A canine communicative signal indicating subordination. In puppies it most frequently happens in two situations: (1) When the puppy becomes excited during reunion with an owner after an extended absence or (2) During social interaction with a person who either punishes the puppy or acts in a threatening or dominant manner.
Significant Features
· Small amounts of urine are usually expelled. The body
posture is one in which the dog crouches,squats or presents the
inguinal area. In extreme cases, a dog will roll over into lateral
recumbency and raises a rear leg. Submissive urination is often
accompanied by other body postures reflective of deference: lowered
head and neck,tail down, ears flattened, and at times retracting
the lips into a "submissive grin". Most puppies as they
mature develop better bladder control; hence, puppies usually
outgrow the tendency by about 8 months.
Prevalent in Cocker
spaniels; Differences between other breeds are not as great.
Females show a greater tendency for submissive urination than
males and a greater tendency to carry the behavioral pattern into
adulthood.
The misbehavior is specific to certain contexts. As noted above,
it most often occurs during reunion between the dog and owner
(e.g. at the time of greetings rather than departures), when the
dog is punished interactively by the owner, or at times when the
dog becomes excited or aroused in the owners presence.
Submissive urination is non-goal directed and relatively "reflexive"
in nature. In other words, it appears to occur outside the puppy
awareness. The behavior can become classically conditioned to
specific events (i.e. owner arriving home and greeting the puppy,
or simply the doorbell ringing). Rarely is the behavior used in
an operant fashion to achieve some goal (e.g. the puppy intentionally
submissively urinates for reward).
More prevalent in puppies than older dogs due to maturational
reasons. As a dog ages its status relationship usually begins
to shift relative to the owner and other humans. For this reason
the tendency wanes or disappears altogether. As noted above, the
tendency is more prevalent in females because females dogs, on
average, are generally more appeasing in their interactions with
humans.
Behavioral Modification Suggestions
The goal is to make the puppy more relaxed, less submissive and less excited when approached during social interaction. Some guidelines are as follow:
1. Never punish - since the puppy is acting with submission, punishment will only increase the tendency for submissive urination.
2. The amount of social interaction should be minimized during greetings between the owner and puppy. Enthusiastic greetings should be toned down. In severe cases the puppy should be totally ignored. In general, an owner should avoid physical praise, picking-up the puppy, making direct and prolonged eye contact, and bending over the puppy. In ethological terms, these kinds of behaviors mimic dominance by another dog and therefore should be avoided.
3. In less severe cases the owner should crouch rather than bend over the puppy when the pup approaches. Petting and touching should be done under the chin or on the throat and chest with the palm up rather than placing the hand on top of the pup's head. As noted above, gestures or behaviors that mimic dominance should be avoided.
4. After the steps the been undertaken and the urination seems to be subsiding, an owner may begin to initiate counter-conditioning procedures. Steps are as follows: (1) Allow the puppy to approach and as it approaches proffer it a food treat; (2) As the puppy eats the food, it should be praised verbally; (3) Subsequent approach behavior should be maintained on an intermittent reinforcement schedule with a gradual introduction of more physical praise.
5. If the above procedures are ineffective, then a systematic desensitization program should be considered. Through desensitization the pup is gradually conditioned to tolerate the stimuli/circumstances that previously elicited the misbehavior.
The above procedues will be review and you will be given specific instructions to meet your individual needs during the class sessions.