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On another SE site, this report was cited as evidence that some breeds of dogs are inherently more dangerous than others.

I have some serious issues with that report (not least of which is that it is clearly heavily agenda-laden, and that it cites "googling news articles" as the research method).

Is breed a valid method of determining relative safety of a given dog? In particular I'm interested in likelihood of attacks, as opposed to overall destructive capabilities. Clearly an American Bulldog can do more physical harm than a Pomeranian, but assuming equal training, is one more likely to bite than the other?

Edit - I believe any information derived from incidents involving dogs specifically trained to attack/guard, or any from dogs involved with dog fights or other forms of abuse should be discarded. Any dog can be trained to be aggressive.

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    From my (purely anecdotal) experience with dogs: Different breeds have drastically different temperaments and will have some effect on aggression but training and environment are significantly more impacting. Aside from possible mental issues, any (domestic) dog breed can be raised friendly and non-aggressive toward humans.
    – MrHen
    Jun 16, 2011 at 19:49
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    Can you please cite more clearly the claim you are skeptical about? The referenced report does NOT claim that training is irrelevant, nor does it claim it is less relevant than breed. Is anyone really making such a claim? (Further it looks at fatalities rather than aggressive behaviour, so it doesn't necessarily contradict what you have heard about smaller breeds being more aggressive, assuming, as you suggest, larger dogs can do more physical harm.)
    – Oddthinking
    Jul 21, 2011 at 5:25
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    @Beofett, I understand better, thanks. I agree that drawing that conclusion from that paper is invalid. Consider restating the question to emphasize the claim "Some breeds of dog are inherently dangerous, despite training" (or conversely, "With training, any breed of dog can be rendered safe.") Right now, there are now several other claims in there: "Any breed of dog can be safe/dangerous", "Some breeds are safer than others", "Some breeds have caused more fatalities than others", "Smaller dogs are more aggressive.", "Training is more important than breed in determining aggression/danger."
    – Oddthinking
    Jul 21, 2011 at 12:27
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    I think the question has a definitive answer because it uses the word dangerous. Smaller dogs may bite as often and probably more often than bigger dogs, but it is obvious that the bigger dog is far more destructive when it does bite. This makes them far more dangerous. Also, why is it everytime the neighbors dog mauls a little kid the owner claims that it was such a sweet and gentle dog? You can train a dog not to bite, but in the end no matter how well they are trained they are still animals and if they are having a bad day big dogs can be very destructive, which makes them more dangerous.
    – Dunk
    May 9, 2012 at 22:08
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    One factor that hasn't been mentioned is that most people probably choose a dog based on the breed's reputation. So people who want a dog mainly to protect their property or to feel "tough" (rather than for companionship) may be more likely to choose a pit bull. And this type of owner may be less likely to give the dog a lot of attention or training, perhaps making the dog more likely to be aggressive. This would reinforce the breed's reputation for aggressiveness.
    – mhwombat
    Oct 22, 2014 at 22:00

4 Answers 4

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The American Veterinary Medical Association has this to say on dog bites:

Statistics on fatalities and injuries caused by dogs cannot be responsibly used to document the “dangerousness” of a particular breed, relative to other breeds, for several reasons. First, a dog’s tendency to bite depends on at least 5 interacting factors: heredity, early experience, later socialization and training, health (medical and behavioral), and victim behavior. Second, there is no reliable way to identify the number of dogs of a particular breed in the canine population at any given time (eg, 10 attacks by Doberman Pinschers relative to a total population of 10 dogs implies a different risk than 10 attacks by Labrador Retrievers relative to a population of 1,000 dogs). Third, statistics may be skewed, because often they do not consider multiple incidents caused by a single animal. Fourth, breed is often identified by individuals who are not familiar with breed characteristics and who commonly identify dogs of mixed ancestry as if they were purebreds. Fifth, the popularity of breeds changes over time, making comparison of breed-specific bite rates unreliable.

