Wolfdog: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Dog-wolf hybrid}}
{{Distinguish|Wolfhound (disambiguation)}}
{{pp-semi-indef}}
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[[Genetic admixture|Admixture]] between domestic dogs and [[Subspecies of Canis lupus|other subspecies of gray wolves]] are the most common wolfdogs since dogs and gray wolves are considered the same species, are genetically very close and have shared vast portions of their ranges for millennia. Such admixture in the wild have been detected in many populations scattered throughout Europe and North America, usually occurring in areas where wolf populations have declined from human impacts and persecutions.<ref name=Randi-Hulva-Fabbri-etal-2014/><ref name=Vila-Wayne-2001-12-24-Hybdzn/>
 
At the same time, wolfdogs are also often bred in captivity for various purposes. AdmixtureA mixture of dogs and two other North American wolf species have also occurred historically in the wild, although it is often difficult for biologists to discriminate the dog genes in the eastern timber and red wolves from the gray wolf genes also present in these wolf species due to their historical overlaps with North American gray wolves as well as with coyotes, both of which have introgressed into the eastern timber and red wolf gene pools.<ref>{{cite web
|title=Great Lakes-boreal wolf
|website=Wolf.nrdpfc.ca
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{{Blockquote|"I suppose that some of the variability exhibited in these wolves could have resulted from crossings in the wild with dogs. Such crosses in the wild have been reported and the wolf in captivity crosses readily with dogs. Some years ago at Circle, Alaska, a wolf hung around the settlement for some time and some of the dogs were seen with it. The people thought that the wolf was a female attracted to the dogs during the breeding period. However, considerable variability is probably inherent in the species, enough perhaps to account for the variations noted in the park and in skins examined. The amount of crossing with dogs has probably not been sufficient to alter much the genetic composition of the wolf population."|{{cite book |title=The Wolves of Mount McKinley |first=Adolph |last=Murie |year=1944 |isbn=0-295-96203-8 |postscript=,}} {{ISBN|978-0-295-96203-0}}.}}
 
In 2008, it was discovered that a gene [[mutation]] responsible for the [[protein]] [[beta-defensin 3]] is responsible for the black coat color in dogs.<ref name="solved">
{{cite web
|title=Black Wolf Mystery Solved
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[[File:Saarloos.jpg|thumb|left|A Saarloos Wolfdog]]
 
In 1932, [[Netherlands|Dutch]] breeder [[Leendert Saarloos]] crossed a male [[German Shepherd]] dog with a female [[European wolf]]. He then bred the female offspring back with the male German Shepherd Dog, creating the [[Saarloos wolfdog]]. The breed was created to be a hardy, self -reliant companion and house dog.<ref>
{{cite web
|url=https://www.ukcdogs.com/saarloosewolfdog
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=== The Czechoslovakian Wolfdog ===
[[File:Czechoslovakian-wolfdog-profile big.jpg|thumb|A [[Czechoslovakian Wolfdog]]]]
In the 1950s, the [[Czechoslovakian Wolfdog]] was also created to work on border patrol in the countries now known as [[Slovakia]] and the [[Czech Republic]]. It was originally bred from lines of [[German Shepherd|German Shepherd Dog]]sShepherds with [[Eurasian wolf|Carpathian grey wolves]]. It was officially recognized as a national breed in [[Czechoslovakia]] in 1982, and later was recognized by the [[Fédération Cynologique Internationale]], the [[American Kennel Club]]'s [[Foundation Stock Service]] and the [[United Kennel Club]], and today is used in agility, obedience, search and rescue, police work, therapy work, and herding in Europe and the United States.
 
=== The Volkosoby WolfdogVolkosob ===
The Volkosob ({{Langx|ru|Волкособ}}, [[Literalplural: meaning{{Langx|lit]]. '''Wolfhound''' in Russian,ru|Волкособы|translit=Volkosoby|label=none}}) was initially developed in the 1990s after the [[Dissolution of the Soviet Union|fall of the Soviet Union]]. Russian [[border guard]]s wanted a dog that would possess the trainability and pack mentality of the German Shepherd, combined with the strength, superior senses and cold-resistance of a wild wolf, able to cope in the harsh conditions of the vast Russian borders. In 2000, a [[Steppe wolf|Caspian Steppe Wolf]], noted for being unusually friendly and cooperative towards humans, was bred with German Shepherds of an [[East European Shepherd]] line, until an F3 generation was standardised. Unlike the previous hybrids, the VolkonsobVolkosob was the only breed that was an effective border guardian as they are renowned for not being too shy.
 
