How wolves became dogs

(economist.com)

108 points | by mooreds 5 days ago

17 comments

  • npstr 1 day ago
  • szanni 1 day ago
    I am rather surprised the article does not mention the shared hunting technique of pursuing prey until exhaustion as a possible link.

    Many hunter gather tribes apparently employed this technique and it can still be found today in Africa with the San people.

    Sharing food or stealing wolf puppies were probably part of the domestication but was this because humans possibly hunted alongside wolves? Humans possibly being capable of pursuing for longer distances due to better body temperature control through sweating while wolves being better at tracking.

    At least that would be my take.

    • IAmBroom 1 day ago
      Interesting. Counterpoint: since the canines can't keep up with the humans, are they only used to start the hunt? How do they know where the humans are near the end?

      Until the dog is fully domesticated (OK, I'll go home and await his return. He'll bring me meat!), I don't know how they could cooperate on a many-hour hunt like this.

      I used to wonder the same about falconry until I met a hawkmaster. The animals don't take prey far away where they'd be hard to find; they hover or perch near the humans in open fields, where they are trivial to find.

      I also wondered why they don't just eat the prey. It's because that involves lots of effort; they know a human will shortly arrive with tasty food that isn't wrapped in tough fur. Basically, they trade a package of hamburger for a Big Mac.

      • runjake 1 day ago
        > Counterpoint: since the canines can't keep up with the humans, are they only used to start the hunt?

        Can you elaborate here? This is a weird fascination of mine (man+canine).

        I walk long distances with dogs, here's what I've found and ruminated:

        1. If I chase or follow a dog, I can chase them to exhaustion.

        2. If I'm walking several miles with a dog, they tend to trot ahead of me and stop and pant and wait for me. Rinse, wash, repeat. Bursted energy/rest cycles.

        • kokanator 1 day ago
          I think your experience is one of conditioning or even breed type. I have German Wirehair Pointers which I keep in top athletic shape.

          When we are in the field they will triple my distance travelled ( verified by GPS ). My outings are typically 8-12 miles and thus 24-36 miles for the dogs. Of course I need to keep them hydrated during this activity.

          The behavior of running forward and looking back is most likely what we refer to as checking in. The dog is trying verify where you are heading/doing. In my dog's case they will range out to around 400 yards and then return to with 20 yards and run passed making eye contact as they run by.

        • overfeed 9 hours ago
          > Can you elaborate here?

          Dogs (and the prey) can do burst sprints, but will easily overheat, and will need to stop periodically to cool down. Humans are furless and sweating is sufficient to regulate our internal temperature, so we can keep jogging for hours on end. Additionally, dogs are great at sniffing out hidden prey at the beginning of a hunt, and once found, humans are excellent trackers.

        • orbital-decay 8 hours ago
          Humans have tons of small adaptations to sustained activity, from sweating to optimized metabolism and locomotion.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endurance_running_hypothesis

      • Retric 7 hours ago
        Dogs packs also do persistence hunting by having the animal pass back and forth. As long as the prey is forced to travel further than any individual dog it works fine.

        In the wider context there are other examples of cross species hunting with octopus and fish for example. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/watch-octopuses-te... So, completely wild wolves doing something similar with humans seems extremely plausible.

      • mjanx123 7 hours ago
        > the canines can't keep up with the humans

        That only applies in hot climate. In moderate climate, canines have similar performance to humans, in the arctic canines are ~2x better.

    • dboreham 10 hours ago
      Probably a bit backwards. There is a filter on <species available for domestication> : they have to either be able to keep up with humans, or be small enough to be carried by a human. Hence: dogs, cats, rats, bunnies, etc.
    • darubedarob 1 day ago
      [dead]
  • sph 1 day ago
    It's clear that human companionship has shaped wolves into dogs.

    A weird, perhaps silly question I've had for a while is: how have wolves shaped humans? Has human society in any way been affected by the structure of wolf packs? Did hairless monkeys form stronger tribes because of it?

