Barking is not just noise. It's a language. Dogs don't bark just out of boredom (though they do that too). Unlike wolves, who prefer howling, dogs have, over thousands of years of living with humans, learned to use barking as a multifunctional communication tool. By the tone, pitch, frequency, and duration of the bark, an experienced owner can determine if their pet is calling for a walk, warning of danger, or simply happy to see them.
The most common reasons for barking: anxiety (someone at the door), fear (loud noises, gunshots, vacuum), play (inviting a run), boredom (long periods of solitude), pain (injury, illness), attention-seeking ("I want food, a walk, petting"), warning to other dogs ("this is my territory"), imitation (the neighbor's dog barked — I'm following). Barking is a reaction to a stimulus. To understand what the dog wants, you need to evaluate the context.
A high, sharp bark with a screech is usually excitement or greeting ("the owner has come!"). A low, throaty bark with growling is aggression and threat ("go away, I'll bite"). A long, monotonous bark is boredom or anxiety ("let me out, I'm alone"). Short "woof-woof" barks with pauses are warnings ("attention, someone's coming"). Barking that turns into howling is longing for the owner or a panic attack. A dog that barks and jumps up is playing. A dog that barks and snarls is protecting itself.
Dogs perfectly understand that people can't hear ultrasound, but they perceive barking very well. Therefore, they have adapted their voice: domestic dogs bark more and louder than wild ones. Studies show that a dog's barking has different acoustics for different situations, and even strangers can accurately determine whether a dog is angry or asking for food. Owners can distinguish their pet's bark with 90% accuracy. This is the result of thousands of years of co-evolution.
If a dog barks constantly, it may be a medical reason (pain, dementia in old dogs). Or behavioral: lack of exercise, lack of toys, separation anxiety. Don't shout at the dog in response — this will intensify the barking (the dog will think you are calling). Ignore undesirable barking and reward silence. If the dog barks at passersby, train the command "quiet" and reward with treats for silence. In difficult cases, consult a dog trainer or zoopsychologist.
Puppies start barking at 2-3 weeks, initially unsure and squeaky. Their barking is mainly for play or hunger signals. Adult dogs bark more meaningfully, with different intonation. The barking of older dogs may become lower and hoarse, sometimes groundless (due to hearing deterioration). The breed also affects it: Dachshunds and Spitz bark more often, while Basenjis almost never bark (they make a grumbling sound). Fighting dogs bark less often, but their barking is more terrifying.
Ethologists recorded dogs' barking in different situations and played it back to other dogs. They reacted differently: they wagged their tails to a "hello" bark, they became alert to a "danger" bark. Scientists have also found that humans can accurately distinguish between the barking of a playing dog and an aggressive one. This speaks of an innate or developed skill of recognition. Interestingly, barking is a secondary signal: it emerged in the process of domestication, wolves almost don't have it.
Barking is the voice of the dog. By learning to understand it, you will become closer to your pet and be able to prevent conflicts. Just listen.
New publications: |
Popular with readers: |
News from other countries: |
![]() |
Editorial Contacts |
About · News · For Advertisers |
Digital Library of Pakistan ® All rights reserved.
2023-2026, ELIB.PK is a part of Libmonster, international library network (open map) Preserving Pakistan's heritage |
US-Great Britain
Sweden
Serbia
Russia
Belarus
Ukraine
Kazakhstan
Moldova
Tajikistan
Estonia
Russia-2
Belarus-2