they have from other dog populations due to long-term separation.[6][2]

Owned dogs

Owned dogs are "family" dogs. They have an identifiable owner, are commonly socialized, and are not allowed to roam.[6][2] They are restricted to particular outdoor or indoor areas. They have little impact on wildlife unless going with humans into natural areas.[11]

Free-ranging owned dogs

A free-ranging dog is a dog that is not confined to a yard or house.[1][2] Free-ranging owned dogs are cared for by one owner or a community of owners, and are able to roam freely.[6][2] This includes "village dogs", which live in rural areas and human habitations. These are not confined. However, they rarely leave the village vicinity. This also includes "rural free-ranging dogs", which also live in rural areas and human habitations. These are owned or are associated with homes, and they are not confined. These include farm and pastoral dogs that range over particular areas.[11]

 
A dog cared for by the community, in Alameda Central, CDMX.

Free-ranging unowned dogs

 
Two stray dogs from Kozhikode in Indian state of Kerala.

Free-ranging unowned dogs are stray dogs. They get their food and shelter from human environments, but they have not been socialized and so they avoid humans as much as possible.[6][2] Free-ranging unowned dogs include "urban free-ranging dogs", which live in cities and urban areas. These have no owner but are commensals, subsisting on left over food from human, garbage or other dogs' food as their primary food sources.[11] Free-ranging unowned dogs also include feral dogs.[6]

Feral dogs

 
A feral dog on Navassa Island in the Caribbean.

The term "feral" can be used to describe those animals that have been through the process of domestication but have returned to a wild state. "Domesticated" and "socialized" (tamed) do not mean the same thing, as it is possible for an individual animal of a domesticated species to be feral and not tame, and it is possible for an individual animal of a wild species to be socialized to live with humans.[12]

Feral dogs differ from other dogs because they did not have close human contact early in their lives (socialization).[6] Feral dogs live in a wild state with no food and shelter intentionally provided by humans and show a continuous and strong avoidance of direct human contact. The distinction between feral, stray, and free-ranging dogs is sometimes a matter of degree, and a dog may shift its status throughout its life. In some unlikely but observed cases, a feral dog that was not born wild but lived with a feral group can become rehabilitated to a domestic dog with an owner. A dog can become a stray when it escapes human control, by abandonment or being born to a stray mother. A stray dog can become feral when it is forced out of the human environment or when it is co-opted or socially accepted by a nearby feral group. Feralization occurs by the development of a fear response to humans. Feral dogs are not reproductively self-sustaining, suffer from high rates of juvenile mortality, and depend indirectly on humans for their food, their space, and the supply of co-optable individuals.[13]

"Wild" dogs

 
The Australian dingo is debated as being a "wild dog".

The existence of "wild dogs" is debated. Some authors propose that this term applies to the Australian dingo and dingo-feral dog hybrids. They believe that these have a history of independence from humans and should no longer be considered as domesticated.[11] Others disagree, and propose that the dingo was once domesticated and is now a feral dog.[14][15]

The first British colonists to arrive in Australia established a settlement at Port Jackson in 1788 and recorded dingoes living there with indigenous Australians.[16] Although the dingo exists in the wild,[17] it associates with humans but has not been selectively bred as have other domesticated animals.[18][17] The dingo's relationship with indigenous Australians can be described as commensalism, in which two organisms live in close association but without depending on each other for survival. They will both hunt and sleep together. The dingo is therefore comfortable enough around humans to associate with them, but is still capable of living independently, much like the domestic cat.[12]: 128–129  Any free-ranging unowned dog can be socialized to become an owned dog, as some dingoes do when they join human families.[6]

Another point of view regards domestication as a process that is difficult to define. It regards dogs as being either socialized and able to exist with humans, or unsocialized. There exist dogs that live with their human families but are unsocialized and will treat strangers aggressively and defensively as might a wild wolf. There also exists a number of cases where wild wolves have approached people in remote places, attempting to get them to play and to form companionship.[12]

Rabies impact

In 2011, a media article on the stray dog population by the US National Animal Interest Alliance said that there are 200 million stray dogs worldwide and that a "rabies epidemic" was causing a global public health issue.[19] In 2013, the World Health Organization reports that dogs are responsible for the vast majority of human rabies deaths, contributing up to 99% of all rabies transmissions to humans. Rabies causes tens of thousands of deaths every year, mainly in Asia and Africa. More than 15 million people receive post-bite rabies vaccines to prevent the disease.[20]

