The History of Dogs
Dog History Part 4 (Click Here For The History of Dogs Part 3)
Whatever may be said concerning the difference existing between dogs and foxes will not hold good in reference to dogs, wolves, and jackals.
The wolf and the jackal are so much alike that the only appreciable distinction is that of size, and so closely do they resemble many dogs in
general appearance, structure, habits, instincts, and mental endowments that no difficulty presents itself in regarding them as being of one
stock. Wolves and jackals can be, and have repeatedly been, tamed. Domestic dogs can become, and again and again do become, wild, even consorting
with wolves, interbreeding with them, assuming their gregarious habits, and changing the characteristic bark into a dismal wolf-like howl.
The wolf and the jackal when tamed answer to their master’s call, wag their tails, lick his hands, crouch, jump round him to be caressed, and
throw themselves on their backs in submission. When in high spirits they run round in circles or in a figure of eight, with their tails between
their legs. Their howl becomes a business-like bark. They smell at the tails of other dogs and void their urine sideways, and lastly, like our
domestic favourites, however refined and gentlemanly in other respects, they cannot be broken of the habit of rolling on carrion or on animals
they have killed.
This last habit of the domestic dog is one of the surviving traits of his wild ancestry, which, like his habits of burying bones or
superfluous food, and of turning round and round on a carpet as if to make a nest for himself before lying down, go far towards connecting him in
direct relationship with the wolf and the jackal.
The great multitude of different breeds of the dog and the vast differences in their size, points, and general appearance are facts which make it
difficult to believe that they could have had a common ancestry.
One thinks of the difference between the Mastiff and the Japanese Spaniel, the Deerhound and the fashionable Pomeranian, the St. Bernard and
the Miniature Black and Tan Terrier, and is perplexed in contemplating the possibility of their having descended from a common progenitor. Yet
the disparity is no greater than that between the Shire horse and the Shetland pony, the Shorthorn and the Kerry cattle, or the Patagonian and
the Pygmy; and all dog breeders know how easy it is to produce a variety in type and size by studied selection.
In order properly to understand this question it is necessary first to consider the identity of structure in the wolf and the dog. This
identity of structure may best be studied in a comparison of the osseous system, or skeletons, of the two animals, which so closely resemble each
other that their transposition would not easily be detected.
The spine of the dog consists of seven vertebrae in the neck, thirteen in the back, seven in the loins, three sacral vertebrae, and twenty to
twenty-two in the tail. In both the dog and the wolf there are thirteen pairs of ribs, nine true and four false. Each has forty-two teeth. They
both have five front and four hind toes, while outwardly the common wolf has so much the appearance of a large, bare-boned dog, that a popular
description of the one would serve for the other.
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