Vocalizations
Better heed the call of the wild!
You've probably noticed that you use one voice when your dog is digging in the flowers, and another
when you're inviting the dog onto the sofa. Other animals, especially mammals and birds, use various tones
of voice too. The tendency by different kinds of animals to use certain sounds to express similar messages is known as Morton's rule.
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© Steve Kaufman
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According to Morton's rule, growls and other low-pitched sounds are warnings. They say, "Go away!"
Whimpers, yelps, and other high-pitched sounds plead, "Pay attention to me," or "Come closer."
The harshness of the sound indicates how much "meaning" or "depth" is behind the sound. An extremely
harsh yelp would convey the dog is in significant pain, rather than a mellow yelp which might
carry a message of "pay attention."
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© Paula White
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Most dog barks are neither high nor low in pitch but rather a mixture. They start fairly high, then
drop in pitch. These send mixed messages: "Go away, come here."
The reason that low-pitched sounds are threatening is probably because larger animals tend to make
them. Pitch decreases with body size in mammals simply because vocal cords become longer and must vibrate
at lower frequencies. When we hear a deep voice, we think big person and we are usually right.
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© Monty Sloan/Wolfpark.org
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To bark or not to bark
Wolves rarely bark except as an alarm, but most dogs bark often and everywhere. There are alarm
barks, "let-me-outside" barks, "I-want-to-play" barks, and more. All this barking may be a result of early
breeding of the first dogs where humans selected for effective guarders -- more specifically, the
noisiest!
One breed of dog never barks -- the African basenji.
Last laugh?
Recent research has discovered distinct vocalizations made by playing dogs. Could these sounds be
dogs laughing? When researchers play the sounds for a group of dogs at rest, some of the dogs
will grab toys and try to get their buddies to play.