Conservation impact

Increasing numbers of free-ranging dogs have become a threat to the snow leopard and young brown bears on the Tibetan Plateau because dog packs chase these animals away from food.[21] Free-ranging dogs are often vectors of diseases such as rabies and canine distemper, which can jump into species such as African wild dogs, wolves, lions and tigers. In addition, they can interbreed with other members of the genus Canis such as the Ethiopian wolf and the dingo, raising genetic purity concerns.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Slater, Margaret R (2001). "The role of veterinary epidemiology in the study of free-roaming dogs and cats". Preventive Veterinary Medicine. 48 (4): 273–86. doi:10.1016/S0167-5877(00)00201-4. PMID 11259820.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Høgåsen, H.R; Er, C; Di Nardo, A; Dalla Villa, P (2013). "Free-roaming dog populations: A cost-benefit model for different management options, applied to Abruzzo, Italy". Preventive Veterinary Medicine. 112 (3–4): 401–13. doi:10.1016/j.prevetmed.2013.07.010. PMID 23973012.
  3. ^ a b Gompper, Matthew E. (2013). "The dog–human–wildlife interface: assessing the scope of the problem". In Gompper, Matthew E. (ed.). Free-Ranging Dogs and Wildlife Conservation. Oxford University Press. pp. 9–54. ISBN 978-0191810183.
  4. ^ a b Lescureux, Nicolas; Linnell, John D.C. (2014). "Warring brothers: The complex interactions between wolves (Canis lupus) and dogs (Canis familiaris) in a conservation context". Biological Conservation. 171: 232–245. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2014.01.032.
  5. ^ a b Lord, Kathryn; Feinstein, Mark; Smith, Bradley; Coppinger, Raymond (2013). "Variation in reproductive traits of members of the genus Canis with special attention to the domestic dog (Canis familiaris)". Behavioural Processes. 92: 131–142. doi:10.1016/j.beproc.2012.10.009. PMID 23124015. S2CID 9748685.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Miklosi, A. (2015). "Ch.8-Intraspecific social organization in dogs and related forms". Dog Behaviour, Evolution, and Cognition (2 ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 172–173.
  7. ^ Laveaux, C.J. & King of Prussia, F. (1789). The life of Frederick the Second, King of Prussia: To which are added observations, Authentic Documents, and a Variety of Anecdotes. J. Derbett London.
  8. ^ Coppinger, Ray (2001). Dogs: a Startling New Understanding of Canine Origin, Behavior and Evolution. New York: Scribner. ISBN 978-0-684-85530-1.
  9. ^ Ortolani, A (2009). "Ethiopian village dogs: Behavioural responses to a stranger's approach". Applied Animal Behaviour Science. 119 (3–4): 210–218. doi:10.1016/j.applanim.2009.03.011.
  10. ^ Udell, M. A. R.; Dorey, N. R.; Wynne, C. D. L. (2010). "What did domestication do to dogs? A new account of dogs' sensitivity to human actions". Biological Reviews. 85 (2): 327–45. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.483.3002. doi:10.1111/j.1469-185X.2009.00104.x. PMID 19961472. S2CID 11627064.
  11. ^ a b c d Vanak, ABI Tamim; Gompper, Matthew E (2009). "Dogs Canis familiarisas carnivores: Their role and function in intraguild competition". Mammal Review. 39 (4): 265. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2907.2009.00148.x.
  12. ^ a b c Pierotti, R.; Fogg, B. (2017). "Ch.9-The process of domestication:Tame versus feral and domestic versus wild". The First Domestication: How Wolves and Humans Coevolved. Yale University Press. pp. 192–193. ISBN 978-0-300-22616-4.
  13. ^ Boitani, L. and Ciucci, P. (1995). "Comparative social ecology of feral dogs and wolves" (PDF). Ethology Ecology & Evolution. 7 (1): 49–72. doi:10.1080/08927014.1995.9522969.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  14. ^ Greig, K; Walter, R; Matisoo-Smith, L (2016). "21–Dogs and People in South East Asia and the Pacific". In Marc Oxenham; Hallie Buckley (eds.). The Routledge Handbook of Bioarchaeology in Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands. Routledge, Oxford UK. pp. 471–475. ISBN 9781138778184.
  15. ^ Jackson, Stephen M.; Groves, Colin P.; Fleming, Peter J.S.; Aplin, KEN P.; Eldridge, Mark D.B.; Gonzalez, Antonio; Helgen, Kristofer M. (2017). "The Wayward Dog: Is the Australian native dog or Dingo a distinct species?". Zootaxa. 4317 (2): 201. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4317.2.1.
  16. ^ Tench, W. (1789). "11" (PDF). A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay. J. Debrett. Note that page numbers are not used in this journal
  17. ^ a b Smith, Bradley, ed. (2015). "Ch.3". The Dingo Debate: Origins, Behaviour and Conservation. CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne, Australia. pp. 55–80. ISBN 9781486300303.
  18. ^ Jackson, Stephen; Groves, Colin (2015). Taxonomy of Australian Mammals. CSIRO Publishing, Clayton, Victoria, Australia. pp. 287–290. ISBN 9781486300136.
  19. ^ "The Global Stray Dog Population Crisis". National Animal Interest Alliance. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  20. ^ "Rabies - Fact Sheet N°99, Updated 2013". World Health Organization. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  21. ^ Understanding Dogs to Protect Cats by Luke Dollar, National Geographic 2016

