- #106
pinball1970
Gold Member
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Late to the party on this- the below study is a few years old about wolves verses dogs and behaviourhttp://science.sciencemag.org/content/345/6199/864/tab-figures-dataApologies if repeating (no time to read all the comments right now)
Comments about the special bond and social animals has been mentioned by Mark44, but there was study in Russia (?) suggesting certain genes come in groups.
The more friendly wolf pups were selected and those pups gave rise to friendly still pups, no surprise passing on similar traits However those friendly pups also had physical characteristics associated with more this behaviour, big eyes floppy ears “smiley” rather than growly faces.
Apologies if details are scant and flaky- the reference was from a Dawkins book so I will find the correct book and ref for this study and feedback. Those friendly traits associated with co-operation acceptance by the top dog (us) I think the “bond” thing is pure survival and selfish genes chiming, genes we have encouraged via selective breeding.
Comments about the special bond and social animals has been mentioned by Mark44, but there was study in Russia (?) suggesting certain genes come in groups.
The more friendly wolf pups were selected and those pups gave rise to friendly still pups, no surprise passing on similar traits However those friendly pups also had physical characteristics associated with more this behaviour, big eyes floppy ears “smiley” rather than growly faces.
Apologies if details are scant and flaky- the reference was from a Dawkins book so I will find the correct book and ref for this study and feedback. Those friendly traits associated with co-operation acceptance by the top dog (us) I think the “bond” thing is pure survival and selfish genes chiming, genes we have encouraged via selective breeding.