Toronto Star

Dogs split from wolves earlier than thought

- ERYN BROWN LOS ANGELES TIMES

A new analysis of ancient wolf DNA has shed light on the murky early history of man’s best friend, suggesting that dogs split from wolves as many as 27,000 to 40,000 years ago — not 11,000 to 16,000 years ago, as earlier genome research proposed.

“Dogs may have been domesticat­ed much earlier than is generally believed,” Love Dalen said in a statement. Dalen is a researcher at the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm and co-author of a study describing the discovery in the journal Current Biology.

Dalen, first author Pontus Skoglund of the Harvard Medical School and their colleagues came to their conclusion after sequencing the DNA of a male wolf that lived on Siberia’s Taimyr Peninsula.

The genetic material came from a small piece of rib bone collected during an expedition to the region. The team was unsure at first if the sample had come from a modern or ancient wolf; radiocarbo­n dating then revealed that the beast, which they referred to as Taimyr 1, lived about 35,000 years ago.

“This wolf lived just a few thousand years after Neandertha­ls disappeare­d from Europe and modern humans started populating Europe and Asia,” Skoglund said.

Examining the animal’s mitochondr­ial and nuclear DNA and comparing them to genomes of modern wolves and dogs, the team surmised that there must have been a threeway split among the Taimyr, dog and wolf lineages.

Furthermor­e, DNA evidence suggested that the animals would have diverged about the same time, a conclusion inconsiste­nt with a relatively recent parting of the ways between wolves and dogs.

They also found that Siberian huskies and Greenland sled dogs shared a relatively large number of genes with Taimyr 1, compared with other breeds. The Chinese shar pei and Finnish spitz also shared Taimyr DNA, to a lesser extent.

“DNA can provide direct evidence that a Siberian husky you see walking down the street shares ancestry with a wolf that roamed northern Siberia 35,000 years ago,” Skoglund said.

 ??  ?? The Chinese shar pei, above, and Finnish spitz share DNA with a beast that lived in Siberia about 35,000 years ago.
The Chinese shar pei, above, and Finnish spitz share DNA with a beast that lived in Siberia about 35,000 years ago.

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