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Canis

Canis is a genus of the Caninae which includes multiple extant species, such as wolves, dogs, coyotes, and golden jackals. Species of this genus are distinguished by their moderate to large size, their massive, well-developed skulls and dentition, long legs, and comparatively short ears and tails.[3]

Canis
Temporal range: 5.332–0 Ma Miocene to present[1]
1st row: wolf (C. lupus),
dog (C. familiaris);
2nd row: red wolf (C. rufus),
eastern wolf (C. lycaon);
3rd row: coyote (C. latrans),
golden jackal (C. aureus);
4th row: Ethiopian wolf (C. simensis),
African wolf (C. lupaster).
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Canidae
Subfamily: Caninae
Tribe: Canini
Subtribe: Canina
Genus: Canis
Linnaeus, 1758[2]
Type species
Canis familiaris
Linnaeus, 1758
Species

Extant:

Extinct:

Taxonomy edit

The genus Canis (Carl Linnaeus, 1758) was published in the 10th edition of Systema Naturae[2] and included the dog-like carnivores: the domestic dog, wolves, coyotes and jackals. All species within Canis are phylogenetically closely related with 78 chromosomes and can potentially interbreed.[4] In 1926, the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) in Opinion 91 included Genus Canis on its Official Lists and Indexes of Names in Zoology.[5] In 1955, the ICZN's Direction 22 added Canis familiaris as the type specimen for genus Canis to the official list.[6]

Canis is primitive relative to Cuon, Lycaon, and Xenocyon in its relatively larger canines and lack of such dental adaptations for hypercarnivory as m1–m2 metaconid and entoconid small or absent; M1–M2 hypocone small; M1–M2 lingual cingulum weak; M2 and m2 small, may be single-rooted; m3 small or absent; and wide palate.

The cladogram below is based on the DNA phylogeny of Lindblad-Toh et al. (2005),[8] modified to incorporate recent findings on Canis species,[9][10]

Canis

Canis latrans (coyote)  

Canis rufus (red wolf)  

Canis lycaon (Algonquin wolf)  

Canis lupus (gray wolf)  

Canis familiaris (domestic dog)  

Canis lupaster (African golden wolf)  

Canis simensis (Ethiopian wolf)  

Canis aureus (golden jackal)  

In 2019, a workshop hosted by the IUCN/SSC Canid Specialist Group recommends that because DNA evidence shows the side-striped jackal (Canis adustus) and black-backed jackal (Canis mesomelas) to form a monophyletic lineage that sits outside of the Canis/Cuon/Lycaon clade, that they should be placed in a distinct genus, Lupulella Hilzheimer, 1906 with the names Lupulella adusta and Lupulella mesomelas.[11]

Evolution edit

See further: Evolution of the canids

The fossil record shows that feliforms and caniforms emerged within the clade Carnivoramorpha 43 million YBP.[12] The caniforms included the fox-like genus Leptocyon, whose various species existed from 24 million YBP before branching 11.9 million YBP into Vulpes (foxes) and Canini (canines). The jackal-sized Eucyon existed in North America from 10 million YBP and by the Early Pliocene about 6-5 million YBP the coyote-like Eucyon davisi[13] invaded Eurasia. The canids that had emigrated from North America to Eurasia – Eucyon, Vulpes, and Nyctereutes – were small to medium-sized predators during the Late Miocene and Early Pliocene but they were not the top predators.

 
Skulls of dire wolf (Aenocyon dirus), gray wolf (C. lupus), eastern wolf (C. lycaon), red wolf (C. rufus), coyote (C. latrans), African golden wolf (C. lupaster), golden jackal (C. aureus) and black-backed jackal (Lupulella mesomelas)

For Canis populations in the New World, Eucyon in North America gave rise to early North American Canis which first appeared in the Miocene (6 million YBP) in south-western United States and Mexico. By 5 million YBP the larger Canis lepophagus, ancestor of wolves and coyotes, appeared in the same region.[1]: p58 

Around 5 million years ago, some of the Old World Eucyon evolved into the first members of Canis,[14] and the position of the canids would change to become a dominant predator across the Palearctic. The wolf-sized C. chihliensis appeared in northern China in the Mid-Pliocene around 4-3 million YBP. This was followed by an explosion of Canis evolution across Eurasia in the Early Pleistocene around 1.8 million YBP in what is commonly referred to as the wolf event. It is associated with the formation of the mammoth steppe and continental glaciation. Canis spread to Europe in the forms of C. arnensis, C. etruscus, and C. falconeri.[1]: p148 

