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Labrador Duo’s Hilarious Bed and Bone Confrontation

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Quick Smiles:

  • A playful Labrador duo recently became TikTok sensations, attracting over 410,000 views within a day.
  • The dogs’ amusing confrontation, initiated by a ‘bed and bone theft’, had viewers in stitches due to the male Labrador’s animated protest and the female one’s carefree reaction.
  • This fun scenario also serves as a reminder that dogs can share resources, especially with familiar canines as per a 2016 study at the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna.
@bailey.and.abe

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♬ Cute mischief, scheming (loop) – The Penguin

In the realm of pet companions, our furry four-legged buddies often become the center of attention due to their hilarious antics. A recent TikTok video of a pair of Labradors perfectly illustrates this. This delightful video quickly went viral, with over 410,000 views in just a day.

The video follows a hilarious incident initiated by the female Labrador who coyly decides to agitate her male counterpart. She not only takes over his bed but also steals his bone, leading to some comical consequences.

In the July 18 video, viewers are treated to the male Labrador’s relatable reaction to his sibling’s brazen actions. His grumbles, playful leaps, and eventual surrender next to the usurped bed are comical yet endearing. Throughout this, his sister remains unfazed, casually lounging on his bed.

Labelled as an “unbothered brat” in the video, she dismisses his pleas for a minute before unhurriedly moving to a similar bed nearby. The pet parent humorously likens her relaxed saunter to a sloth’s and comments that she was “just proving a point to him.”

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It’s not uncommon to witness our pets squabbling over belongings. Interestingly, a 2016 study conducted at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna, Austria, implies that dogs can, and do, share, especially with familiar dogs.

The study involved 15 dogs from multi-pet households. At first, the dogs clearly exhibited sharing behaviors when they cooperated to pull a rope to feed another dog. Further exploration used a token exchange experiment, allowing dogs to use tokens to offer food to another known or unknown dog, or no dog at all.

The results? The dogs preferred to share more food with familiar dogs than with strangers or in non-social contexts. Still, the study couldn’t definitively rule out the possibility that another dog’s presence might have influenced the dogs’ act of sharing, given the complexity of the token exchange task.

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