Dingo a unique species, not a type of wild dog: Study

spaminator

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Dingo a unique species, not a type of wild dog: Study
Pauline Askin, Reuters
First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 07:35 AM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 07:47 AM EDT
SYDNEY - Australia's dingo is a unique species, not a kind of wild dog as previously believed, according to a new study that definitively classifies the country's largest land predator.
The research by Australian scientists, published in the Journal of Zoology, resurrected the species name "Canis dingo", first adopted in 1793 by Friedrich Meyer, a German naturalist.
"What we've done is describe the dingo more scientifically," Mike Letnic from the University of New South Wales told Reuters.
The confusion over whether the dingo was a distinct species partly originated from the previous classification based on a simple drawing and description in the 18th century journal of Australia's first governor, Arthur Phillip, without reference to a physical specimen.
"When Phillip got home to England he wrote about his adventures and in that book he wrote one paragraph about the dingo and published a picture and that was, until now, what science knew of the dingo," Letnic said.
The team found the physical features that define the dingo are a slim build, relatively broad head, long snout, pointy ears and bushy tail, with a weight of 15 to 20 kg (33 to 44 pounds).
To isolate dingoes unlikely to have cross-bred with domestic dogs, the team tracked 69 skull and skin specimens pre-dating 1900 in museums and archaeological sites in Europe, Australia and America to create a benchmark description.
"What we did was say this is what dingoes look like before 1900 and that's what a dingo looks like because there were not very many dogs around," Letnic said. "That's where the benchmark comes in."
Dingoes were introduced to Australia around 3,000 to 5,000 years ago, with genetic evidence suggesting they originated from East Asian domestic dogs. They bred in isolation until the arrival of dogs accompanying European settlers from 1788.
The scientists think there are still pure dingoes in parts of Australia, Letnic said, but without having the DNA from these old animals, they cannot be 100% sure.
Distinguishing pure dingoes from those mixed with feral dogs is an important issue as some parts of Australia support the conservation of dingoes but the extermination of "dingo dogs" that are seen as pests by farmers because they kill livestock.
Dingo behaviour was at the centre of one of Australia's longest-lived legal mysteries, resolved in 2012 by a coroner's finding that one of the animals had carried off an infant, Azaria Chamberlain, from a tent in the outback in 1980.
The body was never found and although her parents always maintained she had been taken by a dingo, the mother was jailed for three years over the death before being cleared, while the father received a suspended sentence as an accessory.
Dingoes play a vital role by regulating populations of animals such as kangaroos, wallabies and invasive red foxes.
The scientists hope a better understanding of dingo numbers based on the clearer identification will help determine their place in biodiversity.
"What our research shows is dingoes are not just yellow," Letnic said. "A lot of people think if it's black it can't be a dingo and kill it."
Dingo. (Shutterstock)

Dingo a unique species, not a type of wild dog: Study | Home | Toronto Sun
 

Sal

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Sep 29, 2007
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I read this article with interest hoping it would mention the Azaria Chamberlain case. What a nightmare that was for the parents. I remember reading a book at the time which presented the circumstances and left one to draw ones own conclusions. Of course you couldn't really.

They showed pictures of the tent and recounted in detail how it had been handled. Few believed the mother. I'm not really certain why. It was an anomaly but dingos are wild. The behaviour of wild animals change according to variables occurring within the environment.

How horrific to have one's baby taken by a dingo and then have others believe you have killed your child. You would be the only one to actually "know" the truth. Guess the dad did too since he was an accessory after the fact to something which never occurred.

Very strange occurrence.
 

Twila

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Mar 26, 2003
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It successfully breeds with dogs but isn't? It looks like a dog.


The article certainly wasn't very clear on these points. I did find this:

There is a broad misinterpretation that the dingo was once a "domestic dog" before he went wild in Australia, and really has developed from the common pye dogs of Asia. That is totally incorrect. The dingo has always been a wild canine - which developed as the wolf of Australia. Primitive peoples may have utilised puppies for whatever purpose, watch animals, food source, camp cleaners, but they did this by taking young animals from the wild. Unlike the African Wild Dog, or the Asian Dhole, both of which are older evolutionary prototypes of canidae; the dingo does not need to live in a pack and be taught to hunt to survive. The dingo has his prey drive inbuilt as instinctive behaviour. He is a natural predator animal. Pure dingoes, like wolves, are still locked genetically into annual breeding cycles.


He also will fit in with social pack hierarchy, as does the wolf, but this is learned behaviour. Whilst the pye dogs may have a shared ancestor thousands of years ago, today they bear no family relationship with the pure Australian dingo. They are modern offshoots of mongrel crosses. If one wishes to hold a belief that a dingo is a domestic dog, then the breed is by far the oldest and purest breed in the world, but it is a naturally evolved one and not man-made. Pure dingoes can never become "domesticated" while they remain pure. They are genetically locked into their primitiveness. Similar to what has occurred globally with wolves, coyotes and other wild canid species, which are all able to interbreed, only by crossing with domesticated breeds can the integrity of this genetic blueprint become impaired.

From here: Dingo are not dogs

This is fascinating.