However, a 2021 genetic study of the dire wolf (Aenocyon dirus), previously considered a member of Canis, found that it represented the last member of an ancient lineage of canines originally indigenous to the New World that had diverged prior to the appearance of Canis, and that its lineage had been distinct since the Miocene with no evidence of introgression with Canis. The study hypothesized that the Neogene canids in the New World, Canis armbrusteri and Canis edwardii, were possibly members of the distinct dire wolf lineage that had convergently evolved a very similar appearance to members of Canis. True members of Canis, namely the gray wolf and coyote, likely only arrived in the New World during the Late Pleistocene, where their dietary flexibility and/or ability to hybridize with other canids allowed them to survive the Quaternary extinction event, unlike the dire wolf.[14]

Xenocyon (strange wolf) is an extinct subgenus of Canis.[15] The diversity of the Canis group decreased by the end of the Early Pleistocene to the Middle Pleistocene and was limited in Eurasia to the small wolves of the Canis mosbachensis–Canis variabilis group and the large hypercarnivorous Canis (Xenocyon) lycaonoides.[16] The hypercarnivore Xenocyon gave rise to the modern dhole and the African wild dog.[1]: p149 

Dentition and biteforce edit

 
Diagram of a wolf skull with key features labelled
 
Eurasian wolf skull
Bite force adjusted for body weight in Newtons per kilogram[17]
Canid Carnassial Canine
Gray wolf 131.6 127.3
Dhole 130.7 132.0
African wild dog 127.7 131.1
Greenland dog and dingo 117.4 114.3
Coyote 107.2 98.9
Side-striped jackal 93.0 87.5
Golden jackal 89.6 87.7
Black-backed jackal 80.6 78.3

Dentition relates to the arrangement of teeth in the mouth, with the dental notation for the upper-jaw teeth using the upper-case letters I to denote incisors, C for canines, P for premolars, and M for molars, and the lower-case letters i, c, p and m to denote the mandible teeth. Teeth are numbered using one side of the mouth and from the front of the mouth to the back. In carnivores, the upper premolar P4 and the lower molar m1 form the carnassials that are used together in a scissor-like action to shear the muscle and tendon of prey.[1]: 74 

Canids use their premolars for cutting and crushing except for the upper fourth premolar P4 (the upper carnassial) that is only used for cutting. They use their molars for grinding except for the lower first molar m1 (the lower carnassial) that has evolved for both cutting and grinding depending on the candid's dietary adaptation. On the lower carnassial the trigonid is used for slicing and the talonid is used for grinding. The ratio between the trigonid and the talonid indicates a carnivore's dietary habits, with a larger trigonid indicating a hypercarnivore and a larger talonid indicating a more omnivorous diet.[18][19] Because of its low variability, the length of the lower carnassial is used to provide an estimate of a carnivore's body size.[18]

A study of the estimated bite force at the canine teeth of a large sample of living and fossil mammalian predators, when adjusted for their body mass, found that for placental mammals the bite force at the canines (in Newtons/kilogram of body weight) was greatest in the extinct dire wolf (163), followed among the modern canids by the four hypercarnivores that often prey on animals larger than themselves: the African hunting dog (142), the gray wolf (136), the dhole (112), and the dingo (108). The bite force at the carnassials showed a similar trend to the canines. A predator's largest prey size is strongly influenced by its biomechanical limits.[20]

Behavior edit

Description and sexual dimorphism edit

 
Male coyote
 
Female coyote
 
Male gray wolf
 
Female gray wolf

There is little variance among male and female canids. Canids tend to live as monogamous pairs. Wolves, dholes, coyotes, and jackals live in groups that include breeding pairs and their offspring. Wolves may live in extended family groups. To take prey larger than themselves, the African wild dog, the dhole, and the gray wolf depend on their jaws as they cannot use their forelimbs to grapple with prey. They work together as a pack consisting of an alpha pair and their offspring from the current and previous years.[21] Social mammal predators prey on herbivores with a body mass similar to that of the combined mass of the predator pack.[22][23] The gray wolf specializes in preying on the vulnerable individuals of large prey,[24] and a pack of timber wolves can bring down a 500 kg (1,100 lb) moose.[25][26]

