The reality is that street dogs in India are often more active, and sometimes far more aggressive, at nighttime. They often rest quietly during the day to avoid suffering from the extreme heat
I'm also puzzled by what this research wants to prove. That it's Ok to have a large uncontrolled population of feral dogs? No, it's not...
No comment on dog behaviour or policy in a country I don't know, but basic research (and, I'd argue, most good academic research) is descriptive, not prescriptive.
Vaccinate the feral dogs. They will make a queue waging the tail, come to you and eat the vaccine from your own hands in 5 seconds if you show half a sausage. Save lottamoney in healthcare later and human lives. End of the problem. Vote me.
Or if you are more ambitious, caught them, mark the vaccinated dogs with a tatto or a ear tag, and give the poochie the whole sausage before releasing it again at their home, so people can know what dog interactions are safer and what need more care. Thus you avoid losing money vaccinating two times the same dog.
"should kill all the dogs because rabies" is stupid. Ecology models predict that that would spread faster the rabies and would made people less safe in that sense. You want territorial animals remaining in their territory.
They are more prone to territorial barking at night, but that's them being good watch-dogs.
I have a rescue from the streets. He is paranoid about bikes and cars coming close.
As most predators do in hot climate. Its a pretty complex topic and its good that some research is done.
Wolfs hunt mostly during night time too, but dogs are not wolfs and despite research from like the 80s where dog behaviour was derived from wolf studies (that actually were mostly done with wolfs in zoos and national parks (Yellowstone was pretty big I think) we know now that these studies fail to explain real wolf behaviour). We just began to understand how wolfs interact with each other in packs in free nature and its fairly complex.
The entire 90s dog trainer used studies about wolfs to explain behaviour and train dogs, often the word dominance is used and that you have to be the "pack leader" for your dog to make him follow your "orders". Which is plain wrong on many levels but would go to far now.
Why do I talk about wolfs? Well, dogs that grew up with humans and get lost (in nature) are known to change behaviour very fast. (It mainly depends on the breed and ofc. character).
They begin to act more like wolves again to the point where they develop shyness in front of people and it has happened that they no longer let themselves be called by their original owner and also have not accepted food from them. It can be very difficult to get them used to humans again.
Obviously, this must be different for dogs that live in urban environments without their/a owner. What is probably not different is that pack structures develop but quite rarely in intra-species "serious" conflicts because they don't need to fight over resources. Most animals fight only if really necessary because even a won fight can lead to death because of injuries.
This is especially true in Northern Canada, where abandoned and neglected pets have (for decades) formed roaming packs that, on average, kill one person per year - usually a child - and leave many others with disfiguring injuries. [0] (An old reference since media has generally pulled way back on these stories, but recent firsthand accounts indicate that there's still an issue.)
Many communities have an annual cull to keep the stray/pack population at bay, but residents from 'southern' cities travel north to adopt and rehabilitate the animals - usually with limited success.
The remoteness and unpopularity of the subject unfortunately hasn't brought about many solutions for the affected communities, and fear even more people abandoning their pets as they return to work may exacerbate the issue.
[0] https://www.rcinet.ca/eye-on-the-arctic/2014/10/17/struggle-...
it was about 5:30 am before most of the city was awake and I was taking myself and luggage out to the nearest main road to get a taxi to catch an early flight.
it turns out that the tactic for scaring off a mountain lion also works with them, if you raise your arms over your head as high as you can reach while simultaneously screaming "YARRRGGGH!!!!!!" as loud as humanly possible, you can chase away a whole pack.
still was quite a sketchy situation.
Remembering that opening an umbrella tends to severely freak out dogs, I walked past them, then turned around and took off my jacket with a big flourish.
They panicked and ran away, then just barked at me from a distance. Haha
I had been pulling a wheeled piece of luggage which possibly set them off because its noise was quite unusual at that time and place.
There's a reddit video of a (?slum?) location celebrating when their local "adopted" street dog is found again after going missing for some time. People become attached to these dogs.
So there's a high degree of socialisation going on in some cases.
But during the heat of the day? They did seem relaxed. Though I never tried to pet one or anything like that. Dogs getting agitated around humans in Hyderabad would probably be pretty exhausting.
Because of dogs, or also other things happening?
Walking around the buildings in our business park in Hitec City isn't bad, there are sidewalks. But even going a half mile up the road is hard if you're not comfortable with how Indian drivers and pedestrians interact.
I personally feel okay with the smaller intersections near our office there, because walking steadily and making no sudden moves seems to do the trick. But any bigger road is essentially blocked for me if I don't have a native from the area to lead me across. Even so, it's quite a thrill getting across a halfway busy road on foot, no matter how skilled you are. Nobody is actually trying to kill you, and in fact is certainly avoiding you, but they aren't giving you more than a few inches of clearance.
Kinda related, it's still on my bucket list to drive from Hitec City over to Charminar and back. But since the pandemic hit, my twice-a-year trips to Hyderabad have stopped and I think it's entirely plausible they will never restart. It may be that if I'm ever to enjoy Absolute BBQ again it'll be in Illinois :(
If you saw an old lady carrying shopping bags you’d feel no risk of danger vs a large male in a hoodie walking in a weird way and looking at you.
When I first heard about this documentary, I thought, what a ridiculous idea of following a stray cow for a day and making a documentary out of it! But when I listened to the audio documentary, it was one of the most engaging documentary I had listened to!
I just listened to it, and it's... yeah, I get what you mean when you wrote "it was one of the most engaging documentary I had listened to!". It truely is.
1991: Strays
1997: Strays
2015: Stray
2016: A Stray
2017: The Stray
2018: Stray
2019: Stray
2020: Stray
2021: Stray
2023 (upcoming): Strays
and a 2021-2022 TV show "Strays" and a 2022 video game "Stray"...
*only place in India where I was attacked by dogs was right at the southern gate of Taj Mahal, dog snapped after my leg but it seems he didnt bite, even guard checked my leg and mind saying when I travelled around Agra I saw in other location again younger boys attacked by street dogs, so seems Agra is really bad place with dogs, everywhere else in India was my experience with street dogs uneventful
We were at the outskirts of the city and decided to take a walk to the center along one of the main roads. After a while we noticed that a street dog was following us at a constant distance of maybe 15 meters. It looked quite friendly and we thought it may be hoping to get food from us, but we did not have any. We talked to it, also waved good bye several times, but it kept following us. Then, suddenly it came closer, maybe to 5 meter distance, and just after that a pack of other street dogs came from a side street, angrily barking and obviously having a problem with out dog being in their hood. But they were afraid of us humans and our dog suddenly acted as if it was our pet dog, walking really close to us. We continued walking and the pack of street dogs eventually gave up. Suddenly after that, our dog was gone. Obviously it had a plan right from the beginning: Using us as protection to get past that pack of dogs into the city center. And it perfectly executed the plan.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_dogs_in_Moscow#Subway-d...
Things like tracking distance the dogs travelled in a day would be pretty easy to do for a random sample. Or the breakdown of sex / estimated age / etc.
Maybe it's just a starting point but it doesn't give much info IMHO.