Note that for "pit bulls" in particular, just about any medium to large size mixed breed dog with a squarish head could be called a "pit bull" right now, particularly if it has been aggressive. The AKC does not list "pit bull" as a breed, although it does have a few bull terrier breeds.

Certainly to determine if a breed is dangerous (as opposed to a dog), the real question is not "how many bites were from breed X" but rather "what is the probability that breed X will bite?" (which the above study says is hard to determine).

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  • There's no doubt that some dogs are geared towards certain tasks: When it gets to actually practicing what you preach, would you buy an alsatian or a retriever, if you had an autistic child? why don't we give all the blind people any old dog if there is no correlation at all? scholar.google.com/… Oct 18, 2019 at 0:45
  • A girl in france had 5 big alsatians at home. She bacame part of the pack, one day, they ate her. Fancy 5 guide dogs eating their owner? Oct 18, 2019 at 0:52
  • I don't disagree that some breeds may have a higher chance of biting (or doing damage), just that bite statistics do not effectively calculate it, and unless the percentage is relatively high, there is no reason to ban an entire breed. Oct 23, 2019 at 21:28
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Cesar Milan, dog expert with a TV show, firmly believes it's the handler and training/raising (socialization in particular) and current "pack" of a dog that determines aggressiveness and general state of being much more than breed.

Often mentioned on his shows as well is that small dogs acting aggressive is often seen as cute instead of dangerous. Until it acts that way in front of a larger dog that doesn't take it. Then the larger dog is blamed, put down and added to the statistics...

He also states that some breeds have inbred behaviors/needs that you have to deal with. For a outside reference on this you can check this article: A Behavioral View on Dog Aggression.

Other sites like dogobedienceadvice.com and caninebreeds.bulldoginformation.com state that some breeds are more prone to aggression but also advise that proper training can prevent this.

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  • He sais that any dog can be socialized and docile. Ceasar still would recommend a guide dog over an Alsatian for an autistic child. Oct 18, 2019 at 1:07
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Breed-specific legislation was lifted in the Netherlands because it was found to be ineffective in preventing dog bites.

Breed-specific legislation has been found ineffective in other jurisdictions as well, whenever its effects have been studied. See World-Wide Failure of Breed Specific Legislation.

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  • The second link is at least as agenda laden as the article the OP was concerned about, just in the opposite way. E.g. in the article that is cited as supporting "no scientific evidence that one kind of dog is more likely to bite or injure a human being than another kind of dog" I cannot find any such statement - the closest is "singling out 1 or 2 breeds for control can result in a false sense of accomplishment". But that article would be perfect for explaining serious legal concerns that would render breed-based laws ineffective and possibly even invalid under US legislation. Nov 12, 2012 at 21:25
  • This appears to be about laws, not directly about dangerous breeds.
    – HDE 226868
    Sep 30, 2015 at 1:52
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Side note: I understand "inherent" as the average level of something and not as "despite" but as "independent of" something else.

Main answer: As the influence of training is widely accepted, determining the inherent level of aggression for different breeds would need a study where the pairing of dog and owner is properly randomized because a strong positive correlation between certain types of owners with aggression levels is to be expected. I don't know proper literature about this. And I don't think it likely that anyone puts up the money for such an expensive study of a question that is mainly academic, because the practical danger as a function of the breed is probably of far more practical interest, and I think that is answered far more easily (see below).

I did find a few studies about breed-specific aggression levels:

