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posted by n1 on Wednesday October 21 2015, @11:29PM   Printer-friendly
from the quacks-like-a-duck dept.

Where did dogs first arrive on the scene? Scientists have long debated that question, and now a study of doggie DNA from around the world is pointing to Central Asia.

Man's best friend may have evolved somewhere near what is now Nepal and Mongolia, researchers say.

Previous studies have suggested southern China, the Middle East, Siberia and Europe as the place where our first domesticated animal arose from wolves at least 15,000 years ago.

For the new work, Adam Boyko of Cornell University and others analyzed DNA from 549 dogs that represented 38 countries in Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe, India, the Middle East and islands north and east of Australia. The animals weren't house pets, but rather "village dogs" that wandered freely in the streets or fields.

The researchers examined the DNA for signals of where the dogs had the most ancient roots. That pointed to Central Asia. The analysis did not tackle the contentious question of when dogs appeared.

Genetic structure in village dogs reveals a Central Asian domestication origin [abstract]


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 22 2015, @08:06PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 22 2015, @08:06PM (#253358)

    You need to spend some time at a dog pound and see what happens to the majority of dogs in the majority of dog pounds.
    At least the Asians aren't wasteful.

    -- gewg_