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Rottweiler attacks the wrong dog!!!

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Our video today is about a Rottweiler attacking a Caucasian Shepherd over dominance. The male Rottweilers are more dominant and aggressive and challenging by behaviour as compared to females. Most of the powerful male dogs breeds are dominant by nature.

Some large male dogs can be great buddies but sometimes they will literally try to kill each other. Always be very careful with introducing two dogs, take your time do it on neutral ground. And if it doesn't work then, you have to accept that they cannot live together or even be near each other.

Dogs exhibit dominance over other dogs when they sense by smell, hearing, appearance, that the other dog could be potentially subservient to themselves. So they give it a try, If the other dog is okay with it, the aggressor becomes dominant without a fuss.

But if the other dog thinks he should be dominant, a fight ensues. Dogs used to live in packs before they were domesticated. So they always tried to establish their rankings in a pack. This is usually nonviolent but could include staredowns and pouncing on the lessdominant dog. Dominance is usually illustrated through body language. But when two dogs who are seeking for an Alpha position in a pack come face to face, then fights are inevitable. Dog breeds such as Rottweilers, Kangals, Pitbulls, Bully Kuttas, Presa Canario, Dogo Argentino, Caucasian Shepherds, Tibetan Mastiffs, Alabais etc are strong dog breeds.

And if they are living in a pack as pets or in the street, 95% of the time these dogs will fight for an Alpha position unless trained from a very young age to tolerate each other. Even a well trained pack at some point will get into a fight , it's because of the dominant nature of these dog breeds.

Being "Alpha" is not necessarily a bad thing, at certain times an alpha dog is needed to lead a pack specially in the wild. Experts and enthusiasts alike believe all dogs live by pack mentality. Canines exhibiting alpha dog behaviour are just doing what's instinctively and genetically programmed in them. There's a pack social ladder in a dog's world and while single dog homes tend to have fewer problems with hierarchy.

In multiple pet homes all bets are off. Those with two dogs may notice how one dog seems to be dominant and the other passive or submissive.

This in fact is instinctive pack hierarchy the two have worked out with the dominant dog being in the Alpha position and they do establish such rankings are established without a fight. In some cases they do fight to gain that position.

However, if you as owner are viewed as alpha leader, the same two dogs may live as equal to each other and look to you as alpha leader.

This is not uncommon for many two dog households. So as a multiple dog owner, the owner should be able to control them and be the pack leader to avoid any conflicts.

This particular Rottweiler tries to claim the Alpha position from a Caucasian Shepherd. Unfortunately for Rottie the Caucasian shepherd was far too strong for it to handle. On the top the Caucasian shepherd female also joined in to fight the Rottweiler. At the end Rottweiler did accept the dominance of Caucasian Shepherd and the fight was over.

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Quarantine (Instrumental) by RYYZN   / ryyzn  
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
Free Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/ryyznquarantine
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posted by iddnc