  • A dissertation in German Mittermann 2000: Assessment of Behaviour of Dogs of the Pitbull-type and Five other Breeds by Temperament Testing According to the Guidelines of the Dangerous Animals Act of Niedersachsen, Germany (GefTVO) of 5th of July 2000
    The dissertation has a total of 415 dogs which fell into categories 1 (American Staffordshire Terrier, Bullterrier and dogs of the Pitbull-type) and 2 (Rottweiler, Doberman Pinscher and Staffordshire Bullterrier) according to state law. The study found overall 20 of 415 animals with inadequate (or disturbed) aggressive behaviour. At that time the legislation treated these two categories differently, legislation required per-dog assessment of behaviour. The thesis cites 4 studies finding hereditive aggressive behaviour, there are physiological reasons like density of opiate receptors (p. 33). This can be changed within few generations by breeding (compare the concerns of the American Veterinary Association wrt. legislation needing a stable basis; paper linked by Kathy). Section 1.3.1.2 discusses breed-specific disposition (i.e. breed-specific high risk for particular types of inadequate behaviour). Breed specific differences were observed (e.g. 1/68 Staffordshire bull terriers 0/38 bull terriers vs. 8/93 Am. staffordshire terriers, 4/63 pitbull type and 5/56 dobermans with >= inadequate agresssive behaviour). These differences are not significant at 5% niveau. But American staffordshire/doberman vs. bull terriers / rottweilers were around 10% significance niveau. Conclusion is that the categories do not warrant the legislative differences (note dobermans in the lower category and bull terriers in the higher!).
    This study has the dogs handled by their owner (which is sensible as the legal test should show that the does is not inadequately aggressive when handled by its owner; but this may distort breed-specific influence).
  • Ott 2008 compared those results to 70 golden retrievers, of which 1 showed inadequate aggression and concludes: not significant.
  • Ott 2009 and Schalke 2010 compare 38 bull terriers of a blood line that was suspected to be more aggressive with the results of the previous 2 studies. None according to Schalke and 1 according to Ott (they are the same group) displayed inadequate aggression. No significant differences.

From a statistical point of view, the problem is that the differences would need to be huge in order to be significant with these sample sizes. The 95% confidence interval for the proportion of 15 dogs with inadequate aggressive behaviour of a total of 415 dogs is ranges from 3 to slightly above 7 % (point estimate: 4.8%). 1 out of 70 golden retrievers: 1.4 % (0 - ca. 7 %). The point estimates are more than a factor 3 apart, but it is not significant (p is about 0.10).

Or, huge numbers of dogs need to be tested. Significantly less aggressive animals at 5% niveau would mean: finding a breed of which 1 of 141 show aggressive behaviour vs. 20/415 (χ² test - that is an approximation that should work OK for these sample sizes).

The breeds with highest proportion of inadequately aggressive dogs were the dobermans (5/56) and Am. staffordshires (8/93). That is almost every 10th and 11th dog showed inadequately aggressive behaviour. Pooling these two breeds (for which I don't see any particular reason) would give 13/149 as reference for highly aggressive breeds. Significance at 5% niveau is reached with 0/105 or 1/134 animals.

Compared to the Am. staffordshires, the proportion of inadequately aggressive golden retrievers was about a factor 6 lower (8.6 vs. 1.4%). Sample size estimation at β=20% and α=5% (i.e. 1 out of 5 such studies missing the fact that another breed shows only 1/6th of the proportion of inadequately aggressive dogs) needs about 200 animals of the other breed. Or 134 dogs if there were (truly) a factor 10 between the different proportions inadequately aggressive dogs.

Now, the dissertation IMHO is a large study (considering the "experimental" effort). However, it is clear that the sample size per-breed is too low to detect reasonable differences in breed specific behaviour.

  • hereditary aggression characteristics can change within few generations (Mittmann, p. 35 [giving further references]). Inadequate selection (too fast breeding, breeding according to outer characteristics without selection of mental characterists) can cause particularly fear-related aggression for fashionable breeds.

On the other hand, the fact that any breed of dog can be trained for low aggression, does not answer the question of breed specific dangerousness, neither. One would need to study how much training is necessary on average to get to low/high aggression levels for different breeds and then account for the damage they are likely to achieve.

So, I'd expect that different breeds have different levels of aggression and "dangerousness". In order to study this, I'd assume that such properties are related to target properties for breeding, and choose a comparison where a large difference can reasonably be expected. E.g. low agression potential for rescue dogs (e.g. Newfoundland; though note that today's breeding targets often developed far away from the working aspect, so that e.g. today's St. Bernhard dogs are usually not considered fit as working dogs any longer, so are German shepherds). Higher bred-in danger for working breeds that were/are used to guard herds also without human supervision against predators as well as theft (aggression potential against unknown humans, size & strength to be effectively dangerous enough to guard the hers). That would probe the "hereditary" part in Kathy's answer. And the last two sentences in ratchet's answer (whose literature tells us to expect higher variance also for certain breeds). So the meta analysis of answers already given points strongly to a "yes". (Jolanta's answer deals with a different aspect of dangerousness which I'd not consider "inherent". Those findings can be in accordance with higher inherent danger, see below).

