[Jacob-list] Behavior
Jacobflock at aol.com
Jacobflock at aol.com
Wed Jul 23 11:40:17 EDT 2003
In a message dated 7/23/2003 12:19:06 AM Central Standard Time,
snielsen at orednet.org writes:
> Who has an assessment of what it means, exactly, when sheep stamp
> their feet at you.
This is very, very long but may be of interest as a whole range of Jacob
behavior has appeared on the list. Dr. Valerius Geist, Professor Emeritus at the
University of Calgary, published the definitive work "Mountain Sheep" in 1971
after spending over four years in the field in northwest North America. This
book in offers a methodology to categorize and understand behavior traits in
wild sheep that are often observed with unimproved domestic sheep and the
Jacob in particular. There is also material available in "National Wildlife"
Oct/Nov 1982 which draws heavily from Geist's authoritative works. The following
is "quoted" from Geist (1971).
"There is no "female form" in mountain sheep society as there is in our own
since the adult female and male look much alike at sexual maturation. Males
are neotenous as they continue to grow for 5 or 6 years after maturation and
segregate into herds of their own away from females and juveniles. This is
segregation by behavior; sexually immature stay in female bands, those acting like
males in male bands. The male groups are homosexual societies in which the
dominant acts the role of the courting male and the subordinates, the female.
The dominant male treats all sheep smaller than he as females; it is his
prerogative to act sexually, it is the subordinate's prerogative to act
aggressively. Most aggressive behavior is directed by subordinates at dominants, not
vice-versa. Male dominance and breeding success run parallel with horn size, and
rams use their horns not only as weapons and shields but also as rank symbols.
These rank symbols allow rams to live in a predictable social surrounding
and sheep to live in an open society. The largest horned ram becomes the
leader.
"In fighting the ram combines the principle of the sledge hammer with that of
the karate chop and smashes his heavy horns edge first into the opponent.
The latter catches it skillfully with his horns. Since the clashes are rendered
harmless by the defense, rams can freely indulge in battles and serious
fights can be long and tedious but rarely injurious. (( FH note: There are no
multi-horn wild sheep and mixing two horn and four horn sheep can have serious
consequences ofr the "weaker" multi-horn condition)) Social selection appears to
be responsible not only for the thick skull but also the thick skin on the
nose. Frequent minor fights allow rams to associate horn size with clash impact
and hence to judge an opponent's combat potential. Rams fight, not for
females but for dominance and they do it year round. They primarily test rams of
similar dominance and take advantage of rivals occupied in combat by smashing
into their sides and may persecute injured superiors. Sheep are egocentric and
pay little attention to a sick and disabled member…except for butting it.
"The female sheep has two behavior phases; normally she acts like a juvenile
but during estrus she acts like a subordinate, young, male.
"There were seventeen behavior patterns I recognized and thirteen were
quantified as frequent and conspicuous. Behavior patterns are signals - postures
and actions performed in a more or less stereotyped, distinct manner before
conspecifics and accompanied occasionally by emissions of sounds and odors. They
are conspicuous acts which stand out from the normal grazing, resting, or
walking. Normal everyday actions are slow and relaxed, never rigid; a rigid
stance is already an alarm signal. Social behavior patterns are characterized by
unusual body conformations, by faster or slower, jerkier or stiffer movements
than normal ones, by non-random orientation toward other sheep and emissions and
noises. One can learn to distinguish and identify these signals.
Attention and alarm
"During normal walking the sheep's head is held quite low, nose pointing to
the ground, while the ears are held back and droop down a little. If the sheep
raises its head and holds it up rigidly while walking, with tense steps, it
at once draws the attention of all others. This is the alarm posture.
"An alarmed sheep need not run away but may move at a stiff, tense walk. It
stops periodically, looks at the source of the disturbance, and struts on. It
appears to glance backward from the corner of one eye at the disturbance;
sheep appear capable of watching something almost behind them without turning
their head.
"In addition to assuming the characteristic posture, alarmed sheep may stamp
the ground with a front leg and blow sharply through the nose. It is more
common to see excited, alarmed sheep perform several short hops with all legs
bunched under, reminiscent of stotting in gazelles.
"A sheep suddenly freezing and staring in one direction alerts others to do
the same. This is the attention posture. Ears are perked forward and may
orient its body along the line of sight. A sheep that frequently interrupts
feeding, and then, in a less rigid posture, looks steadily across a valley
indicates it will soon move in that direction. With its gaze the sheep gives notice
of its intent to travel and of the direction it will take.
