Animal Behaviorist

Veterinary Medicine

Are you fascinated by non-human animals? Do you wonder why they do the things they do? Perhaps you should think about becoming an animal behaviorist. Animal behaviorists study the way animals behave and try to determine what causes certain types of behavior and what factors can prompt behavior change.

They usually specialize in certain types of animals, whether it’s fish, birds, large animals, wild animals, livestock or household pets. They also may focus on certain types of behavior, such as hunting, mating or raising offspring. Many things can influence how an animal behaves, including hunger, illness, hormones, the presence of a potential predator or prey, even the weather.

Animal behaviorists identify behaviors and try to ask questions shaped by Tinbergen’s four questions, named after Niko Tinbergen, a Dutch biologist and ornithologist:

  • What caused the non-human animal to perform the behavior at this particular moment?
  • What is the developmental trajectory of the behavior? (When does the animal first perform it, and does it require learning?)
  • What is the function or purpose of the behavior?
  • What is the evolutionary history of the behavior? (That is, can we track it through a phylogenetic lineage and see how or if it has changed?)

Some animal behaviorists specialize in anthrozoology – the way animals interact with people. However, most anthrozoologists are not animal behaviorists. People who work with pet behavior are applied animal behaviorists. These specialists are often concerned with promoting behavior change in animals by altering aspects of the human-animal relationship. For example, an applied animal behaviorist may come to your home and observe your family’s interactions with a pet to determine why the pet is behaving badly and what changes the family can make in order to improve the pet’s behavior.

Animal behaviorists work in a variety of settings, including universities and research facilities, zoos, animal training facilities, animal shelters, companies that make pet products, organizations that promote animal welfare and in private practice, helping pet and livestock owners better understand and care for their animals.

The Animal Behavior Society reviewed this profile.

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  • Average Salary

    $25K - 90K

  • Years Higher Education

    2 - 7

  • Job Outlook

    Good