Las Vegas Review-Journal

Study: First N. American dogs died out

- By Emiliano Rodriguez Mega The Associated Press

NEW YORK — A new study provides fresh evidence that the first dogs of North America all but disappeare­d after the arrival of Europeans.

The only surviving legacy appears to be a cancer that arose from the cells of a dog that lived more than 8,000 years ago and has since spread to other canines throughout the world, a team reported Thursday in the journal Science.

Researcher­s compared the genomes of ancient and modern American dogs. Results confirm that the first domesticat­ed dogs of North America arrived with people from Asia over the same Bering land bridge used much earlier by humans. These dogs thrived for thousands of years but mostly vanished after contact with Europeans. Scientists don’t know why they disappeare­d.

“I just find it really surprising,” says geneticist Elinor Karlsson from the University of Massachuse­tts Medical School in Worcester, who did not participat­e in the study. “There were millions and millions of dogs all over the continent (that) died out after the Europeans arrived. And the fact that we don’t know anything about it is kind of a big hole.”

In an attempt to fill in the historical gaps, researcher­s sequenced the genetic material of 71 dog remains collected from bones found in Siberia, the United States and Mexico.

When they compared it to the genetic makeup of modern pooches, they confirmed what other scientists have long suggested: The first dogs of North America, similar to Arctic dogs like Siberian huskies or Alaskan malamutes, were brought to the continent when people crossed the land bridge between Asia and North America. It’s not known when the dogs first arrived.

For Elaine Ostrander, a canine genetics expert from the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, this finding reveals something about our own behavior.

“Where people go, so go their dogs,” said Ostrander, who was not part of the study. “This study reinforces that idea and takes it back to nearly the beginning of dogdom.”

The indigenous dogs did appear to leave a genetic legacy: a rare dog cancer known as canine transmissi­ble venereal tumor, or CTVT, that affected a single dog several thousand years ago.

“It’s the closest remaining vestige of this lost dog lineage,” co-author Elizabeth Murchison, a geneticist at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom, said in an email.

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