Horning
"Sheep of all ages and sexes horn shrubs, grass bunches or small trees. It
occurs frequently during dominance fights of rams where it is performed by
both partners. Some horning may be done to remove an uncomfortable clump of
hair. Occasionally rams butted heavily elastic conifer stems and let the backlash
carry them back to their original stance. Others just horned and nibbled
juniper branches and appeared to grow excited by this. It may be that essential
oils found in conifers stimulate sheep to damage trees. Horning is
occasionally contagious, several rams start once one begins. Horning may be initiated by
a butt, after which the horns are rotated or scrubbed under pressure over
grass bushes, shrubs or small trees. There is an aggressive overtone in this
behavior.
Orientation toward the conspecific
"During grazing sheep are dispersed and no obvious orientation is apparent.
However, Crofton (1958) found that grazing domestic sheep orient to fix a
fellow sheep with each eye. Each sheep tended to graze in such a manner that its
body bisected and angle of approximately 110 degrees formed by it and the two
sheep it had a fix on.
"A ewe calling her lamb orients toward the lamb and looks directly at it.
Otherwise, a direct stare of one sheep at another appears to be an aggressive
posture, although the evidence for this is indirect. Subordinates look away
from dominants when the later approach and often turn their rears to them. Even
lambs do this. During the post-clash present the subordinate ram may close
his eyes rather than look at the dominant's face. Sheep tend to rest in such a
manner as not to face each other directly. Only dominant sheep are free to
look in all directions. When sheep are close together they tend to face in the
same direction, probably because this minimizes staring and is the most
peaceful group structure. With sheep a stare is aggressive behavior.
"When sheep are on the move they discourage others from passing by butting at
them, displaying in low-stretch, or by quickly running ahead and cutting them
off. This restores the original march order. Occasionally, small sheep
attempting to pass a grazing dominant at close range are butted back severely the
moment they reach the shoulder level of the dominant. It appears that sheep
in general attempt to keep others behind them. However, this easily gives rise
to the illusion that a leading sheep defends its "lead" position, whereas any
sheep further down the line also discourages others from passing. This
results in a stable march order in single file. During flight, however, sheep run
off as a tight bunch behind the lead animals.
Behavior patterns used in social interactions
Horn displays: low stretch and the present
"The horn displays are the most common social behavior pattern used. They
are present or display threats shown by the dominant to subordinate. In the low
stretch the horns are displayed from a lowered head; in the present, from an
elevated head. In both displays the horns are shown fronto-laterally and it
appears that more horn is visible to the opponent in this position than in a
frontal or lateral one. If the size of the horns is important in these
displays, then rams must be able to distinguish horns of different sizes and must be
able to respond correctly to rams with smaller or larger horns.
"The low-stretch is performed: (1) between rams of equal or near equal horn
size, otherwise only the larger-horned ram displays; (2) by rams, and
occasionally females, when entering or leaving a group, when passing subordinate at a
close distance or a resting dominant one at a greater distance, or when leading
a band of rams. The low-stretch is like a salute but has the opposite
meaning; (3) by rams courting ewes; (4) by adult sheep attempting to displace a
subordinate from his resting place.
The low-stretch is shown primarily by rams and infrequently by females. It
is missing from the repertoire of young lambs.
The present is performed with a raised head. Displaying rams pull their
noses slightly away from the opponent and it appears as if they look past each
other. The head is also pulled back, so that the neck muscles bulge. The
present is most conspicuous after the clash. The rams recoil back and freeze into a
rigid present for a considerable time span. The present is virtually absent
after clashes during vicious battles. It is commonly seen in huddles by rams
and courtship by the estrous female; the dominant rams present while
subordinates, or females, rub or horn their necks, horns, or bodies.
Twist
The twist is similar to an intensified low-stretch. The ram dips its head
down, simultaneously rotates it sharply about its axis, flicks rapidly with the
tongue and expels a harsh loud growl. If he stands close behind the opponent
or female, the ram may push his muzzle into the side. The twist appears in
many variations. It may be coupled with the front kick, in which case the ram
also pushes his opponent with his chest. The twist may end a low-stretch
approach of a ram to a ewe after which the ram freezes into a horn display. The
twist appears to be a serious display.
Front kick ("Laufeinschlag")
The kick with the extended front leg is performed mainly by dominant rams on
all subordinate sheep irrespective of sex and age. The ram whips the front
leg up and hits the opponent ventrally on the chest, belly, haunches, and
occasionally neck and chin. The front kick is less a kick than a push. It is rarely
performed by ewes, if so, by dominant ewes. Old rams kick more frequently
than young ones. On rare occasions the front kick is replaced by pawing if the
opponent is resting.
Neck fight
The neck fight is a rare behavior pattern. The rams put their chins and
throats on the withers of their opponents, however, no pushing or wrestling
followed. This behavior, common in Barbary sheep is vestigal in mountain sheep.
Mount
Mounting is performed by dominant sheep on subordinates irrespective of the
latter's sex and age. This is a pattern which is the privilege of the dominant.