    I don't believe for a second that this deep interspecies friendship has been one-sided and hasn't brought psychological if not physical changes as much as the changes it's brought to wolves.

    • HPsquared 1 day ago
      This is where evolutionary theory can be viewed through the lens of coevolution or group selection (a group defined as containing both a selection of humans, and also animals and plants in varying degrees of domestication, as a whole system). This is in contrast to kin selection, which only accounts for genetic relatedness.

      I remember in one of Jiang Xueqin's videos, he made the interesting argument that "grain domesticated humans" at least as much, if not more, than "humans domesticated grain".

      • dkarl 1 day ago
        I think the "wheat domesticated humans" argument is about changes to our behavior, our culture and social structures, rather than genetic change. It isn't domestication in the evolutionary sense. It would be like keeping zebras on a farm with horses and doing your best to tame and train them. You might be able to change their behavior so that they behaved differently from wild zebras, but it wouldn't be domestication unless you bred them over generations to produce a population that was genetically different from wild zebras.
      • IAmBroom 1 day ago
        Grains aren't very good food until bread is invented (probably from sprouted grains, originally). Seeds are designed to keep their goodness inside, and are very good at that containment. Bread in turn requires cooking. (I wonder now if there was a brief period of surviving on raw sprouted grains... which are far inferior because they mold so quickly.)

        Wisdom teeth are far more valuable to a precooking human, who has to chew constantly to break down plant cells. The extra chewing causes stress that induces the jaw to grow longers, allowing space for the wisdome teeth.

        We're basically at the "awkward teenage" part of evolving past raw-food diets.

    • tomkaos 1 day ago
      I read somewhere that he could have change human sleep. Human can have a deeper sleep knowing a guard will alert of danger.
      • the_af 1 day ago
        Thankfully we have those other animals, "human puppies", to counteract this :P
        • wincy 7 hours ago
          I know it’s said in jest, but if your kid is attached while you’re sleeping, i.e. breastfeeding and cosleeping, which a hunter gatherer society would most certainly do, babies don’t fuss unless they’re sick or something. My wife slept soundly through the night and said “it’s amazing she doesn’t feed at night!” (Referring to our daughter), and I said, shocked, “she eats at night, she makes a soft noise and you just roll over and pop a boob in her mouth without waking up!” This is entirely a modern problem of our own creation and convenience.
    • conductr 1 day ago
      On a long enough timeline it’s possible that cat-people and dog-people evolve separately into different species
      • sph 1 day ago
        Only if cat-people and dog-people don't intermingle.

        But given how hostile many cat-people are (see sibling comment), compared to dog-people which tend to also enjoy the company of cats, I can imagine a timeline where this misanthropist branch of humans splits off, goes to live in trees and hisses at anybody that comes nearby.

        • FeteCommuniste 1 day ago
          Hmm, I've known a good number of dog people who dislike cats. Never read any stats on the ratio of cat-lover+dog-hater to dog-lover+cat-hater groups, though.
        • steve1977 1 day ago
          > goes to live in trees

          Mainly because they lost the ability to climb down.

          • IAmBroom 1 day ago
            A symbiotic relationship with Homo caniphilus firemen, then?
      • pokstad 1 day ago
        I watched a documentary on dogs that was cheerful until the last 5% when they mentioned modern day dog owners. The film speculated that dogs might be a considered like a parasite that infiltrates human families and causes them to stop breeding humans and instead only have dogs and cats. So if that’s the case, the evolution ends for us :)
        • conductr 1 day ago
          I've heard this before. I think better term than parasite is an addictive drug since we created these types of pet dogs and indulge on them. I feel strongly the trend of dog ownership overtaking people having children, while real, is more so a result of modern economic realities regarding cost of housing and raising a child.
          • pokstad 1 day ago
            Cost is definitely a factor, but I think the ease and convenience of a dog over the stress of children also plays a big role. Dogs are obedient and mature in less than 2 years.
          • akkad33 1 day ago
            I don't know to what extent cost is stopping people from having kids. Many poor people have kids. And then they struggle to raise them.
      • thebruce87m 1 day ago
        I think some dog people already are a different species - hanging bags of dog shit on trees would never occur to me for example. I’d hate to see what their Christmas trees look like.
        • conductr 1 day ago
          This seems normal to me. I've never done it or even seen it - but it seems everyone exercises a slightly personalized disregard for the very society they are a part of these days
        • pxc 1 day ago
          Huh? Who does that?
          • sjw987 1 day ago
            In the UK, it's incredibly common for dog owners to do this. When confronted about leaving the bagged dog shit somewhere they always say they're going to pick it up on the way back, yet the next day it's still there.

