| Territorial Marking
Dogs and cats are territorial animals. This
means that they "stake out a claim" to a particular space,
area or object. They let other people and animals know about their
claim by marking it with a variety of methods and at many levels
of intensity. For example, a dog may bark to drive away what he
perceives as intruders to his territory. A cat may mark a valued
object by rubbing it with her face.
Some pets may go to the extreme of urinating
or defecating to mark a particular area as their own. Urine-marking
is not a house soiling problem, but is a territorial behavior. Therefore,
to resolve the problem, you need to address the underlying reason
for your pet’s need to mark his territory in this way.
House Soiling Or Urine-Marking? How
To Tell The Difference!
Your pet may be urine-marking if:
• The problem is primarily urination.
Dogs and cats rarely mark with feces.
• The amount of urine is small and is
found primarily on vertical surfaces. Dogs and cats do sometimes
mark on horizontal surfaces. Leg-lifting and spraying are dominant
versions of urine-marking, but even if your pet doesn’t assume
these postures, he may still be urine-marking.
• Any pet in your home is not spayed
or neutered. Both intact males and females are more likely to urine-mark
than are spayed or neutered animals. However, even spayed or neutered
animals may mark in response to other intact animals in the home.
• Your pet urinates on new objects in
the environment (a shopping bag, a visitor’s purse), on objects
that have unfamiliar smells, or on objects that have another animal’s
scent.
• Your pet has conflicts with other
animals in your home. When there’s instability in the pack
hierarchy, a dog may feel a need to establish his dominance by urine-marking
his territory. If one cat is intimidating another cat, the bullied
cat may express his anxiety by urine-marking.
• Your pet has contact with other animals
outside your home. A cat that’s allowed outdoors may come
home and mark after having an encounter with another cat outside.
If your pet sees another animal through a door or window, he may
feel a need to mark his territory.
• Your dog marks frequently on neighborhood
walks.
What You Can Do:
• Spay or neuter your pet as soon as
possible. Spaying or neutering your pet may stop urine-marking altogether,
however, if he has been urine-marking over a long period of time,
a pattern may already be established.
• Resolve conflicts between animals
in your home (see our handouts: "Canine Rivalry" and "Feline
Social Behavior and Aggression Between Family Cats").
• Restrict your pet’s access to
doors and windows through which they can observe animals outside.
If this isn’t possible, discourage the presence of other animals
near your house (see our handout: "Discouraging Roaming Cats").
• Keep your cat indoors. He’ll
be safer, will live longer, and will feel less need to mark his
territory.
• Clean soiled areas thoroughly (see
our handout: "Successful Cleaning to Remove Pet Odors and Stains").
Don’t use strong smelling cleaners as these may cause your
pet to "over-mark" the spot.
• Make previously soiled areas inaccessible
or unattractive (see our handouts: "Aversives For Dogs"
and "Aversives For Cats").
• If making soiled areas inaccessible
or unattractive isn’t possible, try to change the significance
of those areas. Feed, treat and play with your pet in the areas
he is inclined to mark.
• Keep objects likely to cause marking
out of reach. Guests’ belongings, new purchases and so forth,
should be placed in a closet or cabinet.
• If your pet is marking in response
to a new resident in your home (a new baby, roommate or spouse),
have the new resident make friends with your pet by feeding, grooming
and playing with your pet. Make sure good things happen to your
pet when the new baby is around (see our handout: "Preparing
Your Pet for Baby’s Arrival").
• For dogs: watch your dog at all times
when he is indoors for signs that he is thinking about urinating.
When he begins to urinate, interrupt him with a loud noise and take
him outside, then praise him and give him a treat if he urinates
outside. When you’re unable to watch him, put your dog in
confinement (a crate or small room where he has never marked) or
tether him to you with a leash.
• For cats: try to monitor your cat’s
movements. If he even sniffs in an area he has previously marked,
make a loud noise or squirt him with water. It's best if you can
do this without him seeing you, because then he’ll associate
the unpleasantness with his intent to mark, rather than with you.
• Practice "nothing in life is
free" with your dog (see our handout: "Nothing In Life
Is Free"). This is a safe, non-confrontational way to establish
your leadership and requires your dog to work for everything he
wants from you. Have your dog obey at least one command (such as
"sit") before you pet him, give him dinner, put on his
leash or throw a toy for him. Establishing yourself as a strong
leader can help stabilize the hierarchy and thus diminish your dog’s
need to mark his territory.
What Not To Do:
Don’t punish your pet after the fact.
Punishment administered even a minute after the event is ineffective
because your pet won’t understand why he is being punished.
Pets Aren’t People
Dogs and cats don’t urinate or defecate
out of spite or jealousy. If your dog urinates on your baby’s
diaper bag, it’s not because he is jealous of, or dislikes
your baby. The unfamiliar scents and sounds of a new baby in the
house are simply causing him to reaffirm his claim on his territory.
Likewise, if your cat urinates on your new boyfriend’s backpack,
this is not his opinion of your taste in men. Instead, he has perceived
the presence of an "intruder" and is letting the intruder
know that this territory belongs to him.
Dominance Or Anxiety?
Urine-marking is usually associated with dominance
behavior. While this is often the case, some pets may mark when
they feel anxious or upset. For example, a new baby in the home
brings new sounds, smells and people, as well as changes in routine.
Your dog or cat probably isn’t getting as much attention as
he was used to getting. All of these changes cause him to feel anxious,
which may cause him to mark. Likewise, a pet that is generally anxious
may become more so by the presence of roaming neighborhood animals
in your yard, or by the introduction of a new cat or dog into your
household. If your pet is feeling anxious, you might consider talking
to your veterinarian about medications to reduce his anxiety while
you work on behavior modification.
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Friends League. All Rights Reserved.
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