Only if a sheep can mount another without being punished has it demonstrated
dominance. Females rarely mount. Young rams mount spontaneously more
frequently than older rams. The mounting posture is erect with head held high and
nose pointed at the back and pelvic strokes are performed irrespective of sex..
Subordinate males may react like females by showing lordosis or urinating to
the larger rams.
Lipcurl ("Flehmen")
The lipcurl is normally performed by rams after they lick the urine of ewes
be it on the ground, in the long hairs below the vulva or as it is expelled.
After the ram nuzzles the urine, he raises his head, opens his mouth slightly,
retracts the upper lip and exposes the palate, droops the lower lip slightly
and often moves the head slowly back and forth. This is characteristic of
sexually mature rams; it occurs with female urine and male urine, even their own.
Sniffing of rear
After a ram approaches a ewe in low-stretch he frequently sniffs and nuzzles
her rear. Rams will also sniff the rear of subordinate males. The
significance of this behavior and the lipcurl have never been demonstrated but there are
many opinions. Rams deprived of their sense of smell were not able to
distinguish between estrous and non-estrous ewes.
Head shake
This behavior is shown almost only by small sheep, sub-adults and females
after being disturbed by large sheep. Occasionally during the head shake the
animal bounces forward, frolics, threat jumps, and runs on. A threat jump by a
subordinate male may be initiated with a head shake. During play, rams
sometimes shake their heads before butting or clashing. Small sheep shaking their
heads in response to a disturbance by larger sheep had on all occasions the
rump turned to the dominant. Head shaking is not common.
Horning body, rubbing, and nuzzling
"These three contact patterns are the most commonly used behavior patterns of
small rams on larger ones. After a small ram approaches a dominant he begins
to lick and nuzzle the head of the dominant; horn his face, neck, chest, or
shoulders, or to rub his face on the face of the dominant. Dominant rams
usually accept the horning and rubbing of subordinates or estrous ewes while
standing in the present but will occasionally kick and growl.
Horn threat
"The horn threat is an intention movement to butt and as such is a true
weapon threat. It is frequently shown by subordinates toward the approaching
dominants or by dominants chasing away subordinates. The behavior pattern consists
of lowering the head and inclining the horns at the opponent.
Threat jump
"This is an intention movement to clash in which the sheep rises on its hind
legs in front of the opponent and inclines its head toward the opponent. Like
the clash it is primarily initiated by the subordinate toward the dominant
and is shown by sheep of all sexes and ages. It occurs during dominance fights
and play; in the former it is executed much more stiffly and followed by the
present, in play it is often preceded by a head shake and performed while
frolicking.
Butt and clash
"The sole weapons of the mountain sheep are its horns. The butt, which is
the mildest blow, is a downward blow with the head, during which the chin is
drawn in and the horns thrown forward and down. The sheep puts the weight of
its rigid body into the butt and pushes the horns against the body once contact
is made. When butting the sheep keeps its feet on the ground.
"The clash is a more sophisticated and exaggerated form of the butt and
differs in the force and means of achieving such force. Whereas the butt is
performed by one opponent, both opponents participate in the clash. The sheep may
jump into the clash from a four legged stance or after a bipedal run. It is
sophisticated specialized behavior which concentrates all the force a ram can
generate onto one narrow horn keel to achieve a hard blow.
"The clash has several stages. In the preparatory stage the ram initiating
the clash faces his opponent, lifts one front leg, and simultaneously tilts his
head sideways and crouches in the rear. If the head is tilted to the left,
the left horn will make first contact. His eyes are wide open and looking at
the opponent; ears laid back flat. The ram may rise on his hind legs and lift
the front legs off the ground.
"Next, the hind legs propel the body forward and up. Then the body
straightens out and begins to fall; head and neck are propelled down at a faster rate
than the body; the chin is pulled in sharply, flinging the heavy horns forward
and down. The force of the blow is focused on that one narrow horn keel the
way a karate fighter concentrates the force of a blow. Momentarily he stiffens
into the blow; then, after making contact with one horn, he rotates his head
and brings the other horn into contact with the opponent. The simplest defense
against a clash or butt is to jump aside. This is commonly done by subadults
and females but rarely by rams.
Geist describes ram, ewe and lamb behavior patterns for mountain sheep in
great detail. While the above behaviors appear to be "hawkish" he also describes
the "dove", the interference of a third ram that spoils the dominance fights
appearing to take sides and maintain a peaceful social order (page 201).
Jacob breeders often talk about traits that are not included in the breed
standard. Behavior is a trait worthy of observation and reporting. Geist has
presented a set of tools for mountain sheep that may be adapted to behavior in
Jacobs. While observing your own flock, take notes, pictures or videos of
various behaviors. Share your observations.
Fred Horak
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