A sociobiological origin of pregnancy failure in domestic dogs

BARTOŠ, L., BARTOŠOVÁ, J., CHALOUPKOVÁ, H., DUŠEK, A., HRADECKÁ, L. & SVOBODOVÁ, I. A sociobiological origin of pregnancy failure in domestic dogs. Scientific Reports , 2016, roč. 6, s. 22188. {INTLINK}
BARTOŠ, Luděk, BARTOŠOVÁ, Jitka, CHALOUPKOVÁ, Helena, DUŠEK, Adam, HRADECKÁ, Lenka and SVOBODOVÁ, Ivona. A sociobiological origin of pregnancy failure in domestic dogs. Scientific Reports , 2016, 6, 22188. ISSN 2045-2322.
Year2016
CathegoryScientific publication in impacted journals
Internal link16004.pdf
Abstract

Among domestic dog breeders it is common practice to transfer a domestic dog bitch out of her home environment for mating, bringing her back after the mating. If the home environment contains a male, who is not the father of the foetuses, there is a potential risk of future infanticide. We collected 621 records on mating of 249 healthy bitches of 11 breed-types. The highest proportion of successful pregnancies following mating occurred in bitches mated within their home pack and remaining there. Bitches mated elsewhere and then returned to a home containing at least one male had substantially lower incidence of maintained pregnancy in comparison with bitches mated by a home male. After returning home, housing affected strongly the frequency of pregnancy success. Bitches mated elsewhere but released into a home pack containing a home male were four times more likely to maintain pregnancy than bitches which were housed individually after returning home. Suppression of pregnancy in situations where a bitch is unable to confuse a home male about parentage may be seen as an adaptation to avoid any seemingly unavoidable future loss of her progeny to infanticide after birth and thus to save energy.