Scientists Find that Wolves
Can Show Attachment toward Humans
When it
comes to showing affection towards people, many dogs are naturals. Now comes
word reported in the journal Ecology and Evolution on September 20th that the
remarkable ability to show attachment behaviour toward human caregivers also
exists in wolves.
From Stockholm
University Communications Office
September 20, 2022
-- The findings were made when researchers at Stockholm University, Sweden,
tested 10 wolves and 12 dogs in a behavioural test specifically designed to
quantify attachment behaviours in canids. During this test 23-week-old wolves
spontaneously discriminated between a familiar person and a stranger just as
well as dogs did, and showed more proximity seeking and affiliative behaviours
towards the familiar person. Additionally, the presence of the familiar person
acted as a social stress buffer for the wolves calming them in a stressful
situation. These discoveries build on a slowly accumulating body of evidence
contradicting the hypothesis that the abilities necessary to form attachment
with humans, arose in dogs only after humans domesticated them at least 15,000
years ago.
“We felt that there was
a need to thoroughly test this,” says Dr. Christina Hansen Wheat, PhD in
Ethology from Stockholm University, Sweden. “Together with earlier studies
making important contributions to this question, I think it is now appropriate
to entertain the idea that if variation in human-directed attachment behaviour
exists in wolves, this behaviour could have been a potential target for early
selective pressures exerted during dog domestication.”
Dr. Hansen Wheat is
interested in understanding how domestication affects behaviour. To study this,
she and her team raised wolf and dog puppies from the age of 10 days and put
them through various behavioural tests. In one of those tests, a familiar
person and a stranger takes turn in coming in and out of a test room to create
a somewhat strange and stressful situation for the animal. The theory behind
the test, originally developed to assess attachment in human infants, is that
by creating this unstable environment attachment behaviours, such as proximity
seeking, will be stimulated.
In essence, what the researchers
were looking for in this Strange Situation Test was if the wolves and dogs
could discriminate between the familiar person and the stranger. That is, did
they show more affection, and spend more time greeting and in physical contact
with the familiar person than the stranger. If wolves and dogs would do so
equally it would point towards this ability not being unique to dogs, i.e. it
has not evolved specifically in dogs.
Wolves prefer a
familiar person over an stranger
“That was exactly what
we saw,” says Dr. Hansen Wheat. “It was very clear that the wolves, as the
dogs, preferred the familiar person over the stranger. But what was perhaps
even more interesting was that while the dogs were not particularly affected by
the test situation, the wolves were. They were pacing the test room. However,
the remarkable thing was that when the familiar person, a hand-raiser that had
been with the wolves all their lives, re-entered the test room the pacing
behaviour stopped, indicating that the familiar person acted as a social stress
buffer for the wolves. I do not believe that this has ever been shown to be the
case for wolves before and this also complements the existence of a strong bond
between the animals and the familiar person.”
Dr. Hansen Wheat adds that
similarities between dogs and wolves can tell us something about where the
behaviour we see in our dogs come from. And, while it may be a surprise to some
that wolves can connect with a person in this way, she says in retrospect it
also makes sense.
Selective advantage
during dog domestication
“Wolves showing
human-directed attachment could have had a selective advantage in early stages
of dog domestication,” she says.
Dr. Hansen Wheat will
now continue to work with the data she and her team have collected over the
course of three years hand-raising wolves and dogs under identical conditions
to learn even more about their behavioural differences and similarities.
The article “Human-directed
attachment behaviour in wolves suggests standing ancestral variation for
human-dog attachment bonds” is published in Ecology and Evolution.
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9299
This research did not
receive any specific grants from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or
not-for-profit sectors.
https://www.su.se/english/news/Scientists
find that wolves can show attachment toward humans - Stockholm University
(su.se)
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