Older
cats and dogs don’t get adopted as readily as young animals. Big dogs
don’t get adopted as easily as small dogs. We can figure out why. But
why do black dogs and black cats seem to be the
last to be
adopted? Is it because they look scary? Is it because of old legends of
bad luck and witches cats? That may have something to do with it, but
there are other, more concrete reasons. It could be because facial
expressions are harder to read against black fur. Or because they are
hard to photograph.
Most shelters feature photos of
their animals on a website in an attempt to entice adopters; black dogs
are difficult to photograph, and their personalities are often masked in
darkness. A 1992 Animal Welfare study presented participants with
photographs of different colored dogs: 65% preferred dogs with lighter
coats. Anthrozoos published a study in 2013 that found “participants
rate yellow dogs significantly higher that black dogs on the personality
dimensions of Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, and Emotional
Stability.” The same study found that participants considered black dogs
the “least friendly” -- based solely off of a photograph.
Cats
suffer from the same photography problems. I have a black cat, and as
sweet and smart as she is, she’s never taken a picture that makes her
look anything but terrifying. Pricenomics has more on black dogs and
cats, and
why they suffer from lack of adoption more than other pets that are just like them on the inside.
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