Dubai Telegraph - Dingoes aren't just feral dogs, says study

EUR -
AED 4.00239
AFN 77.901537
ALL 99.570104
AMD 426.241811
ANG 1.950766
AOA 999.242893
ARS 1169.054315
AUD 1.739347
AWG 1.96416
AZN 1.853607
BAM 1.973662
BBD 2.199506
BDT 132.378021
BGN 1.962749
BHD 0.41078
BIF 3188.423169
BMD 1.089687
BND 1.463848
BOB 7.52712
BRL 6.177465
BSD 1.089359
BTN 93.112669
BWP 15.077451
BYN 3.564963
BYR 21357.858548
BZD 2.188102
CAD 1.551294
CDF 3128.490379
CHF 0.956162
CLF 0.027142
CLP 1041.565839
CNY 7.919953
CNH 7.983175
COP 4523.56175
CRC 547.252634
CUC 1.089687
CUP 28.876697
CVE 111.202819
CZK 24.944071
DJF 193.659126
DKK 7.461477
DOP 69.004375
DZD 146.036559
EGP 55.102187
ERN 16.3453
ETB 141.495965
FJD 2.536627
FKP 0.843238
GBP 0.835457
GEL 3.007329
GGP 0.843238
GHS 16.840543
GIP 0.843238
GMD 78.596697
GNF 9425.443668
GTQ 8.404996
GYD 228.779518
HKD 8.482491
HNL 27.857777
HRK 7.530391
HTG 142.144816
HUF 405.686959
IDR 18218.010224
ILS 4.06251
IMP 0.843238
INR 93.227442
IQD 1425.636054
IRR 45880.47746
ISK 144.984928
JEP 0.843238
JMD 170.351013
JOD 0.772568
JPY 161.218066
KES 140.839007
KGS 94.296087
KHR 4351.377272
KMF 496.34433
KPW 980.739588
KRW 1603.189231
KWD 0.335982
KYD 0.906348
KZT 548.592464
LAK 23574.453714
LBP 97333.606338
LKR 321.098389
LRD 217.875851
LSL 20.035565
LTL 3.217562
LVL 0.65914
LYD 5.2425
MAD 10.493251
MDL 19.568874
MGA 5089.03109
MKD 62.049599
MMK 2287.808049
MNT 3793.617555
MOP 8.732666
MRU 43.257664
MUR 49.716088
MVR 16.82705
MWK 1887.20361
MXN 22.074812
MYR 4.834358
MZN 69.614416
NAD 20.035565
NGN 1674.732434
NIO 40.057705
NOK 11.34153
NPR 149.233827
NZD 1.902635
OMR 0.419524
PAB 1.089687
PEN 3.997955
PGK 4.456932
PHP 62.371691
PKR 304.710229
PLN 4.219411
PYG 8659.520377
QAR 3.966751
RON 5.022032
RSD 118.218763
RUB 92.110544
RWF 1545.577324
SAR 4.086464
SBD 9.262672
SCR 15.783962
SDG 654.319049
SEK 10.756989
SGD 1.463925
SHP 0.856323
SLE 24.877246
SLL 22850.185609
SOS 621.541486
SRD 40.161434
STD 22554.313806
SVC 9.534918
SYP 14168.616683
SZL 20.035565
THB 37.25238
TJS 11.877824
TMT 3.811469
TND 3.381528
TOP 2.623784
TRY 41.365339
TTD 7.374109
TWD 36.23056
TZS 2883.427716
UAH 44.955826
UGX 3976.878025
USD 1.089687
UYU 45.928442
UZS 14069.244987
VES 75.830943
VND 27940.385529
VUV 134.440755
WST 3.091517
XAF 661.792439
XAG 0.032275
XAU 0.000345
XCD 2.950221
XDR 0.820241
XOF 661.792439
XPF 119.331742
YER 268.069536
ZAR 20.651698
ZMK 9808.489274
ZMW 30.667925
ZWL 350.87866
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    68

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    22.5

    +0.27%

  • AZN

    -0.3800

    72.22

    -0.53%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    65.78

    0%

  • BTI

    -0.8500

    40.25

    -2.11%

  • GSK

    -0.2300

    37.64

    -0.61%

  • RELX

    0.3100

    50.98

    +0.61%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.83

    +0.04%

  • SCS

    0.1400

    11.46

    +1.22%

  • BP

    0.0000

    33.81

    0%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.04

    +0.46%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2700

    9.78

    -2.76%

  • BCC

    3.1600

    102.07

    +3.1%

  • RIO

    -0.3300

    59.9

    -0.55%

  • BCE

    -0.9600

    21.82

    -4.4%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    9.12

    -1.64%

Dingoes aren't just feral dogs, says study
Dingoes aren't just feral dogs, says study / Photo: Handout - EUREKALERT!/AFP

Dingoes aren't just feral dogs, says study

Dingoes might look like regular mutts, but in fact they're genetically in between wolves and dogs, according to a new study published Friday in Science Advances.

Text size:

The iconic species -- revered in Aboriginal culture but the bane of modern ranchers -- has been Australia's top predator since the extinction of Tasmanian tigers last century.

However, "the evolutionary position of the dingo has been divided for a substantial period of time," co-author Bill Ballard of La Trobe University and the University of Melbourne told AFP.

Some hold that the lean, tan-colored canines brought to the continent 5,000 to 8,500 years ago are simply another form of domestic dog.

The new research -- a global collaboration involving 26 authors from 10 countries -- compared the genome of a desert dingo named Sandy, who was rescued in 2014 along with her siblings -- to those of five domestic dog breeds and the Greenland wolf.

They found the dingo's genome was structurally distinct from the boxer, German shepherd, basenji, Great Dane and Labrador retriever.

But she still shared more similarity with the domestic dogs than with the Greenland wolf. Among the breeds, Sandy was closer to the German shepherd than the rest.

“Sandy the desert dingo is intermediate between the wolf and the domestic dogs,” concluded Ballard. To be even more sure, the team is sequencing the genome belonging to an alpine dingo, found in the Australian Alps in the country’s east.

- Ancient human movements -

The finding can have several applications.

For one, the dingo genome can be used as an ancient reference book to help identify which genes are responsible for genetic disease in modern dogs, rather than trying to compare between breeds which share much common ancestry.

Knowing more about dingo evolution can also illuminate the history of the ancient people who brought them across the sea from Southeast Asia.

"At some stage they had to cross some water with some traveling peoples," said Ballard. "Whether they're First Nation Australians or whether they're people that interacted with First Nation Australians, we don't know."

The team hopes to get a clearer sense of the timeline and start to answer other questions like whether it was a single migration or multiple, once they sequence the alpine dingo.

The study also set out to test the differences in how dingoes metabolize nutrients compared to domestic breeds, by running a controlled diet study on a number of dingos and German shepherds.

Dingoes, like wolves, have only one copy of a gene that creates pancreatic amylase, a protein that helps dogs live on starchy diets, which humans have thrived on especially in the past 10,000 years.

German shepherds have eight copies of the gene. After receiving the same food and water for 10 days, the German shepherds’ scat contained three bacteria families involved in breaking down starch, confirming the researchers’ predictions.

Like the wolf in North America, dingoes are deeply polarizing: they are romanticized by city dwellers and play a prominent role in Indigenous songs and stories, but are hated by farmers for allegedly killing livestock.

According to Ballard, however, dingoes evolved to prey on small marsupials and aren’t easily able to digest high-fat foods -- thus lambs are more likely being hunted by feral dogs or hybrids.

He hopes to test the theory, and hopefully exonerate the dingo, in future behavior experiments.

A.Hussain--DT