            Modern British dog owners are incredibly irresponsible surrounding how they look after their pets and how they handle the pets mess. Covid made it measurably worse.

            • FeteCommuniste 1 day ago
              > In the UK, it's incredibly common for dog owners to do this.

              That's wild. I've never once seen this in the US.

              Obviously there are people who just don't clean up after their dogs in the first place, but to clean it up and then hang the bagged crap on a tree? Haha.

              • jamiecurle 1 day ago
                They do it a lot. My garden backs onto a public woodland and I can confirm it happens. Last summer when I tidied up out the back of my house, I found at least five years worth of buried dog turds in bags. Cleaning it up was not fun. I used a backpack blower to blow it all into line of "turd shame" away from the houses.

                It looks a lot nicer out there now and I gave the trees a little prune (I'm a qualified arborist) so people know this is a "tidy area" and so far no more turds in bags.

              • gweinberg 8 hours ago
                In the US they don't hang it on trees, they just leave by the side of the trail or road or whatever. But it is very common to see bags of dogshit on the sidewalk or by the side of a trail in the US.
              • tyjen 1 day ago
                I've never seen it in a tree, but I do see some owners leaving their crap bags on hiking trails and often forgetting about them on the return trip. I'd rather they let the dog poop in the forest instead of encapsulating it in a plastic bag until a Good Samaritan picks it up.
            • dboreham 9 hours ago
              One of the few benefits of widespread gun ownership in the USA: overt antisocial behavior is less common.
              • cmrx64 7 hours ago
                Contrariwise, I was part of the troupe of people that daily picked up these bags along walking trails. One of the few benefits of living in the USA: covert prosocial behavior is extremely common.
      • ddawson 1 day ago
        Culture has been affected by Toxoplasmosis which humans are primarily exposed to through cats so this makes sense.
        • akkad33 1 day ago
          There's no evidence that Toxoplasmosis has that effect on humans
      • overfeed 9 hours ago
        My bet is the other species will be a result of Toxoplasma gondii zombification.
      • TacticalCoder 1 day ago
        It's so weird that cats are still so feline, basically miniature tigers/lions but that dogs went so much off the rails compared to majestic wolves. Sure, some dogs are wolves-like but many just lot the plot: chihuahuas, daschhunds (my mom always had those: friendly but... not wolves-like), pugs, sharpeis, etc.

        So many are just... Not badass? A wolf is badass. Cats are totally badass: they're natural born killers, hunting billions of poor preys yearly.

        My parents are divorced. Father always had huge dogs (St. Bernard, Leonberg, Newfoundland, etc.) while mother always had tiny dogs (daschunds). I loved these dogs but I really hate having to take care of dog poo. So I'm a cat person.

        As a bonus my miniature tiger takes care of itself and goes shitting where nobody can see it.

        • conductr 1 day ago
          Dogs get bred for specific personality traits and to develop physical traits. My border collie was a maniac that just wanted to work all day every day. That herding part of his personality was extremely prevalent. Even if I tossed a treat on the ground, it never would occur to him to use his nose, he'd frantically look all around. Even if it was right under his nose if he didn't see it then it's as if it didn't exist. Likewise, from 1000 yards away I could make subtle hand jesture and he knew to go get his ball that was 1000 yards in another direction and bring it to me; over half our communication was body language and it even had context. Like if we were out somewhere and he was off leash, also 1000 yards away, I could nod my head slightly and he knew it was time to go and he jumped in the truck. Same head nod elsewhere meant something else. It's hard to explain but that was the most connected I've ever been to another creature (even my wife in many ways if I'm being honest, he never misunderstood me :)).

