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By training general practitioners to read behavioral changes as clinical signs, we diagnose fatal diseases earlier. Conversely, by understanding that a "vicious" dog is often a "sick" dog, we prevent unnecessary euthanasia. To appreciate the breadth of this field, one must look beyond dogs and cats. Exotic animal behavior is the cutting edge.

A behavioral veterinary approach asks: Is this a medical disease or a behavioral pathology? animal+sexzooskool+anna+masked+mistress+cracked

For decades, veterinary science focused primarily on the physiological: the broken bone, the infected tooth, the parasitic worm. The question was always, “What is wrong with the animal’s body?” By training general practitioners to read behavioral changes

Unlike dog trainers (who focus on obedience) or applied animal behaviorists (who focus on ethology), veterinary behaviorists can prescribe medication. This is crucial for conditions that are organic, not learned. Exotic animal behavior is the cutting edge

For example, a sudden onset of aggression in a geriatric cat is often misattributed to "meanness." However, veterinary behavioral science points to (tooth resorption) or somatic dysfunction (osteoarthritis). More critically, sudden aggression can be the first sign of feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) or a brain tumor .