Multiple and Ancient Origins of the Domestic Dog

Carles Vilà(Brigham Young University), Peter Savolainen(Brigham Young University), Jesús E. Maldonado(Brigham Young University), Isabel R. Amorim(Brigham Young University), J. E. Rice(Brigham Young University), Rodney L. Honeycutt(Brigham Young University), Keith A. Crandall(Brigham Young University), Joakim Lundeberg(Brigham Young University), Robert K. Wayne(Brigham Young University)
Science
June 13, 1997
Cited by 1,091

Abstract

Mitochondrial DNA control region sequences were analyzed from 162 wolves at 27 localities worldwide and from 140 domestic dogs representing 67 breeds. Sequences from both dogs and wolves showed considerable diversity and supported the hypothesis that wolves were the ancestors of dogs. Most dog sequences belonged to a divergent monophyletic clade sharing no sequences with wolves. The sequence divergence within this clade suggested that dogs originated more than 100,000 years before the present. Associations of dog haplotypes with other wolf lineages indicated episodes of admixture between wolves and dogs. Repeated genetic exchange between dog and wolf populations may have been an important source of variation for artificial selection.


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