          Likewise, I now have a golden doodle. It's like having a giant 5 year old puppy. They've been bred to be docile, kid friendly, playful, cute, non-shedding, and the perfect family/instagram dog. But they're extremely dopey when compared to a border collie.

          I'm not sure what cats get bred for. Fur length? Ability to shit in a box? I'm guessing they've not been bred too much on their personality, which is why they are mostly the same and still miniature tigers.

          • WalterBright 10 hours ago
            > Dogs get bred for specific personality traits and to develop physical traits.

            If I was a doggie researcher, I'd be breeding them for general intelligence and see how far that can go.

            For example, some dogs have vocabularies of over 100 words.

        • gavinmckenzie 1 day ago
          Putting aside the greater variety of physical traits that you describe, dogs generally are more adaptable than cats. They are estimated to have twice the number of neurons and are much more malleable whereas cats feel more hardwired into a set of cat behaviours.

          I’ve assumed that this greater learning capacity and malleability is both the best part of a dog and a vulnerability that can lead them to become highly anxious and dependent animals.

          I’ve had both cats and dogs, and loved them both, but my goodness they are so wildly completely different animals.

        • dboreham 9 hours ago
          Full sized dogs can kill and eat a human. Full sized sand cat (or whatever they began as) can't eat a human. It's another domestication filter: "can't be able to easily eat a human".

          Years ago I was walking along the beach on a pacific island (probably Rarotonga). I'd noticed dogs running about (individually, not in a pack) and remarked how docile they seemed. Mentioned this to a local I ran into to which he responded "any that wasn't docile went in the Umu".

    • dsign 1 day ago
      Slightly tangential, but I think that dogs have allowed for some bad things to happen to us. Like, they are available physically, so if you don’t want to go insane in this society of ours where you are allowed to have physical contact with at most one person (your one and only partner), you can get a dog or five, or simply pet your friend’s dog or even a neighbor’s. Many post-agricultural revolution civilizations predicated on small family cells and strict property and succession rules would have been impossible without a dog to pet.
      • sph 1 day ago
        Are nuclear families a post-agricultural phenomenon? AFAIK, it's a much recent societal change driven by the industrial revolution (i.e. 300 years ago vs ~15,000 years of agriculture)
      • akkad33 1 day ago
        I don't really understand this comment. Are you saying dogs made way for nuclear families? Why would it be impossible? In India for example pet ownership is very low. Much lower than prevalence of nuclear families
      • TacticalCoder 1 day ago
        > ... if you don’t want to go insane in this society of ours where you are allowed to have physical contact with at most one person ...

        There are animals where the male and female only ever live together and are loyal (and not for the sake of the idea of loyalty, they're animals). It's not something speficic to some human societies.

      • IAmBroom 1 day ago
        > Many post-agricultural revolution civilizations predicated on small family cells and strict property and succession rules would have been impossible without a dog to pet.

        That's silly. US Midwest farmers meet every detail up until "would have been impossible"; dogs are common but not ubiquitous, and farming communities are highly social.

        (Cats, ironically, are ubiquitous on farms, because of their utility at hunting mice and rats.)

        Ironically, you're describing the classic "cat lady" trope, only with the wrong pet type.

    • mikkupikku 1 day ago
      Seems plausible to me that our long relationship with wolves/dogs has modified humanity to be more empathic to other species of animals in general. Probably impossible to prove though.
    • venusenvy47 1 day ago
      I've watched a couple documentaries that discuss your question. I think they mention the aspect about how humans could become more agricultural.

      https://m.imdb.com/title/tt10462930

      https://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/dogs-that-changed-the-world-...

    • WalterBright 10 hours ago
      > how have wolves shaped humans?

      The bonds between humans and wolves go both ways. Humans love their dogs.

