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¿Por qué mi perro patea el suelo con sus patas traseras?

 Por lucy el 09 nov 2016 |
6Comentario (s)
Muchos dueños de perros se desconciertan cuando sus compañeros caninos rasgan en el suelo con sus patas traseras después de eliminar. A menudo, ellos asumen que el comportamiento es similar al de un gato - que su perro está tratando de "encubrir" su desorden. Sin embargo, esto no podía estar más lejos de la verdad. Como el acto de eliminar a sí mismo es una de las maneras de su perro de marcar su territorio, por lo que es el pie shuffle que sigue.


Foot scraping is a relic of dogs’ past, when their wild ancestors needed to mark off vast swaths of territory. Compared to humans’ 5 million scent glands, dogs have a whopping 125 to 300 million— meaning their sense of smell is magnitudes higher than our own. Dogs have glands in their feet that secrete pheromones—chemical signals that help animals communicate with each other— and a few backward scratches in the dirt releases those chemicals into the area and the noses of other hounds. This likely came in handy when our canines’ relatives needed to mark and protect territories too large to for them to patrol on a daily basis. Feces loses its scent once it dries out, after all, but the scent from dog’s feet lasts longer. This not only may have helped our canines’ ancestors protect valuable hunting grounds, but also guard fertile pack mates.
 
El pie de los perros que rasca casi siempre sigue defecar u orinar, y esto tiene sentido cuando consideramos el comportamiento de nuestros animales domésticos alrededor del ritual: Cada dueño ha esperado pacientemente mientras que sus perros eligen el punto perfecto para realizar su deber, después de todo. Eliminar es sólo una forma en que su perro deja su olor detrás, y el raspado de la pata trasera es la manera de Fido de doblar abajo en sus señales territoriales. Debido a que se trata de marcar su propiedad, en lugar de afirmar la dominación, los perros de ambos géneros y con una variedad de temperamentos son conocidos por participar en pie rascarse.
 
El raspado de la pierna trasera es un comportamiento normal, no destructivo, por lo que no hay necesidad de tratar de cambiar el hábito de su perro. De hecho, la única causa de preocupación debe ser si su mascota normalmente se rasca los pies y de repente se detiene. Un cambio en el comportamiento puede señalar algo que está obstaculizando la movilidad de su mascota y puede conducir a problemas más graves en el camino. Sin embargo, si su compañero canino continúa con sus actividades normales, su única preocupación debería ser esperar a que deje de mover el pie trasero antes de recogerlo después de él, a menos que se le ponga tierra o algo mucho peor en la cara.

Comentario (s)6

Dwight  - Comment
Dwight 02 oct 2020Reply
My dog does it after he urinates or defecate. I don't mind so much in our yard, but when I walk him he does it every time he stops and makes his territory. He just doesn't want to stop and can be pretty destructive. He is 8 yo and has only started it about a year ago.
Bev - Comment
Bev20 ene 2021Reply
Sure she kicks her hind legs after bathroom use, but tonight out of no where she started kicking her hind legs running around inside home then lay down for few minutes then run around and doi it again. She doesn't seem to want go out for bm .. feeling puzzled
Taddy - Comment
Taddy20 ene 2021Reply
My dog doing same thing and he started today
Kathryn Baylis - Comment
Kathryn Baylis13 de marzo de 2021Reply
OK, but what if my dog does this even if he’s not eliminating? And will sometimes do it on hard enough surfaces, and long enough, to sometimes make his feet bleed? Also, he sometimes does it on backwards circles. I took video of it and showed it to my vet, and he said he’s never seen behavior like that.
It’s almost like it obsessive; like he zones out and does it until you physically stop him, then he just snaps out of it. He was a rescue straight off the street, so I don’t know his history. I suspect he may have either been born with a brain defect, or sustained a head injury that brought it on.
Any ideas?
Linda Bird - Comment
Linda Bird13 abr 2022Reply
We have a little (pug x chihuahua?) rescue dog aged 11 months who scratches her hind feet on the floor when you talk to her or if another dog has a toy she wants - almost as a frustration release. She has neurological damage from untreated distemper as a pup which has left her hyperkinetic and I think is why she displays this unusual behaviour......
Lorrie Maiorano - Comment
Lorrie Maiorano20 de mayo de 2022Reply
I love when my little Pomeranian does this! She does it when she is playing and getting Rowdy … she likes to do it when she wants something to like she wants to be the boss ! I love it so cute!
Kathy - Comment
Kathy30 Jul 2022Reply
My shishon does this when she wants attention. That is the ONLY time she does this. She is tearing up my carpet because the force is so strong. But like I say the only time she does this is when I am on the computer, telephone or watching tv and she isn't getting attention, lol

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