corvus
Posted : 1/21/2007 5:10:39 AM
Jones, I thought your point was a very good one and an important one. As someone with more experience with wild animals than domestic animals, I agree with your viewpoint because of my own experiences and observations. Raising a wild hare alongside a domestic rabbit has convinced me far better than mountains of scientific papers ever could. The hare was hand-raised and socialised every bit as much as a puppy would have been, and yet, he hates strangers, loathes to be touched outside of very specific circumstances, and goes nuts whenever he sees something out of the ordinary. On the other hand, my rabbit was raised basically in seclusion with minimal handling and she's so laid back you'd think she was comatose.
This story serves to make two points. Firstly, to back up jones in producing a real life wild animal with "unreasonable" fear. He's never been hurt by a person in his life, and he met plenty of strangers as a baby and loved it, but now he's terrified of strangers. His environment was very controlled and I know he had no unpleasant experiences prior to this fear setting in. And yet, there he is, freezing up and hiding the moment someone new walks in.
It also demonstrates what domestication has the power to do. Domestic bunnies would not stand a chance in the wild. It's just not right for rabbits to stamp their feet angrily at dogs and chase cats and hop around the feet of strangers, begging for treats. Domestication has indeed seriously modified fear behaviour in animals.
I also don't buy this reasonable/unreasonable thing. Those things are defined by people, who know nothing very much of what is important for wild animals to survive day to day. It's dangerous to define reasonable and unreasonable fear in a human context for animals that are not humans. I'm sure every dog that is frightened of thunderstorms is damn sure it's a reasonable thing to be frightened of.
I've never seen a wild animal that ISN'T afraid of unfamiliar things. If you've never seen it before, you'd better be real cautious in case it's dangerous. No one's there to bail them out if they eat poison, or mess with an animal that looked safer than it turned out to be. Whether animals pick an approach of fear or caution, I believe, is neither here nor there. They are all frightened for at least the first few moments. Some flee never to return, some hang around and eventually pluck up the courage to explore further. The curious ones might discover that the new scary thing is a good source of food, or they might discover it's toxic and die. That's why we still have both responses in wild animal populations. Neither is universally beneficial. If you can convince me that it's ALWAYS beneficial to overcome neophobia with a cautionary approach, then I'll believe you that neophobia never sticks around, despite my observations to the contrary.
I think that fear is an incredibly basic and universal emotion. Reasonable and unreasonable doensn't come into it, because those things are arbitrary and subjective. I don't indulge fears my dog has that I judge unreasonable, because she's my dog living in my world, but I make those judgements based on her future quality of life, seeing as it's not nice to be afraid of something you have to deal with everyday. That's why I would say a fear of stairs is unreasonable whereas a fear of fireworks is reasonable.
Lastly, I think this would be a good time to add that dogs are neotenised wolves. Essentially, they are young in their behaviour, and young wild animals are more prone to fear responses than adults. Who are we to say that's entirely attributable to experience, especially as we've already discussed the juvenile "fear period"? If we say it's entirely attributable to experience, then my hare should have overcome his fear of strangers by now.