    • belviewreview 1 day ago
      I am speculating that agriculture lead to human beings evolving to do the sort of labor that it requires, especially grains.
    • wendgeabos 1 day ago
      It's hard to imagine how it could not have driven human evolution as well.
    • deadbabe 1 day ago
      Misconceptions about wolf pack hierarchical structures have led humans to come up with misguided perceptions of being an Alpha, Beta, Sigma, etc…
      • psunavy03 1 day ago
        On the plus side, it makes it easier to write off someone as a loser when they use any of those terms unironically.
  • jjtheblunt 1 day ago
    I watch the genetic studies and it seems always presumed, in these articles, that dogs derive from wolves, not that dogs derive from siblings of wolves that derive from a common proto-canine ancestor.

    The wikipedia entry considers the issue, presents data that are curious with respect ot the data in the Economist article, saying domestication is presumed from wolves roughly 14,000 years or so ago.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog#Taxonomy

    The Economist article hints at the curiosity, in mentioning pre-Colombian dogs in the Americas were distinct some 23,000 years ago, but then returns to the standard presumptions.

    An article in Nature also considers the ancestry presumptions

    https://www.nature.com/articles/505589e

    • griffzhowl 1 day ago
      The wiki article doesn't say domestication occurred roughly 14k years ago, it says at least 14k years ago, because that's the earliest definitive evidence of a domesticated dog. Here are the next two sentences from the wiki article:

      "The remains of the Bonn–Oberkassel dog, buried alongside humans between 14,000 and 15,000 years ago, are the earliest to be conclusively identified as a domesticated dog.[9][7] Genetic studies show that dogs likely diverged from wolves between 27,000 and 40,000 years ago."

      • jjtheblunt 1 day ago
        agreed. in one of the articles linked, they further summarize

        "Dog ancestors diverged from modern wolf ancestors at least 27,000 years ago"

        which is still compatible with the two diverged ancestries sharing a proto-canid ancestor from which proto-wolves and proto-dogs both were derived.

        Interestingly, the article about Belgian prehistoric canid dna says the genetics are so varied that they don't form a clear group.

    • mjanx123 6 hours ago
      Dogs descend from an extinct wolf species that was sibling to the grey wolf. There are multiple wolf species, proto wolves date far before dog domestication.
      • jjtheblunt 4 hours ago
        that's consistent with what is discussed a couple days ago with article links.

        do you have a dataset or study with such? it would be interesting.

    • IAmBroom 1 day ago
      We have fossil records of wolves that do not seem much different from modern grey wolves. We do not have fossil records of ancestors to the grey wolves that share much of their DNA coexisting with the grey wolves.

      Occam's Razor says that the posited ancestor of Canus domesticus that shared grey wolf DNA was... the grey wolf.

      • jjtheblunt 1 day ago
        I believe the linked articles number 10 and 11 in the wikipedia article have a counterexample to what you just wrote.

        they do also emphasize that the "northern dogs" (huskies, malamute, akita?) are very close to wolves in shared ancestry.

  • amiga386 1 day ago
    It's Bob, all right... but look at those vacuous eyes, that stupid grin on his face - he's been domesticated, I tell you.
    • jacquesm 1 day ago
      Hehe, shades of The Far Side.
  • softwaredoug 1 day ago
    One clue is in mythology.

    Across many cultures, dogs exist in a transitory space between life and death (ie Cerebus). Hinting at dogs being "transitory" from here (camp) and out there (the wilderness). Going between, getting scraps, staying for a while, leaving. You can imagine a process unfolding over Millenia of gradual domestication this way. You see it in Ancient North Eurasians myth across different cultures. Ancient North Eurasians are genetic precursors Eurasian, Western Europe, and American lineages where dog domestication originated, and arguably where many cultures have the deeper associations with dogs.

  • jebarker 1 day ago
    Highly recommend the book "How to tame a fox" about the Russian fur farm fox domestication experiment
  • feintruled 1 day ago
    Interesting article, though is there really much new there? Also it discounts the alternative hypothesis of some bright spark acquiring wolf pups and doing it purposefully because that would take 'weeks'. Weeks, you say?

