The smaller, the more barking and offensive? It is familiar to many owners of small dogs, but it can also be known to those who have been wildly bitten by a handful of dogs.
We had a handkerchief the size of a handkerchief next door. He literally took it in the hands of his master, he just put it to the ground to do his thing. At times, however, it was as if he had absorbed superpower. What was moving was bothering him, if he thought it was too threatening, it would have made him worse. The whole area resounded from the miniature eb.
It is said that such offensive, barking small puppies are unaware of how big they really are. This question has already been looked at, but the study has refuted all of this, meaning the animals do know how big they are.
Dogs have also been tested on this issue. Three-sized holes were used to test whether the dogs were aware of their dimensions. The first hole was larger than one of their bodies, meaning they could easily fit through it. The next is an opening about the same size as their body, through which they had to squeeze themselves a little, but passed through it. The last one was a small hole they certainly couldn’t get through. During the study, they observed that they were confidently approaching and passing through the large hole, while they approached an opening of the same size much more carefully. Based on this, dogs have body awareness. But then why are small puppies so offensive?
Perhaps it is from man that in the case of small dogs we do not teach them not to bite, since they are small, so they do not pose a danger. And in the case of medium and large dogs, one basically tries to raise a gentle and well-groomed dog. An explanation for this behavior may also be that they are acting in this way with all creatures larger than them to scare them, or at least show that they can attack if necessary.
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(Source: homepicture.com | Pictures: Pixabay)