Bibliography

  • Beck, Alan M., "The Ecology of Stray Dogs: A Study of Free-Ranging Urban Animals" (1973). Purdue University Press Books.

free, ranging, stray, redirects, here, other, uses, stray, disambiguation, free, ranging, that, confined, yard, house, include, street, dogs, village, dogs, stray, dogs, feral, dogs, owned, unowned, global, population, estimated, million, which, around, regard. Stray dog redirects here For other uses see Stray dog disambiguation A free ranging dog is a dog that is not confined to a yard or house 1 2 Free ranging dogs include street dogs village dogs stray dogs feral dogs etc and may be owned or unowned The global dog population is estimated to be 900 million 3 4 of which around 20 are regarded as owned pets and therefore restrained 5 An Indian street dog Two urban free ranging dogs outside Moscow Russia Contents 1 Origin 2 Categories of dogs 2 1 Owned dogs 2 2 Free ranging owned dogs 2 3 Free ranging unowned dogs 2 4 Feral dogs 2 5 Wild dogs 3 Rabies impact 4 Conservation impact 5 See also 6 References 6 1 BibliographyOrigin EditDogs living with humans is a dynamic relationship with a large proportion of the dog population losing contact with humans at some stage over time This loss of contact first occurred after domestication and has reoccurred throughout history 6 The global dog population is estimated to be 900 million and rising 3 4 Although it is said that the dog is man s best friend 7 for the 17 24 of dogs that live as pets in the developed countries 5 in the developing world pet dogs are uncommon but there are many village community or feral dogs 8 Most of these dogs live out their lives as scavengers and have never been owned by humans with one study showing their most common response when approached by strangers is to run away 52 or respond aggressively 11 9 Little is known about these dogs or the dogs in developed countries that are feral stray or that are in shelters as the majority of modern research on dog cognition has focused on pet dogs living in human homes 10 Categories of dogs EditThere is confusion with the terms used to categorize dogs Dogs can be classed by whether they possess an owner or a community of owners how freely they can move around and any genetic differences they have from other dog populations due to long term separation 6 2 Owned dogs Edit Owned dogs are family dogs They have an identifiable owner are commonly socialized and are not allowed to roam 6 2 They are restricted to particular outdoor or indoor areas They have little impact on wildlife unless going with humans into natural areas 11 Free ranging owned dogs Edit A free ranging dog is a dog that is not confined to a yard or house 1 2 Free ranging owned dogs are cared for by one owner or a community of owners and are able to roam freely 6 2 This includes village dogs which live in rural areas and human habitations These are not confined However they rarely leave the village vicinity This also includes rural free ranging dogs which also live in rural areas and human habitations These are owned or are associated with homes and they are not confined These include farm and pastoral dogs that range over particular areas 11 A dog cared for by the community in Alameda Central CDMX Free ranging unowned dogs Edit Two stray dogs from Kozhikode in Indian state of Kerala See also Estray Free ranging unowned dogs are stray dogs They get their food and shelter from human environments but they have not been socialized and so they avoid humans as much as possible 6 2 Free ranging unowned dogs include urban free ranging dogs which live in cities and urban areas These have no owner but are commensals subsisting on left over food from human garbage or other dogs food as their primary food sources 11 Free ranging unowned dogs also include feral dogs 6 Feral dogs Edit A feral dog on Navassa Island in the Caribbean The term feral can be used to describe those animals that have been through the process of domestication but have returned to a wild state Domesticated and socialized tamed do not mean the same thing as it is possible for an individual animal of a domesticated species to be feral and not tame and it is possible for an individual animal of