This blog is for primitive dog enthusiasts. It is part of the INDog Project www.indog.co.in. Only INDogs (India's primitive indigenous village dogs) and INDog-mixes (Indies) are featured here. The two are NOT the same, do please read the text on the right to understand the difference. Our aim: to create awareness about the primitive landrace village dog of the Indian subcontinent. I sometimes feature other landrace breeds too. Also see padsociety.org
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Daddy dear
Parental behaviour in INDogs is rarely a topic of interest for dog lovers, and with good reason. Most of us are city-dwellers and the sight of puppies usually makes our hearts sink - so sad and unnatural when you think about it. I mean, babies are usually a source of joy aren't they? It's such a pity that these babies are a source of worry instead..."How do we prevent them from being run over, how do we find homes for them, how do we get the parents neutered?"
Apart from the overpopulation problem, city dogs are also almost always mongrelized, so their behaviour may not be that of pure primitive dogs.
In "normal" villages, by which I mean villages which do not have a booming human population, the number of dogs is automatically limited because of the fixed amount of food available. So overpopulation is not an issue and one can study and understand the true natural behaviour of INDogs, including their breeding habits.
One interesting observation is that some male dogs seem to be monogamous and also share in parental duties. Dr Sunil Kumar Pal researches the behaviour of free-roaming dogs in West Bengal (his papers are published in prestigious scientific journals including Elsevier and Applied Animal Behaviour Science). He has documented incidents of male dogs even feeding very young pups with regurgitated food. I've heard similar accounts from Orissa and no doubt this happens elsewhere too. When the pups are older, a few fathers have been observed bringing scavenged food for them to eat.
I took these pictures in two villages near Similipal in Orissa last month.
The tricoloured dog in the two lower pictures is very tolerant of his boisterous offspring.
The handsome brown dog in the top two photos is very indulgent with his pups too, and usually stays with his family. Before you get all sentimental I should point out that his mate is also his mother. It helps to remember that dogs are not furry little humans but a different species with rules of their own. We should love and respect them for what they are...in my humble opinion, this sort of love is more genuine than the kind that projects a human personality on to them.
Similipal
Orissa
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