The emergence and diversification of dog morphology

Rick Knecht, Susan Crockford, Paul Sciulli, Mark Omura, Emma Usmanova, Allowen Evin, Joan Frances, Ekaterina Antipina, Sergey Fedorov, Keith Dobney, Robert J. Losey, Vincent Bonhomme, Kate Britton, Daniela C. Kalthoff, Pavel Kosintsev, Laurent Frantz, Myriam Boudadi-Maligne, Maria Mostadius, Stephan Curth, Carly AmeenErika Rosengren, Yaroslav V. Kuzmin, Ruth F. Carden, Colline Brassard, Alan Keith Outram, Lídia Colominas, Maria Saña-Seguí, Victor Varfolomeev, Francisco Gil Cano, Joris Peters, Andre Rehazek, Ilja Victor Merts, Anna E Linderholm, Victor Karl Merts, Sophie Dennis, Julien Claude, Z. Jack Tseng, Mikhail Sablin, Greger Larson, Vedat Onar, Andrew C Kitchener

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2 Cites (Scopus)

Resum

Dogs exhibit an exceptional range of morphological diversity as a result of their long-term association with humans. Attempts to identify when dog morphological variation began to expand have been constrained by the limited number of Pleistocene specimens, the fragmentary nature of remains, and difficulties in distinguishing early dogs from wolves on the basis of skeletal morphology. In this study, we used three-dimensional geometric morphometrics to analyze the size and shape of 643 canid crania spanning the past 50,000 years. Our analyses show that a distinctive dog morphology first appeared at about 11,000 calibrated years before present, and substantial phenotypic diversity already existed in early Holocene dogs. Thus, this variation emerged many millennia before the intense human-mediated selection shaping modern dog breeds beginning in the 19th century.
Idioma originalAnglès
Pàgines (de-a)741-744
Nombre de pàgines4
RevistaScience
Volum390
Número6774
DOIs
Estat de la publicacióPublicada - 13 de nov. 2025

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