Texarkana Gazette

STUDY ADDRESSES ORIGIN OF NORTH AMERICAN DOGS

Continent’s first canines domesticat­ed in Siberia

- By Deborah Netburn

The arrival of the first Europeans in the Americas in the 15th century didn’t just affect the lives of native people already living here. It also took a devastatin­g toll on their pets.

In a paper published this week in Science, an internatio­nal team of archaeolog­ists and geneticist­s report that the lineage of dogs that thrived alongside Native Americans for thousands of years was essentiall­y wiped out, thanks to the arrival of canines from Europe.

“This study demonstrat­es that the history of humans is mirrored in our domestic animals,” senior author Greger Larson, who studies evolutiona­ry genomics at Oxford University, said in a statement. “Just as indigenous people in the Americas were replaced by European colonists, the same is true for their dogs.”

The new work relied on genetic evidence culled from the archaeolog­ical remains of 71 dogs from North America and Siberia.

An analysis of the data revealed that the earliest dogs in North America arrived here already domesticat­ed more than 10,000 years ago. The researcher­s think they probably came alongside humans who crossed a land bridge between Alaska and Siberia.

The authors also found that the ancient dogs of North America are mosmost closely related to a population of dogs from Zhokhov Island in Eastern Siberia, where archaeolog­ists recently found the earliest known evidence of dog domesticat­ion.

The North American dogs and the Zhokhov Island dogs shared a common ancestor that lived 14,600 years ago, the scientists scientists said. The researcher­s were surprised to find that the “native” or “pre-contact” dogs left little to no genetic trace of thetheir existence on the modern dog population.

Their closest relatives are the American Arctic dogs, which includes the Alaskan malamute, the Alaskan husky and the Greenland dog.

The authors also found a similar relationsh­ip between the precontact dogs and and modern Eurasian Arctic dogs like the

Siberian husky. But none of these modern dogs appear to be direct descendant­s of the earliest American dogs, they said.

“It is fascinatin­g that a population of dogs that inhabited many parts of the Americas for thousands of years, and that was an integral part of so many Native American cultures, could have disappeare­d so rapidly,” Laurent Frantz, an evolutiona­ry geneticist at Queen Mary University of London who helped lead the work, said in a statement.

Although the study did not reveal what killed off the first group of American dogs, Frantz suggests that their demise was likely due to a mix of disease, cultural persecutio­n and biological changes that started when the first Europeans arrived in the “new” world.

In a strange twist, however, the authors also discovered that the genes of America’s first dogs live on in an unexpected place: the DNA of a transmissi­ble cancer that now affects dogs across the planet.

The cancer is known as CTVT, or canine transmissi­ble venereal tumor. It causes genital tumors and is passed from dog to dog during mating.

CTVT developed as a mutation from the stem cell of a single dog and continues to carry the genetic imprint of that animal to this day.

Previous research suggested that the CTVT founder dog was related to the modern Arctic dogs, but it turns out that it’s even more closely related to the ancient American dogs.

Further analysis of the CTVT genome shows that the founder dog lived up to 8,225 years ago.

Since this is after dogs arrived in the Americas, it’s possible that CTVT originated with a dog in North America, the authors concluded.

“It is fascinatin­g that a population of dogs that inhabited many parts of the Americas for thousands of years, and that was an integral part of so many Native American cultures, could have disappeare­d so rapidly.”

—Laurent Frantz

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In a paper published this week in Science, an internatio­nal team of archaeolog­ists and geneticist­s report that the lineage of dogs that thrived alongside Native Americans for thousands of years was essentiall­y wiped out, thanks to the arrival...
ABOVE: In a paper published this week in Science, an internatio­nal team of archaeolog­ists and geneticist­s report that the lineage of dogs that thrived alongside Native Americans for thousands of years was essentiall­y wiped out, thanks to the arrival...

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