==Livestock guardian dogs==
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Wild wolfdogs were occasionally hunted by European aristocracy, and were termed ''lycisca'' to distinguish them from common wolves.<ref name=Rousseau-2006-Anth-duLoup/>
Noted historic cases (such as the [[Beast of Gévaudan]]) of large wolves that were abnormally aggressive toward humans, may be attributable to wolf-dog mating.<ref name=Willems-1994-AWIC/>
In Europe, unintentional mating of dogs and wild wolves have been confirmed in some populations through [[genetic testing]]. As the survival of some Continental European wolf packs is severely threatened, scientists fear that the creation of wolfdog populations in the wild is a threat to the continued existence of European wolf populations.<ref name=Rincon-2004-04-08-BBC-N/>
However, extensive admixture between wolf and dog is not supported by morphological evidence, and analyses of [[mtDNA]] sequences have revealed that such mating are rare.<ref name="WOLVES"/>
 
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}}
</ref>
In Canada, the provinces of Alberta, Manitoba, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Prince Edward Island prohibit wolfdogs as pets.<ref name=Bruch-2007-Almanac/>
Most European nations have either outlawed the animal entirely or put restrictions on ownership.<ref>
{{cite web
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==In popular culture==
* [[Jed (wolfdog)|Jed]] was a Canadian timber wolf-Alaskan Malamute and animal actor, known for his roles in such movies as [[White Fang (1991 film)|''White Fang'']] (1991), ''[[White Fang 2: Myth of the White Wolf]]'' (1994), ''[[The Journey of Natty Gann]]'' (1985), and [[The Thing (1982 film)|''The Thing'']] (1982); he was born in 1977 and died in June 1995, aged 18.
* Balto, Aleu and Kodi are fictitious wolfdogs in the animated films ''[[Balto (film)|Balto]]'' (1995), ''[[Balto II: Wolf Quest]]'' (2002) and ''[[Balto III: Wings of Change]]'' (2004), respectively. The actual [[Balto]] was not a wolfdog but instead a [[Siberian Husky]] (similar to Steele, the main villain of the first film).
* [[White Fang]] is the titular character of [[Jack London]]'s eponymous [[White Fang|1906 novel]], first serialized in [[Outing (magazine)|''Outing'' magazine]], that details the wild wolfdog's journey to domestication in the [[Yukon Territory]] and the [[Northwest Territories]] during the 1890s [[Klondike Gold Rush]].
* ''[[The Wolf Dog]]'' (1933) is an American [[Pre-code Hollywood|Pre-Code]] Mascot film serial starring Frankie Darro and [[Rin Tin Tin]] Jr.
* ''[[Wolf Dog]]'' (1958), also known as ''A Boy and His Dog'', is a Northwestern movie, directed and produced by Sam Newfield, and produced by Regal Films
* ''Wolfdogs Magazine'' self-describes as a progressive "community based publication for wolfdog enthusiasts".<ref>{{cite book
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==See also==
{{Commons category|Wolf-dog hybrid}}{{Portal|Dogs
}}
* [[Portal:Dogs|Dogs portal]]
* [[Black wolf]]
* [[Canid hybrid]]
* [[Coydog]]
* [[Coywolf]]
* [[Dingo-dog hybrid]]
* [[Dogxim]]
* [[Jackal–dog hybrid]]
* [[Wolves as pets and working animals]]
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</ref>
 
<ref name=DEFRA-RSPCA-2013-01-23>{{cite web
{{cite web
|url=http://www.defra.gov.uk/wildlife-countryside/gwd/wolfdogs/wolfdogs.pdf
|title=RSPCA report on wolfdogs
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|date=2013-01-23
|access-date=2013-12-16
|archive-date=2006-12-15
}}
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061215025632/http://www.defra.gov.uk/wildlife-countryside/gwd/wolfdogs/wolfdogs.pdf
</ref>
|url-status=dead
}}</ref>
 
<ref name=Frantz-Larson-2018-ch-1>
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</ref>
 
<ref name=Ottawa-Humane-c2013>{{cite web
{{cite web
|title=Ottawa Humane
|website=Ottawahumane.ca
|url=http://www.ottawahumane.ca/wolfdoghybrids.html
|access-date=2013-12-16
|archive-date=2013-12-16
}}
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131216043033/http://www.ottawahumane.ca/wolfdoghybrids.html
</ref>
|url-status=dead
}}</ref>
 
<ref name=Humane-Soc-c2007>
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|volume=105 |issue=3 |pages=345–353
|doi=10.1093/jhered/esu014 |pmid=24622972
|doi-access=free
}}
</ref>