Mating behaviour edit

The genus Canis contains many different species and has a wide range of different mating systems that varies depending on the type of canine and the species.[27] In a study done in 2017 it was found that in some species of canids females use their sexual status to gain food resources. The study looked at wolves and dogs. Wolves are typically monogamous and form pair-bonds; whereas dogs are promiscuous when free-range and mate with multiple individuals. The study found that in both species females tried to gain access to food more and were more successful in monopolizing a food resource when in heat. Outside of the breeding season their efforts were not as persistent or successful. This shows that the food-for-sex hypothesis likely plays a role in the food sharing among canids and acts as a direct benefit for the females.[27]

Another study on free-ranging dogs found that social factors played a significant role in the determination of mating pairs. The study, done in 2014, looked at social regulation of reproduction in the dogs.[28] They found that females in heat searched out dominant males and were more likely to mate with a dominant male who appeared to be a quality leader. The females were more likely to reject submissive males. Furthermore, cases of male-male competition were more aggressive in the presence of high ranking females. This suggests that females prefer dominant males and males prefer high ranking females meaning social cues and status play a large role in the determination of mating pairs in dogs.[28]

Canids also show a wide range of parental care and in 2018 a study showed that sexual conflict plays a role in the determination of intersexual parental investment.[29] The studied looked at coyote mating pairs and found that paternal investment was increased to match or near match the maternal investment. The amount of parental care provided by the fathers also was shown to fluctuated depending on the level of care provided by the mother.

Another study on parental investment showed that in free-ranging dogs, mothers modify their energy and time investment into their pups as they age.[30] Due to the high mortality of free-range dogs at a young age a mother's fitness can be drastically reduced. This study found that as the pups aged the mother shifted from high-energy care to lower-energy care so that they can care for their offspring for a longer duration for a reduced energy requirement. By doing this the mothers increasing the likelihood of their pups surviving infancy and reaching adulthood and thereby increase their own fitness.

A study done in 2017 found that aggression between male and female gray wolves varied and changed with age.[31] Males were more likely to chase away rival packs and lone individuals than females and became increasingly aggressive with age. Alternatively, females were found to be less aggressive and constant in their level of aggression throughout their life. This requires further research but suggests that intersexual aggression levels in gray wolves relates to their mating system.

Tooth breakage edit

 
Dentition of a wolf showing functions of the teeth.

Tooth breakage is a frequent result of carnivores' feeding behaviour.[32] Carnivores include both pack hunters and solitary hunters. The solitary hunter depends on a powerful bite at the canine teeth to subdue their prey, and thus exhibits a strong mandibular symphysis. In contrast, a pack hunter, which delivers many shallower bites, has a comparably weaker mandibular symphysis. Thus, researchers can use the strength of the mandibular symphysis in fossil carnivore specimens to determine what kind of hunter it was – a pack hunter or a solitary hunter – and even how it consumed its prey. The mandibles of canids are buttressed behind the carnassial teeth to crack bones with their post-carnassial teeth (molars M2 and M3). A study found that the modern gray wolf and the red wolf (C. rufus) possess greater buttressing than all other extant canids and the extinct dire wolf. This indicates that these are both better adapted for cracking bone than other canids.[33]

A study of nine modern carnivores indicate that one in four adults had suffered tooth breakage and that half of these breakages were of the canine teeth. The highest frequency of breakage occurred in the spotted hyena, which is known to consume all of its prey including the bone. The least breakage occurred in the African wild dog. The gray wolf ranked between these two.[32][34] The eating of bone increases the risk of accidental fracture due to the relatively high, unpredictable stresses that it creates. The most commonly broken teeth are the canines, followed by the premolars, carnassial molars, and incisors. Canines are the teeth most likely to break because of their shape and function, which subjects them to bending stresses that are unpredictable in direction and magnitude.[34] The risk of tooth fracture is also higher when taking and consuming large prey.[34][35]

In comparison to extant gray wolves, the extinct Beringian wolves included many more individuals with moderately to heavily worn teeth and with a significantly greater number of broken teeth. The frequencies of fracture ranged from a minimum of 2% found in the Northern Rocky Mountain wolf (Canis lupus irremotus) up to a maximum of 11% found in Beringian wolves. The distribution of fractures across the tooth row also differs, with Beringian wolves having much higher frequencies of fracture for incisors, carnassials, and molars. A similar pattern was observed in spotted hyenas, suggesting that increased incisor and carnassial fracture reflects habitual bone consumption because bones are gnawed with the incisors and then cracked with the carnassials and molars.[36]

Coyotes, jackals, and wolves edit

The gray wolf (C. lupus), the Ethiopian wolf (C. simensis), and the African golden wolf (C. lupaster) are three of the many Canis species referred to as "wolves". Species that are too small to attract the word "wolf" are called coyotes in the Americas and jackals elsewhere. Although these may not be more closely related to each other than they are to C. lupus, they are, as fellow Canis species, more closely related to wolves and domestic dogs than they are to foxes, maned wolves, or other canids which do not belong to the genus Canis. The word "jackal" is applied to the golden jackal (C. aureus), found across southwestern and south-central Asia, and the Balkans in Europe.