    Surely some enterprising hunter-gatherer had sufficient time on their hands. I can't help but think strutting around with a feared predator at your beck and call would have been the ultimate status symbol, and once you saw it would have to be the must have accessory for the self-respecting hunter. Aficionados would no doubt breed their stock amongst themselves to save the hassle of having to abduct more wolf cubs, which would naturally tend to the more suited specimens (friendliness being one trait as you don't want them eating the kids). Once it was realised what an incredible force multiplier they are in hunting and their utility in defence, any time investment would pay for itself many times over.

    I find this no less as unlikely as thinking humans would let wolves help themselves to their excess food. Fascinating subject all round, no matter the reason. I hope they can figure out more.

    • SJC_Hacker 1 day ago
      > I find this no less as unlikely as thinking humans would let wolves help themselves to their excess food

      Wolves can extract nutrition from animal tissue which humans discard, such as bone and the tougher cartilage/connective tissue. Modern dogs still absolute love bones.

      They also have much better night vision than humans, sense of smell and hearing.

      So, follow human tribes and pick off the remains when they move camp. Maybe eventually escalate to sneaking in at night. The human tribes now become a "resource" which the wolves will start guarding from other predators, such as bears or competing wolf packs. The humans eventually catch on that the wolves are providing a benefit at very little cost - food remains which they are not eating anyway. They even start to share kills - the wolves being better at tracking game while the humans finish the kill with spear/bow.

      When animal and crop domestication occurs, you get another benefit - protecting the flocks/herds/crops from marauders. Especially at night.

    • tastyfreeze 1 day ago
      I see this as likely as becoming more amenable to humans over a long time due to free food.

      Falconers often acquire and train wild birds. With wolves abducting pups or adopting orphans seems like a reasonable path to domestication.

  • ChrisMarshallNY 7 hours ago
    All these comments, and no one has mentioned the classic “What’s the Worst That Can Happen?” Meme?

    I won’t link to it, because all the sources are not so nice for techs, but just search for “10000 years later”, or “what’s the worst that can happen?”. The thumbnail previews will be fine. No need to open X or Facebook.

  • azornathogron 1 day ago
    HN title-destroying rules strike again. It's "How Wolves Became Dogs"
    • Luc 1 day ago
      This rule is one of the worst ones, often resulting in nonsense titles or grammatical problems.

      Another one on the homepage right now: "Samba Was Written". Ok, great.

      • rebolek 1 day ago
        Technically it's correct.
    • andersa 1 day ago
      Why not get rid of this stupid title changer already? I don't get it.
    • k8sToGo 1 day ago
      Why is the how dropped? Is it automatic?
      • xnorswap 1 day ago
        Yes. There are a few other title-mangle rules that HN has.

        It's an attempted technical solution to try to remove / limit the amount of "clickbait" in titles.

        It does not work very well.

        • omoikane 1 day ago
          I tried searching for similar incidents in the past[1], and I think the problem is that the title munging actually doesn't happen often enough for Hacker News to want to do anything about it. It's unusual that two front page articles were affected on the same day, but that's a small fraction compared to titles that passed through[2].

          I don't know if Hacker News will pop up any extra confirmation to the submitter to warn that their submitted title were automatically edited, but I think that would be a better interface than relying on submitters and readers to fix the mistake after the article is already visible and ranked.

          Whether any automated editing of titles actually helps with reducing clickbait is a different question.

          [1]

          How wolves became dogs (2026-01-09) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46553433

          How Samba Was Written (2026-01-04) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46551531

          Why I have to give Fortnite my passport to use Bluesky (2025-12-19) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46327832

          How they clean the balls in a ball pit (2025-10-15) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45592984

          Why we didn't rewrite our feed handler in Rust (2025-10-08) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45517240

          How Spain put up wealth taxes (2025-08-16) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44927460

          [2]

          Majority of the submitted titles never had "how" or "why" to begin with, and sometimes the submitter catches the change in time, for example:

          How to Code Claude Code in 200 Lines of Code (2026-01-08) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46545620

          I didn't see any mentions of the title being edited here.

