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The leftovers route to dog domesticat­ion

WHEN ANCIENT HUNTERS ATE JUICY PARTS OF THEIR PREY AND GAVE WOLVES LEAN MEAT, IT STARTED A BEAUTIFUL FRIENDSHIP

- BYJAMES GORMAN

It’s the middle of the last ice age and you are in the cave on a cold winter’s night che wing the fat, and I don’ t mean gossiping. You are chewing real, gristly fat from some animal you just killed and cooked because if you eat only lean meat you’ll starve to death or get protein poisoning. By evolutiona­ry necessity, you find fat irresistib­le. Many thousands of years later this will cause your descendant­s to eat Doritos and Slim Jims, but that’s not your problem.

Still, you have leftover leanmeat because that’s not the part of the musk ox that people like. What to do with it? Toss it to the wolf pup! You don’t know why you took the beast in, but it’s cute, and it seems to thrive on the parts of the kill you don’t favour. If this happens often enough, and you and your children and their children end up keeping some of these wolves and their progeny, what do you get? Dogs!

Maria Lahtinen, an archaeolog­ist at the Finnish Food Authority, and colleagues published this idea ina bitmore scientific detail last week in Scientific Advances. Lahtinen, whose main research is on the diet of Arctic people, had a notion that the different dietary needs of humans and wolves could be key to the origin of dogs. It is, she said, “a completely new hypothesis why initial dog domesticat­ion took place.” Two species, both carnivores to a greater or lesser extent, with different nutritiona­l needs, could have a commensal relationsh­ip. The wolves would benefit and the humans, at least at first, would neither lose nor benefit.

Nabbing a wolf pup to live with people isn’t that easy, and having your children eaten would be a significan­t downside.

The riddle of transforma­tion

The process of dog domesticat­ion, in which a now extinct group of wolves was transforme­d into dogs, has always been a puzzle. Scientists agree it happened 15,000 years ago or longer, likely in Eurasia. But some scientists say ancient wolves gradually came closer to humans as they fed on their garbage. Others argue that thehunter- gatherers of the time wouldn’t have had enough waste to make that work. They argue that hunter- gatherers nabbed wolf puppies from their dens and kept them as pets. But nabbing a wolf pup and socialisin­g it to live with people isn’t that easy, and having your children eaten would be a significan­t downside.

Lahtinen and her colleagues said in winter, ice age humans would have had to forego plants, depending on hunting. But people can’t survive on protein alone. Eventually they starve or get protein poisoning. They need fat, so they would have eaten primarily the fatty parts of prey, with some lean meat left over. Wolves, with different digestive systems, can live for quite a while on pure protein.

The researcher­s said that among human Arctic hunters, animal protein could have provided up to 45 per cent of the calories needed in the winter. They also calculated the amount of protein in the prey available to wolves in the ice age. People and wolves hunt similar species, so if humans were consuming the same animals they would have excess protein fromtheir kills.

Humans, including modern hunter- gatherers, have an odd habit of feeding other animals and keeping them, at least for a while.

So the authors lean toward the idea of various human bands occasional­ly snatching a wolf puppy. Eventually, the two species grew closer together and the newdog- wolves became useful. Many thousands of years later, we have pandemic puppies.

Minimal dietary competitio­n

The hypothesis is just that, an idea about what might have happened, not a demonstrat­ion of what did happen. But Naomi Sykes, a zoo- archaeolog­ist at the University of Exeter in Britain, said she thought the researcher­s made two important points. “The first is their suggestion that there would have been minimal dietary competitio­n between humans and wolves.” The second, she said, was that their hypothesis “flips the idea of domesticat­ion” to people feeding animals rather than raising themto eat.

She said archaeolog­ical finds indicate that the domesticat­ion of chickens, rabbits, horses and other animals may have begun with the animals being deliberate­ly fed. In some of the earliest discoverie­s, she said, the ancient bones show that the animals were “being maintained, looked after and even worshipped rather than eaten.”

For wolves, she said, she didn’t favour the puppy- snatching part of the hypothesis. The presence of leftover protein would have been enough for the humans and wolves to draw closer.

The hypothesis flips the idea of domesticat­ion to people feeding animals rather than raising them to be eaten.”

Naomi Sykes | Archaeolog­ist

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 ?? New York Times ?? Feeding time for pups at Wolf Park in Battle Ground, Indiana. A newhypothe­sis says the dietary need for fat by early humans and for lean meat bywolves could be key to the origin of dogs.
New York Times Feeding time for pups at Wolf Park in Battle Ground, Indiana. A newhypothe­sis says the dietary need for fat by early humans and for lean meat bywolves could be key to the origin of dogs.

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