African migration edit

The first record of Canis on the African continent is Canis sp. A from South Turkwel, Kenya, dated 3.58–3.2 million years ago.[37] In 2015, a study of mitochondrial genome sequences and whole genome nuclear sequences of African and Eurasian canids indicated that extant wolf-like canids have colonised Africa from Eurasia at least 5 times throughout the Pliocene and Pleistocene, which is consistent with fossil evidence suggesting that much of the African canid fauna diversity resulted from the immigration of Eurasian ancestors, likely coincident with Plio-Pleistocene climatic oscillations between arid and humid conditions.[38]: S1  In 2017, the fossil remains of a new Canis species, named Canis othmanii, was discovered among remains found at Wadi Sarrat, Tunisia, from deposits that date 700,000 years ago. This canine shows a morphology more closely associated with canids from Eurasia instead of Africa.[39]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

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canis, this, article, about, genus, canines, other, uses, disambiguation, genus, caninae, which, includes, multiple, extant, species, such, wolves, dogs, coyotes, golden, jackals, species, this, genus, distinguished, their, moderate, large, size, their, massiv. This article is about the genus of canines For other uses see Canis disambiguation Canis is a genus of the Caninae which includes multiple extant species such as wolves dogs coyotes and golden jackals Species of this genus are distinguished by their moderate to large size their massive well developed skulls and dentition long legs and comparatively short ears and tails 3 CanisTemporal range 5 332 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Miocene to present 1 1st row wolf C lupus dog C familiaris 2nd row red wolf C rufus eastern wolf C lycaon 3rd row coyote C latrans golden jackal C aureus 4th row Ethiopian wolf C simensis African wolf C lupaster Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraFamily CanidaeSubfamily CaninaeTribe CaniniSubtribe CaninaGenus CanisLinnaeus 1758 2 Type speciesCanis familiarisLinnaeus 1758SpeciesExtant Canis aureus Canis familiaris Canis latrans Canis lupaster Canis lupus Canis lycaon Canis rufus Canis simensisExtinct Canis antonii Canis borjgali Canis chihliensis Canis edwardii Canis etruscus Canis lepophagus Canis mosbachensis Canis palmidens citation needed Canis variabilis Subgenus Xenocyon Canis africanus Canis antonii Canis falconeri Canis lycanoides Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Evolution 2 Dentition and biteforce 3 Behavior 3 1 Description and sexual dimorphism 3 1 1 Mating behaviour 3 1 2 Tooth breakage 4 Coyotes jackals and wolves 5 African migration 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksTaxonomy editThe genus Canis Carl Linnaeus 1758 was published in the 10th edition of Systema Naturae 2 and included the dog like carnivores the domestic dog wolves coyotes and jackals All species within Canis are phylogenetically closely related with 78 chromosomes and can potentially interbreed 4 In 1926 the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature ICZN in Opinion 91 included Genus Canis on its Official Lists and Indexes of Names in Zoology 5 In 1955 the ICZN s Direction 22 added Canis familiaris as the type specimen for genus Canis to the official list 6 Canis is primitive relative to Cuon Lycaon and Xenocyon in its relatively larger canines and lack of such dental adaptations for hypercarnivory as m1 m2 metaconid and entoconid small or absent M1 M2 hypocone small M1 M2 lingual cingulum weak M2 and m2 small may be single rooted m3 small or absent and wide palate Richard H Tedford 7 The cladogram below is based on the DNA phylogeny of Lindblad Toh et al 2005 8 modified to incorporate recent findings on Canis species 9 10 Canis Canis latrans coyote nbsp Canis rufus red wolf nbsp Canis lycaon Algonquin wolf nbsp Canis lupus gray wolf nbsp Canis familiaris domestic dog nbsp Canis lupaster African golden wolf nbsp Canis simensis Ethiopian wolf nbsp Canis aureus golden jackal nbsp In 2019 a workshop hosted by the IUCN SSC Canid Specialist Group recommends that because DNA evidence shows the side striped jackal Canis adustus and black backed jackal Canis mesomelas to form a monophyletic lineage that sits outside of the Canis Cuon Lycaon clade that they should be placed in a