Vargen Hendrix. Foto: Christina Hansen Wheat.
Hendrix is one of the wolves Christina Hansen Wheat at the Department of Zoology studies to find behavioural differences and similarities between dogs and wolves. Photo: Christina Hansen Wheat.
 

The findings were made serendipitously when researchers tested 13 wolf puppies from three different litters in a behavioural test battery designed to assess various behaviours in young dog puppies. During this series of tests, three 8-week-old wolf puppies spontaneously showed interest in a ball and returned it to a perfect stranger upon encouragement. The discovery comes as a surprise because it had been hypothesized that the cognitive abilities necessary to understand cues given by a human, such as those required for a game of fetch, arose in dogs only after humans domesticated them at least 15,000 years ago. 

“When I saw the first wolf puppy retrieving the ball I literally got goose bumps,” says Christina Hansen Wheat of the Department of Zoology at Stockholm University. “It was so unexpected, and I immediately knew that this meant that if variation in human-directed play behaviour exists in wolves, this behaviour could have been a potential target for early selective pressures exerted during dog domestication.”

How domestication affects behaviour 

Vargvalpen Flea. Foto: Christina Hansen Wheat
Flea, a wolf puppy who comes from a non-fetching litter born in 2015. Photo: Christina Hansen Wheat.

Hansen Wheat is interested in understanding how domestication affects behaviour. To study this, she and her team raise wolf and dog puppies from the age of 10 days and put them through various behavioural tests. In one of those tests, a person the pup does not know throws a tennis ball across the room and, without the benefit of any prior experience or training, encourages the puppy to get it and bring it back. 

The researchers never really expected wolf pups to catch on. In fact, the first two wolf litters they worked with showed little to no interest in balls let alone retrieving one. They thought little of it at the time. It was what they would have expected, after all. That is until they tested the third wolf litter and some of the puppies not only went for the ball, but also responded to the social cues given by the unfamiliar person and brought it back.

Selective advantage

“It was very surprising that we had wolves actually retrieving the ball,” says Hansen Wheat. “I did not expect that. I do not think any of us did. It was especially surprising that the wolves retrieved the ball for a person they had never met before.”

Hansen Wheat adds that similarities between dogs and wolves can tell us something about where the behaviour we see in our dogs comes from. And, while it was a surprise to see a wolf puppy playing fetch and connecting with a person in that way, she says, in retrospect, it also makes sense.

“Wolf puppies showing human-directed behaviour could have had a selective advantage in early stages of dog domestication,” she says.

Her team will now continue to work with the data they have collected over the course of three years hand-raising wolves and dogs under identical conditions to learn even more about their behavioural differences and similarities. 

The article

“Intrinsic ball retrieving in wolf puppies suggests standing ancestral variation for human-directed play behaviour” by Christina Hansen Wheat and Hans Temrin was published in the jounal iScience on January 16. https://www.cell.com/iscience/fulltext/S2589-0042(19)30557-7 DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2019.100811