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How Did Dogs Become A Man's Best Friend And Left The Wolves Behind?

by Karishma Abhishek on July 24, 2021 at 4:36 PM
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Highlights:

A sense of loneliness is almost lost when you are with your best friend - Dogs! Many of us favor this reality and deem these buddies more faithful than any other creature. They are there for you almost forever.


But have you ever wondered what makes these little companions extra unique and friendly? The research hints the reason might be their early emerging social skills towards humans.

Evolutionary Perspective

It is long known that evolutionarily, the dogs evolved from the wolves. Both the domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) and wolves species are found to get attracted to familiar objects and perform non-social measures of memory and inhibitory control almost similarly.

‘Extraordinary social skills and communication amongst dogs stir a sense of interesting curiosity in us. It is found that altered social maturation along with domesticated attraction towards humans, has allowed the dogs to become more flexible with humans.’

However, the reason for their faithful friendliness towards humans presents a mystery as to how domestication altered the dog's cognition. Experts speculate that this was due to altered social maturation by a process of selecting for an attraction to humans. This allowed the dogs to shift more compliance with their new social partner, who was once feared, and these unusual social skills of communication arose early in their development.

The Pups Study

The study has compared the battery of temperament and cognition tasks of 44 dogs with 37 wolf puppies of 5-18 weeks old.

It was observed that dog puppies exhibited enhanced attraction to humans (almost more than double), with the more skillful ability to read human gestures and better eye contact with humans when compared to wolf puppies.

This was even though the wolf puppies received more intense human socialization. The study depicts the role of domestication in further enhancing the cooperative-communicative abilities of dogs and favors the evolutionary hypothesis.

Why Dogs are Nurtured Equally as Kids - Supporting Ideologies

Reports also propose that domestic dogs are more thriving in communicative gestures with humans (similar to human children) when compared to even mother-reared chimpanzees and other great apes. This quality of dogs is present almost instantly to them without any intensive training.

Hence apart from relying on the olfactory cues and bodily gestures alone, the dogs and human infants bestow similar correlated variance in their use of different human gestures. This is not observed in other great apes.

The Domestication Hypothesis (DH)

The domestication hypothesis (DH) points that the innate character of the dogs to understand human gestures is a product of domestication.

The differences in varied breeds are predicted by genetic similarity among them and the genes expressed in the brain. This relates independently to other cognitive tasks. Thus 40% of the variation in this skill is found to be attributable to genetics.

The other striking feature of the dogs that make them extra friendly is their interspecific communicative abilities that emerge early. Right at the age of weaning (∼7-9 weeks) in dog puppies, they are capable enough to already use human gestures.

In an experimental setup, the foxes were analyzed for similar attraction to humans by their exposure and domestication. It was found that the experimental foxes used human gestures at a similar level to dog puppies.

This in turn supports the ideology of a similar process that had evolutionarily occurred during dog domestication and it led to the early emergence of dogs' unusual social skills.

The Canid Ancestry Hypothesis (CAH)

The CAH in contrast to the DH, suggests that rather than gaining these interspecific communicative abilities from their ancestors, the dogs inherited the skills from the wolves. The spontaneous learning of human gestures by the adult wolves is viewed as support for this theory.

However, only limited data exist to support this fact. Thus two contrasting views support the early domestication in dogs - either from their common ancestor with wolves or lacking sensitiveness of data to support the CAH in wolf puppies.

Dogs are Our Best Buddies

Nevertheless, even the young dog puppies around the age of weaning are shown to be attracted to humans more than wolves puppies, despite limited human interaction. This greatly favors the predictions of the domestication hypothesis.

The ideology thereby suggests that the dog but not wolf puppies show increased attachment to humans with social maturity skills for reading human gestures. The dogs also had better non-social skills, that is, specialized for cooperative communication with humans.

Here, the fear component was replaced by attraction. This lays emergence from the idea that unusual interest in humans is the main drive that motivates this domestication. However future research is required to solve the further evolutionary process and look for any variation in social skills across groups of domestic dogs and wolves.

Facts on Dogs


References:

  1. Cooperative Communication with Humans Evolved to Emerge Early in Domestic Dogs - (https:www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(21)00880-0)
  2. 10 amazing facts about dogs - (https:www.pdsa.org.uk/what-we-do/blog/10-amazing-facts-about-dogs)
  3. 30 Fun and Fascinating Dog Facts - (https:www.akc.org/expert-advice/lifestyle/dog-facts/)
  4. 15 Amazing Dog Facts - (https:www.purina.co.uk/articles/dogs/behaviour/common-questions/amazing-dog-facts)


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