Can Spaying Lead to Bad Behavior?

Can Spaying Lead to Bad Behavior?

 
 

On an episode of “It’s Me or the Dog,” a show on Animal Planet, British dog trainer Victoria Stilwell tackled the problem of a bull terrier that exhibited mounting behavior. The first solution was to send the dog for a time-out when he mounted. However, the mounting was so severe that the trainer finally recommended neutering, which solved the problem. This case raises two questions: What other behavioral issues can neutering help address, and what is the rate of success?

In general, it would be expected that spaying or neutering most likely affects sexually dimorphic behaviors — those that are more characteristic for one gender or the other. This is exactly what a 1997 study conducted by researchers at the University of California, Davis, Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital found.

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Misbehaving Male Dogs

This study evaluated how neutering adult male dogs affected such problem behaviors as urine marking in the house, mounting, roaming, fear of inanimate stimuli as well as aggression toward family members, strangers, household dogs, unfamiliar dogs, and human territorial intruders.

Fifty-seven dogs that had exhibited one or more of these problems before being castrated at 2 to 7 years of age were included in the study.
Follow-up revealed that castration was most effective at reducing:

  • urine marking
  • mounting
  • roaming

The decrease was marked.

  • These behaviors decreased by 90% in 40% of the study dogs
  • And decreased by 50% in the remaining 60% of the study dogs

No relationship existed between the effect of neutering and the age of the dog or duration of the problem behavior before castration.

Neutering also affected aggression toward canine and human family members, but to a lesser extent and in fewer dogs, with 25% of the study dogs improving by more than 50%.

Surprisingly, 10% to 15% of dogs showed less aggression toward unfamiliar dogs and territorial intruders. Therefore, neutering can likely provide marked improvement for many dogs that are exhibiting marking, roaming or mounting behavior, and may offer some improvement in dogs that are aggressive toward people and other dogs. Neutering seems to be less successful in reducing other types of aggression, although improvement is possible.

Misbehaving Male Cats

For cats, the story may be even more promising. “Regarding behaviors that are more specific to male animals, castration seems to be more effective [in modifying behavior problems] in cats than in dogs,” says Melissa Bain, DVM, assistant professor of clinical animal behavior at U.C. Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.

A study conducted at U.C. Davis in the 1990s found that in 90% of male cats, castration greatly reduces or eliminates

  • urine spraying
  • roaming
  • fighting with neighborhood males

Fifty percent of the cats showed a dramatic decrease (80% decrease) in the spraying, roaming, and fighting in the first week, although the remaining study cats demonstrated a more gradual decline.

For Females the Effects May be Different

The study results for male dogs and cats make the course of action clear. But for female dogs, the findings on the effects of spaying on behavior were unexpected.

According to Katherine Houpt, VMD, PhD, DACVB, director of the Animal Behavior Clinic at Cornell University Hospital for Animals, spaying may actually contribute to behavioral problems. In a cooperative study with the Institute of Animal Medicine at Gyeongsang National University in Korea, Houpt and her colleagues found that ovariohysterectomy (spay) in healthy German Shepherds bred as working dogs led to increased reactivity.

In the study, 14 healthy German Shepherd bitches at the Korean Air Force Dog Training Center were studied. Half of the study dogs were spayed at 5 to 10 months of age, and the other half were intact. The dogs were littermates and were split equally into both groups to control for genetics. The dogs all lived in the same kennel environment and received similar handling. Their behavioral reactions were tested at 4 and 5 months after surgery.

Each dog was tested separately in its outdoor kennel while the rest of the dogs remained indoors. An unfamiliar human with an unknown dog walked within 1 meter of the target dog’s kennel, and the kenneled German Shepherd’s response was recorded.

In each of four different recordings for each dog, researchers recorded

  • barking or growling
  • lunging
  • jumping
  • snapping
  • head high
  • ears forward
  • eyes staring
  • lips lifting or curling.
       

Dogs were scored as follows

  • Score of 3 if they exhibited all 10 behaviors
  • Score of 2 if they exhibited 7 of 10 behaviors
  • Score of 1 if they exhibited 5 of 10 behaviors
  • Score of 0 if they exhibited less than 4 of the behaviors
        

“Ideally we would have scored the dogs before they were spayed, too,” says Houpt. “Regardless, the results were dramatic. Dogs that had been spayed were significantly more reactive, with most receiving scores of 2 and 3, whereas the unspayed littermates received reactivity scores of 1.”

These scores decreased in two of the seven experimental dogs on repeat testing, but by the final testing phase, five of the seven dogs still received a score of 2 or higher.

Houpt emphasizes that military dogs would be expected to exhibit more aggressive behaviors and such behavior on command may be desirable. These dogs would not, however, be appropriate as pet or guide dogs or for pet therapy. Although the study was small, Houpt suggests that veterinarians should consider performing a hysterectomy rather than an ovariohysterectomy for preventive health reasons in aggressive pet female dogs.

Such decisions on whether to perform surgery or not should be made with all the facts in hand since failure to remove the ovaries can increase the incidence of mammary cancer. Female dogs spayed after their second heat have a 26% higher risk of developing mammary cancer than those spayed before their first heat.