a wild species to be socialized to live with humans 12 Feral dogs differ from other dogs because they did not have close human contact early in their lives socialization 6 Feral dogs live in a wild state with no food and shelter intentionally provided by humans and show a continuous and strong avoidance of direct human contact The distinction between feral stray and free ranging dogs is sometimes a matter of degree and a dog may shift its status throughout its life In some unlikely but observed cases a feral dog that was not born wild but lived with a feral group can become rehabilitated to a domestic dog with an owner A dog can become a stray when it escapes human control by abandonment or being born to a stray mother A stray dog can become feral when it is forced out of the human environment or when it is co opted or socially accepted by a nearby feral group Feralization occurs by the development of a fear response to humans Feral dogs are not reproductively self sustaining suffer from high rates of juvenile mortality and depend indirectly on humans for their food their space and the supply of co optable individuals 13 Wild dogs Edit Wild dog redirects here For other uses see Wild dog disambiguation The Australian dingo is debated as being a wild dog The existence of wild dogs is debated Some authors propose that this term applies to the Australian dingo and dingo feral dog hybrids They believe that these have a history of independence from humans and should no longer be considered as domesticated 11 Others disagree and propose that the dingo was once domesticated and is now a feral dog 14 15 The first British colonists to arrive in Australia established a settlement at Port Jackson in 1788 and recorded dingoes living there with indigenous Australians 16 Although the dingo exists in the wild 17 it associates with humans but has not been selectively bred as have other domesticated animals 18 17 The dingo s relationship with indigenous Australians can be described as commensalism in which two organisms live in close association but without depending on each other for survival They will both hunt and sleep together The dingo is therefore comfortable enough around humans to associate with them but is still capable of living independently much like the domestic cat 12 128 129 Any free ranging unowned dog can be socialized to become an owned dog as some dingoes do when they join human families 6 Another point of view regards domestication as a process that is difficult to define It regards dogs as being either socialized and able to exist with humans or unsocialized There exist dogs that live with their human families but are unsocialized and will treat strangers aggressively and defensively as might a wild wolf There also exists a number of cases where wild wolves have approached people in remote places attempting to get them to play and to form companionship 12 Rabies impact EditIn 2011 a media article on the stray dog population by the US National Animal Interest Alliance said that there are 200 million stray dogs worldwide and that a rabies epidemic was causing a global public health issue 19 In 2013 the World Health Organization reports that dogs are responsible for the vast majority of human rabies deaths contributing up to 99 of all rabies transmissions to humans Rabies causes tens of thousands of deaths every year mainly in Asia and Africa More than 15 million people receive post bite rabies vaccines to prevent the disease 20 Conservation impact EditIncreasing numbers of free ranging dogs have become a threat to the snow leopard and young brown bears on the Tibetan Plateau because dog packs chase these animals away from food 21 Free ranging dogs are often vectors of diseases such as rabies and canine distemper which can jump into species such as African wild dogs wolves lions and tigers In addition they can interbreed with other members of the genus Canis such as the Ethiopian wolf and the dingo raising genetic purity concerns citation needed See also EditDogs portal Feral cat Dog PuppyReferences Edit a b Slater Margaret R 2001 The role of veterinary epidemiology in the study of free roaming dogs and cats Preventive Veterinary Medicine 48 4 273 86 doi 