Monday, September 22, 2014

The Origin of the Domesticated Dog

Have you ever wondered where did dogs come from? Know about the animal what scientists believe to be the ancestor of dogs.



There are several theories explaining how the domestication process actually took place. Thus, according to certain studies, wolf puppies that are taken at a very early age away from their parents to be raised and tamed by humans, are easily trained and socialized. There is at least one such study. Nonetheless, some other researchers state that in the case of wolf pups that are 21 years old, it's very hard to achieve any socialization or taming, and these attempts are rarely successful.

Many scientists consider that orphaned wolf cubs were adopted by humans, who took care of them together with their human babies, and thus appeared a new type of wolf-like domesticated animals which, in time, will turn into dogs. According to Dr. Raymond Coppinger of Hampshire College (Massachusetts), those types of wolves that were more interactive towards humans passed these traits to their following generation, and thus creating a kind of wolf that could be more easily domesticated by humans.

Coppinger speaks of a special behavior trait that was essential for the wolf's transformation into dog, and this trait was called "flight distance". It referred to the distance kept by an animal towards a human before running away from what they perceived as danger. In this respect, animals that live at a shorter distance from humans are likely to linger and feed even when these humans are present. Dr. Coppinger says that his argument is that tame or domesticated means being able to eat even in the presence of otherwise perceived as threatening humans. This is precisely what wild wolves cannot do. The side effects of domesticity-purposed selection were the selection of related physical features that were actually genetically caused, plus behavior such as barking.

There is a hypothesis according to which wolves got separated into two kinds of populations: the pack of hunters and village-directed kind of scavengers. The following selection steps were not actually defined, but perhaps there was a certain tension between these two groups. From the archeological viewpoint, there isn't certainty about the earliest known domestication until 7,000 BC. According to other evidence, dogs' domestication began in East Asia. There is a certain difficulty in deciphering the bones' structural differences, and because of that the culturally-based domestic dog identification is quite valuable. The first dog found buried together with a human dates back with about 12,000 years ago, in the country of Palestine.
Read more at Buzzle: http://www.buzzle.com/articles/the-origin-of-the-domesticated-dog.html

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