“Of course, theoretically, the real cure would be to spay and then give progestins,” Houpt added. “This was done years ago and worked well until the dogs became diabetic and had increased appetites. Sometimes you could cure the territorial aggression, but then they became food-aggressive. It is not something we recommend now.”

References

1. Neilson JC, Eckstein RA, Hart BL. Effects of castration on problem behaviors in male dogs with reference to age and duration of behavior. JAVMA 1997;211(2):180-183.

2. Hart BL, Eckstein RA. The role of gonadal hormones in the occurrence of objectionable behaviours in dogs and cats. Appl Anim Behav Sci 1997;52:331-344.

3. Im HH, Yeon SC, Houpt KA, et al. Effects of ovariohysterectomy on reactivity in German shepherd dogs. Vet J 2006;172(1):154-159.

The original version of this article originally appeared in Veterinary Forum in November 2008.

Pets Predicting Earthquakes?

Pets Predicting Earthquakes

Haicheng, China, 1975. A massive earthquake hits. Buildings are demolished, roads destroyed, but thanks to an evacuation several hours earlier, thousands, possibly tens of thousands of human lives are saved. The Chinese claimed they’d predicted an earthquake within hours of its occurrence. Their forecasting system: animals.

This success sparked the interest of the U.S. Geological Survey. What were animals cuing in on? How did their detection systems work? Could answers to these questions lead to the development of a high-tech earthquake forecasting system?

Dr. Benjamin Hart, a veterinary behaviorist at the University of California, Davis, School of Veterinary Medicine, was on the front lines. “I received a call from the USGS,” says Hart. ” `Can you tell us what it is that animals respond to in an earthquake?’ the caller asked, almost expecting that I knew the answer already. I told him that I hadn’t the slightest idea and that I was sure none of my colleagues knew either. First tell me what the stimuli are.”

Early Warning Signs

The caller rattled off different types of stimuli—radon gas, magnetic lines, electron particles, seismic foreshocks. While animals have remarkable senses, Hart knew of no examples of animals responding specifically to earthquake stimuli, so he suggested a meeting of geologists and experts in sensory systems in animals. And so it was. A think tank of scientists ranging from seismologists to experts in pigeon homing and hearing in lizards convened to ponder how or even whether animals might detect earthquakes.

Says Dale Lott, professor of conservation biology at UC Davis, “I was pretty skeptical about animals having a specific earthquake detection ability. In evolutionary terms, why should animals care if there’s an earthquake? So the Earth shakes a little. The food still grows, and the streams still flow.”

But Lott and the others did feel that animals might detect precursors as something odd without knowing specifically that an earthquake was coming. In this case, you would expect to see a species-specific anxiety or fear reaction.

The symposium brought forth many ideas and a call for research. Hart and Lott teamed up with geologist Ken Verosub and proposed several projects, one of which received funding—an interview of earthquake victims just after an earthquake.

Their first research opportunity was the 1977 earthquake in Willits (Mendocino County).

Posing as an earthquake survey team so they wouldn’t bias the interviewees, they questioned victims about damage to their homes first. Then, well into the interview, they asked, “Did you have any idea this was going to happen? Did anything unusual occur before the earthquake?”

Usually if they were going to get anything about animals, they’d get it here. The results were quite interesting.

“It was a melange,” says Lott. “Ben would do some interviews and get a lot of positives, and then I would do some and get nothing and vice versa.”

Positives were marked: A cat that normally entered the house about 7:30 a.m. to eat and sleep continually paced, entering and leaving the house repeatedly. The owners had discussed the unusual behavior before the earthquake.

A 2-year-old Doberman that normally slept in the morning shadowed her owner continually from 8 a.m. until the earthquake, sometimes whining and pacing. The owner wondered whether the dog needed a tranquilizer.

Clusters of Awareness

When the researchers finally were informed of the exact epicenter, they examined the mapped interview locations and found that the positives were clustered around the epicenter. An incredible 50 percent of the households around the epicenter reported strange animal behavior, whereas the baseline for positive answers far away from the epicenter was only 10 percent.

Both Lott and Hart were impressed with the pattern. Maybe they were onto something. But the excitement ended there.

Disappointing Discoveries

Over the next year, they studied six more earthquakes spanning North, Central and South America and came up with nothing.

Their conclusion was that animal earthquake detection works sometimes but not often. Some earthquakes are preceded by cues that some animals can detect, but since this phenomenon is not consistent, it’s not reliable enough to be useful in predicting earthquakes.

While the findings may have been disappointing, they were still valuable. Says Lott, “It stopped the folklore about animals having specific earthquake-predicting abilities and allowed the geologists to go on to study other forms of earthquake prediction. It was an idea that had to be rigorously tested.”

And what of the Haicheng earthquake? Turns out that it was a propaganda act by the Chinese government during the Cultural Revolution madness. The government never produced scientific evidence supporting its claim. Furthermore, shortly before the Haicheng earthquake, there had been many smaller earthquakes in the area. General warnings were issued many times, and people were encouraged to stay outdoors. One such warning happened to coincide with the Haicheng earthquake.

A more recent earthquake in southwest China, in 2008, left 87,000 people dead or missing.

© Sophia Yin, DVM. Originally appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle in 2000.