10 1016 S0167 5877 00 00201 4 PMID 11259820 a b c d e f Hogasen H R Er C Di Nardo A Dalla Villa P 2013 Free roaming dog populations A cost benefit model for different management options applied to Abruzzo Italy Preventive Veterinary Medicine 112 3 4 401 13 doi 10 1016 j prevetmed 2013 07 010 PMID 23973012 a b Gompper Matthew E 2013 The dog human wildlife interface assessing the scope of the problem In Gompper Matthew E ed Free Ranging Dogs and Wildlife Conservation Oxford University Press pp 9 54 ISBN 978 0191810183 a b Lescureux Nicolas Linnell John D C 2014 Warring brothers The complex interactions between wolves Canis lupus and dogs Canis familiaris in a conservation context Biological Conservation 171 232 245 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2014 01 032 a b Lord Kathryn Feinstein Mark Smith Bradley Coppinger Raymond 2013 Variation in reproductive traits of members of the genus Canis with special attention to the domestic dog Canis familiaris Behavioural Processes 92 131 142 doi 10 1016 j beproc 2012 10 009 PMID 23124015 S2CID 9748685 a b c d e f g h Miklosi A 2015 Ch 8 Intraspecific social organization in dogs and related forms Dog Behaviour Evolution and Cognition 2 ed Oxford University Press pp 172 173 Laveaux C J amp King of Prussia F 1789 The life of Frederick the Second King of Prussia To which are added observations Authentic Documents and a Variety of Anecdotes J Derbett London Coppinger Ray 2001 Dogs a Startling New Understanding of Canine Origin Behavior and Evolution New York Scribner ISBN 978 0 684 85530 1 Ortolani A 2009 Ethiopian village dogs Behavioural responses to a stranger s approach Applied Animal Behaviour Science 119 3 4 210 218 doi 10 1016 j applanim 2009 03 011 Udell M A R Dorey N R Wynne C D L 2010 What did domestication do to dogs A new account of dogs sensitivity to human actions Biological Reviews 85 2 327 45 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 483 3002 doi 10 1111 j 1469 185X 2009 00104 x PMID 19961472 S2CID 11627064 a b c d Vanak ABI Tamim Gompper Matthew E 2009 Dogs Canis familiarisas carnivores Their role and function in intraguild competition Mammal Review 39 4 265 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2907 2009 00148 x a b c Pierotti R Fogg B 2017 Ch 9 The process of domestication Tame versus feral and domestic versus wild The First Domestication How Wolves and Humans Coevolved Yale University Press pp 192 193 ISBN 978 0 300 22616 4 Boitani L and Ciucci P 1995 Comparative social ecology of feral dogs and wolves PDF Ethology Ecology amp Evolution 7 1 49 72 doi 10 1080 08927014 1995 9522969 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Greig K Walter R Matisoo Smith L 2016 21 Dogs and People in South East Asia and the Pacific In Marc Oxenham Hallie Buckley eds The Routledge Handbook of Bioarchaeology in Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands Routledge Oxford UK pp 471 475 ISBN 9781138778184 Jackson Stephen M Groves Colin P Fleming Peter J S Aplin KEN P Eldridge Mark D B Gonzalez Antonio Helgen Kristofer M 2017 The Wayward Dog Is the Australian native dog or Dingo a distinct species Zootaxa 4317 2 201 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 4317 2 1 Tench W 1789 11 PDF A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay J Debrett Note that page numbers are not used in this journal a b Smith Bradley ed 2015 Ch 3 The Dingo Debate Origins Behaviour and Conservation CSIRO Publishing Melbourne Australia pp 55 80 ISBN 9781486300303 Jackson Stephen Groves Colin 2015 Taxonomy of Australian Mammals CSIRO Publishing Clayton Victoria Australia pp 287 290 ISBN 9781486300136 The Global Stray Dog Population Crisis National Animal Interest Alliance Retrieved 4 July 2014 Rabies Fact Sheet N 99 Updated 2013 World Health Organization Retrieved 4 July 2014 Understanding Dogs to Protect Cats by Luke Dollar National Geographic 2016 Bibliography Edit Beck Alan M The Ecology of Stray Dogs A Study of Free Ranging Urban Animals 1973 Purdue University Press Books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Free ranging dog amp oldid 1148104467, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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