However, I doubt that incidence statistics (of any kind) allow to "measure" danger levels inherent to the breed. The reason is the already mentioned possibility of a positive correlation with respect to agression. It is quite possible (and IMHO probable) that certain dog owners who prefer an dangerous dog will both tend to have breeds that have the reputation of being more dangerous and also train them to exhibit more aggression rather than train them for low aggression (the other part of being dangerous, the level of damage the dog can achieve does depend on the breed. One bite of a St. Bernhard's can cause far more damage than a bite of a chihuahua - though ultimately a newborn may die from a chihuahua's nip into the nose).

The answer to the "Is breed a valid method of determining relative safety of a given dog?" sub-question may be yes (personally I think this very likely; but I cannot give "hard" scientific evidence; the studies cited above did not find significance at 5% level [discussion whether p-values are appropriate are off-topic here], but they also found a factor 6 between the proportions of dogs handled by there owner with inadequately aggressive behaviour between Dobermans or Am. staffordshire terriers and golden retrievers (or bull terriers)). The breed of dog may be (personal expectation: is) a good predictor for the aggression level of the dog owner. Meaning that there is a positive feedback loop between alleged or existing aggressiveness and dangerousness and training target characteristic. Which makes the answer to the subquestion a stronger "yes".

Again, I have no hard evidence. But detailed studies for dog ban policies could give hints in favour or against this possibility:
If this were the case, one would expect

  • that aggression studies on dogs from the breeds that fall under the typical ban policies would in fact be found to be aggressive on per-animal evaluation
  • yet a dog ban on the basis of breeds should have only a small effect (if at all) on the overall danger of the dog population (incidents) as the potential of aggressively training dog owners is hardly affected, and there are enough dogs that can easily be trained to be aggressive.
  • that banning of dog owners may have more impact, but I think it questionable whether anything the like could be practically enforced. So, again, this would be hard to observe.

Some more thoughts:

  • Huge critique point with the linked article: as there is not even an attempt to give approximate proportions of the respective breeds within the total dog population, the "danger" of a specific breed cannot be inferred.
    On the other hand it is also quite clear that pit bulls (whatever they specifically are) are far less than 60% of the total US dog population.

  • Huge difficulty with the whole question: there are enough different (more or less) sensible definitions of danger that every opining can find supporting studies.

  • In Germany, about every town collects dog tax. For such countries, the relative frequencies of different breeds may be determined with enough precision for practical purposes. So the relative-to-the-general-dog-population difficulty can be addressed at least in some regions.

In general, googling news for sure isn't proper research. In the particular question of fatal dog attacks, however,

  • I think that the risk of missing any fatal incident is low to negligible
  • I also think it a fairly safe assumption that basically every fatal dog attack is reported.
  • I also think that there are few enough fatal dog attacks that it is fairly easy to sort them out (i.e. not confusing two to be the same; nor double-counting)
  • and I'd expect that it would be big headlines if the same dog is repeatedly responsible for fatal attacks.

Put together, I think fatal attacks may be treated as surrogate markers for severe aggressive incidents - under the usual caution you need with any kind of surrogate marker.

(more literature to come when time permits)

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  • Please provide some references to support your claims. If you don't have evidence, please avoid answering - this site is only for referenced answers.
    – Sklivvz
    Nov 12, 2012 at 21:29
  • @skivvz: references are coming. I just wanted to make sure the written stuff is not lost. Nov 12, 2012 at 21:58
  • @cbeleitesunhappywithSX nice answer but just checking if you want to update since the last comment says ‘more literature coming’... Mar 15, 2020 at 3:44

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