SMAR vs Prey Drive

Why the Distinction Matters in Malinois Rescue

When Malinois are surrendered to rescue, owners rarely say:

“He has too much prey drive.”

They say:

“He’s aggressive.”
“She loses her mind.”
“He’s out of control.”

Those words follow the dog into assessment, into kennels, sometimes into euthanasia decisions.

And in many cases, they’re wrong.

Those words carry weight.

And they often carry the wrong meaning.

The Language Problem

“Prey drive” is already a vague term. But in rescue cases, the situation is often worse. Instinctive predatory behaviour gets mislabelled as aggression.

The distinction is not academic.

It determines whether a dog gets training… or euthanasia.

What Is Actually Happening

When a Malinois enters the predatory motor sequence, it is intense.

Orient.
Eye.
Stalk.
Chase.
Grab.
Bite.

That sequence is hardwired. It does not ask permission. And when it activates, higher reasoning temporarily drops out.

To an inexperienced owner, it looks like the dog has “lost his mind.”

In a sense, he has. The cognitive brakes are offline while the motor pattern runs.

That does not equal social aggression.

It equals activation.

This is where clearer terminology matters.

Most of what owners describe in these cases is not generalised aggression. It is movement-triggered predatory behaviour directed at small mammals – what I’ve previously referred to as Small Mammal Attack Response.

What many owners are describing as prey drive is often this movement-triggered predatory motor pattern – explained in detail in our Small Mammal Attack Response (SMAR) article.

Instinct plus intensity.
Not instability.

Where Bites Occur

Jim Bradley, widely regarded as one of the most experienced voices in Malinois rescue, put it bluntly:

“Unprepared individuals trying to interrupt that predatory motor sequence is also where bites occur as the dog redirects in frustration on the owner (or other pets in the home) due to their inability to complete the hardwired motor sequence…which confirms to the inexperienced individual the dog is ‘aggressive’ or ‘loses his mind.’”

That redirection seals the misunderstanding.

Owner tries to physically stop the sequence.
Dog redirects in frustration.
Owner labels the dog aggressive.

The narrative is now fixed.

Dogs Almost Euthanised – For Instinct

Jim continued:

“I’ve received calls about Malinois scheduled for euthanasia for ‘aggression,’ only to find a textbook high-drive dog in hands that didn’t know how to interrupt or channel that intensity. A few of those dogs went on to become police K9s that were clearly stable but misunderstood.”

That sentence alone should make people pause.

Police K9s.

Stable.

Misunderstood.

The genetics didn’t change. The handling did.

Instinct vs Aggression

When Jim takes out a ball or a flirt pole and sees intensity light up, he doesn’t see instability.

He sees genetics.

The general public often cannot distinguish between predatory motor patterns and social aggression. That line becomes blurred in homes, and even in shelters.

The consequences are real.

A dog labelled aggressive faces a very different future than a dog labelled high-drive and trainable.

Language shapes outcome.

The Critical Factor – Interruption

Both in working homes and pet homes, one thing is critical:

The ability to prevent or interrupt the predatory motor sequence safely and reliably.

You do not remove instinct from a Malinois.

You build brakes.

Without brakes, intensity looks like chaos.

With brakes, intensity becomes capability.

Why This Matters in Rescue

Clearer language would absolutely help adopters understand what they’re taking on.

It would help rescues frame dogs accurately.

It would help prevent high-drive, stable dogs from being misdiagnosed as aggressive.

And it would shift responsibility back where it belongs – preparation and education.

The predatory motor sequence is fascinating. Watching it activate is impressive and, for many, intimidating.

But intimidation is not pathology.

The Malinois was bred to respond to movement. That response must be respected, trained and controlled.

Calling it aggression when it is not does nothing except damage good dogs.

Other opinions are available. This one is mine

But clarity saves lives.

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