Dogs
and their tails - Dog article - on Pets.ca
Wagging
tails - dog tails - why dogs wag their tails
(Excerpt from How to Speak Dog)
Dr. Stanley Coren
"....In some ways, tail-wagging serves the same functions as our
human smile, polite greeting, or nod of recognition. Smiles
are social
signals, and human beings seem to reserve most of their smiles
for social situations, where somebody is around to see them.
Sometimes, vicarious social situations, as when watching television
or occasionally when thinking about somebody special, can trigger
a smile. For dogs, the tail wag seems to have the same properties.
A dog will wag its tail for a person or another dog. It may
wag its tail for a cat, horse, mouse, or perhaps even a
butterfly.
But when the dog is by itself, it will not wag its tail to
any lifeless thing. If you put a bowl of food down, the
dog will
wag its tail to express its gratitude to you. In contrast,
when the dog walks into a room and finds its bowl full,
it will approach
and eat the food just as happily, but with no tail-wagging
other than perhaps a slight excitement tremor. This is
one indication
that tail-wagging is meant as communication or language. In
the same way that we don't talk to walls, dogs don't wag
their tails
to things that are not apparently alive and socially responsive.
A dog's tail speaks volumes about his mental state, his social
position, and his intentions. How the tail came to be a communication
device is an interesting story.
The dog's tail was originally designed to assist the dog in its
balance. When a dog is running and has to turn quickly, it throws
the front part of its body in the direction it wants to go. Its
back then bends, but its forward velocity is such that the hindquarters
will tend
to continue in the original direction. Left unchecked, this movement
might result in the dog's rear swinging widely, which could greatly
slow its rate of movement or even cause the dog to topple over
as it tries to make a high-speed turn. The dog's tail helps to
prevent this. Throwing the tail in the same direction that the
body is turning serves as a sort of counterweight, which reduces
the tendency to spin off course. Dogs will also use their tails
when walking along narrow surfaces. By deliberately swinging
the tail to one side or the other in the direction opposite to
any
tilt in the body, the dog helps maintain its balance, much the
same way a circus tightrope walker uses a balance bar. Quite
obviously, then, the tail has important uses associated with
specific movements.
However, the tail is not particularly important on flat surfaces,
when a dog is simply standing around or walking at normal speeds.
At these times, it becomes available for other uses. Evolution
again seized an opportunity and now adapted the tail for communication
purposes.
It is something of a surprise to many people to learn that puppies
don't wag their tails when they are very young. The youngest
puppy I ever saw systematically wagging its tail was eighteen
days old,
and both the breeder and I agreed that this was quite unusual.
Although there are some differences among the various breeds,
the scientific data suggests that, on average, by thirty days
of age,
about half of all puppies are tail wagging, and the behavior
is usually fully established by around forty nine days of age.
Why does it take so long for the puppy to start wagging its tail?
The answer comes from the fact that puppies begin wagging their
tails when it is necessary for purposes of social communication.
Until they are about three weeks of age, puppies mostly eat and
sleep. They are not interacting significantly with their littermates
other than curling up together to keep warm as they sleep or
crowding together to nurse. They are physically capable of wagging
their
tails at this time, but they don't.
By the age of six or seven weeks (when we start to see tail-wagging
behaviors on a regular basis), the puppies are socially interacting
with one another. Most of the social interactions in puppies
consist of what psychologists call "play behaviors." It
is through playing that puppies learn about their own abilities,
how they
can interact with their environment, and most important, how
to get along with other individuals. A puppy learns that if it
bites
a littermate, it is apt to be bitten back, and perhaps the game
it was playing might be terminated by its now angry playmate.
It is at this point that the puppy also starts to learn dog language.
It is not clear to what degree these emerging social communications
are prewired, but learning is clearly needed to refine the use
and interpretation of these signals. The pups
learn to connect their own signals and the signals provided by
their
mother and their siblings with the behaviors that come next.
They also begin to learn that they can use signals to indicate
their
intentions and to circumvent any conflicts. This is where and
when the tail-wagging behavior begins.
One place where conflicts are likely to occur is during feeding.
When a puppy wants to suckle its mother, it must come very close
to its littermates as it crowds in to find her teats. Remember
that this puppy is now coming close to the very same individuals
that might have been nipping, jostling, or chasing him a few
minutes earlier. To indicate that this is a peaceful situation,
and to
calm any fearful or aggressive response by the other puppies
when they too are pushing toward the mother's teat, the puppy
begins
to wag its tail. Tail-wagging in the puppy then serves as a truce
flag to its littermates. Later on, puppies will begin to wag
their tails when they are begging food from the adult animals
in their
pack or family. The puppies come close, to lick the face of the
adult, and they signal their peaceful intentions by tail-wagging.
It thus becomes clear that the reason that very young puppies
don't wag their tails is that they don't yet need to send appeasement
signals to other dogs. When communication between dogs is needed,
they rapidly learn the appropriate tail signals.
Tail language actually has three different channels of information:
position, shape, and movement. Movement is a very important aspect
of the signal, since dog's eyes are much more sensitive to movement
than they are to details or colors. This makes a waving or wagging
tail very visible to other dogs.
Evolution has used a few additional tricks to make the tails
even more visible. Wild canines, like wolves, often have great
bushy
tails, which are easily seen at a distance. In addition, many
tails are specially colored to facilitate recognition of tail
signals.
Often, the underside of the tail is lighter, to make the high-tailed
signals quite visibly different from signals involving the tucking
of tails into a lower position. Many canines will also have distinctive
markings to make the tail tip more visible. Usually, there is
a lightening toward the tail tip, or perhaps simply a white mark
which defines the tip of the tail. In other canines, the tail
tip
is noticeably darker. Either of these two color contrasts helps
to make the end of the tail more visible, and this make movement
and position cues easier to recognize...."

Excerpted from How to Speak Dog
© Stanley Coren All rights reserved
Reprinted by permission
Dr. Stanley Coren is a professor of Psychology.
He has written 6 books on dogs and is the host
of the television show Good Dog!
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2004
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