Behaving Like Animals! - UC Agriculture and Natural Resources
Dr. Sarah L. Brown, a board-certified veterinary behaviorist, notes, “In 80% of primary care cases, the presenting complaint has a behavioral component. Either the behavior is the problem (aggression, anxiety), or the behavior is a symptom of a physical problem (pain, neurological disease).” xdesi pig zooskool sex mobi
However, a crucial rule of veterinary behavior medicine is: Rule out physical causes first. A dog with sudden onset of house-soiling and increased thirst may have diabetes, not a behavioral problem. A cat that yowls at night may have hyperthyroidism, not senility. Behaving Like Animals