      • mooreds 1 day ago
        It is automatic on submission, but the submitter can go back and edit the title. I just forgot to do so.
  • craig552uk 1 day ago
    A good (if slightly dated) book on the subject:

    How the Wolf Became the Dog by Mark Derr

    This is an active, and fast-moving, research area and I'd be keen to read something more up-to-date.

  • z3t4 1 day ago
    It's common in fur farms that they breed the animals that are most friendly to humans, and in only a few generations those animals behave like very friendly pets, and killing them becomes more difficult.
    • suzzer99 1 day ago
      A NOVA episode on dogs showed a Russian study where they bred the most friendly foxes with each other and did the same with the most aggressive (so extremes in both directions). The aggressive-bred animals were like that scene in I Am Legend where he checks on his infected rats. They were being fed, and they still wanted to kill their feeders. Kind of terrifying.
    • wendgeabos 1 day ago
      huh so that's a way that it's adaptive for the animals
    • ekr____ 1 day ago
    • akkad33 1 day ago
      Why do they kill animals for fur? Could they not shave them? (I realise my question sounds dumb)
      • snerbles 9 hours ago
        The pelt is what's harvested - the fur is not removed from the skin.

        In some cases the animal's hair can be cut without harm, like how sheep are shorn for wool.

  • MichaelRo 1 day ago
    >> “The only, absolute and best friend a man has, in this selfish world, the only one that will not betray or deny him, is his dog.”

    Well, this is far from absolute, isn't it? :) There's a fair number of vicious attacks of a dog on his owner. Oftentimes pitbulls (are they even dogs or rather "creatures"?!), but other breeds do it too. So ... nothing is absolute :P

    • gradschool 1 day ago
      For another example of betrayal, one of the cronies in Katherine the Great's court always gave a dog to his girlfriends whenever he started a new relationship. Then if the dog ever greeted some other guy familiarly, he inferred he was falling out of favor. He probably learned that trick when someone did it to him, because he would let the other guy know how he was rumbled before graciously bowing out.
    • inahga 1 day ago
      Mostly, if not entirely due to intentionally poor breeding practices. Who betrayed who?
      • IAmBroom 1 day ago
        Mostly, if not entirely, due to poor raising.

        I've gotten "BEWARE OF DOG!" pitbulls and rottweilers to befriend me simply by speaking kindly to them, and then over a period of days raising that to handsniffs, then petting.

        Misanthropic dogs are taught that behavior, which contradicts 10,000+ years of training. They don't enjoy being assholes.

        This is not to say dogs aren't naturally barky and suspicious of strangers; that is also part of their millenia of training. Lots of nice people are also suspicious of strangers. But aggressively attacking people is basically psychotic behavior for a social animal that considers humans part of its society.

    • IAmBroom 1 day ago
      The quote doesn't insist all dogs are infinitely loyal.

      Your disgusting prejudice aside, I've never met a pitbull in public that wasn't sweet and loving - which reinforces my suspicion that the real problem with them is the sort of psychotic, uncaring owner they attract.

      When I was young, it was Dobermans that were demonized, and likewise the dog of choice for assholes who abused them as mere security devices.

  • Beijinger 1 day ago
    Previously: Our dogs' diversity can be traced back to the Stone Age https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45922997

    Me: Not sure man. The closest relative to the dog is the likely extinct, Japanese Wolf https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_wolf Maybe they were very tame to begin with? Like the extinct Falkland wolf:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falkland_Islands_wolf

    "There were no forests for the animal to hide in, and it had no fear of humans;[citation needed] it was possible to lure the animal with a chunk of meat held in one hand, and kill it with a knife held in the other"

  • macspoofing 1 day ago
    Next up: Raccoons.
    • srean 1 day ago
      Wouldn't mind killer whales and dolphins while we are at it. We aren't that great about sharing the environment though.
  • thedudeabides5 1 day ago
    positive sum games
  • pointbob 9 hours ago
    [dead]