Out of Asia: An Allopatric Model for the Evolution of the Domestic Dog
Author(s) -
Stan Braude,
Justin T. Gladman
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
isrn zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-5238
pISSN - 2090-522X
DOI - 10.1155/2013/841734
Subject(s) - allopatric speciation , domestication , sympatric speciation , biology , lineage (genetic) , zoology , evolutionary biology , isolation (microbiology) , ecology , population , genetics , demography , sociology , gene , microbiology and biotechnology
The domestication of the dog has been a ripe area of evolutionary speculation for more than 150 years. A wolf ancestry and probable East Asian origin of domestication are now widely accepted. We offer a new allopatric hypothesis for the domestication of dogs that recognizes the importance of isolation in the speciation of the dog from the wolf. Although sympatric isolation during domestication of many other species would not have been problematic, it has always been difficult to keep dogs from breeding with wild canids. Furthermore, wild canids readily hybridize with one another. This would have made it very difficult for an early domestic dog lineage to diverge from the wolf and to evolve into the morphologically, developmentally, and behaviorally distinct species that we recognize today. Our allopatric model is consistent with two subhypotheses: isolation when tamer scavenger wolves followed humans south and away from hunting populations of wolves or isolation when climate forced humans and tamer scavenger wolves into isolated refugia.
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