distinct genus Lupulella Hilzheimer 1906 with the names Lupulella adusta and Lupulella mesomelas 11 Evolution edit See further Evolution of the canidsThe fossil record shows that feliforms and caniforms emerged within the clade Carnivoramorpha 43 million YBP 12 The caniforms included the fox like genus Leptocyon whose various species existed from 24 million YBP before branching 11 9 million YBP into Vulpes foxes and Canini canines The jackal sized Eucyon existed in North America from 10 million YBP and by the Early Pliocene about 6 5 million YBP the coyote like Eucyon davisi 13 invaded Eurasia The canids that had emigrated from North America to Eurasia Eucyon Vulpes and Nyctereutes were small to medium sized predators during the Late Miocene and Early Pliocene but they were not the top predators nbsp Skulls of dire wolf Aenocyon dirus gray wolf C lupus eastern wolf C lycaon red wolf C rufus coyote C latrans African golden wolf C lupaster golden jackal C aureus and black backed jackal Lupulella mesomelas For Canis populations in the New World Eucyon in North America gave rise to early North American Canis which first appeared in the Miocene 6 million YBP in south western United States and Mexico By 5 million YBP the larger Canis lepophagus ancestor of wolves and coyotes appeared in the same region 1 p58 Around 5 million years ago some of the Old World Eucyon evolved into the first members of Canis 14 and the position of the canids would change to become a dominant predator across the Palearctic The wolf sized C chihliensis appeared in northern China in the Mid Pliocene around 4 3 million YBP This was followed by an explosion of Canis evolution across Eurasia in the Early Pleistocene around 1 8 million YBP in what is commonly referred to as the wolf event It is associated with the formation of the mammoth steppe and continental glaciation Canis spread to Europe in the forms of C arnensis C etruscus and C falconeri 1 p148 However a 2021 genetic study of the dire wolf Aenocyon dirus previously considered a member of Canis found that it represented the last member of an ancient lineage of canines originally indigenous to the New World that had diverged prior to the appearance of Canis and that its lineage had been distinct since the Miocene with no evidence of introgression with Canis The study hypothesized that the Neogene canids in the New World Canis armbrusteri and Canis edwardii were possibly members of the distinct dire wolf lineage that had convergently evolved a very similar appearance to members of Canis True members of Canis namely the gray wolf and coyote likely only arrived in the New World during the Late Pleistocene where their dietary flexibility and or ability to hybridize with other canids allowed them to survive the Quaternary extinction event unlike the dire wolf 14 Xenocyon strange wolf is an extinct subgenus of Canis 15 The diversity of the Canis group decreased by the end of the Early Pleistocene to the Middle Pleistocene and was limited in Eurasia to the small wolves of the Canis mosbachensis Canis variabilis group and the large hypercarnivorous Canis Xenocyon lycaonoides 16 The hypercarnivore Xenocyon gave rise to the modern dhole and the African wild dog 1 p149 Dentition and biteforce edit nbsp Diagram of a wolf skull with key features labelled nbsp Eurasian wolf skullBite force adjusted for body weight in Newtons per kilogram 17 Canid Carnassial CanineGray wolf 131 6 127 3Dhole 130 7 132 0African wild dog 127 7 131 1Greenland dog and dingo 117 4 114 3Coyote 107 2 98 9Side striped jackal 93 0 87 5Golden jackal 89 6 87 7Black backed jackal 80 6 78 3Dentition relates to the arrangement of teeth in the mouth with the dental notation for the upper jaw teeth using the upper case letters I to denote incisors C for canines P for premolars and M for molars and the lower case letters i c p and m to denote the mandible teeth Teeth are numbered using one side of the mouth and from the front of the mouth to the back In carnivores the upper premolar P4 and the lower molar m1 form the carnassials that are used together in a scissor like action to shear the muscle and tendon of prey 1 74 Canids use their premolars for cutting and crushing except for the upper fourth premolar P4 the upper carnassial that is only used for cutting They use their molars for grinding except for the lower first molar m1 the lower carnassial that has evolved for both cutting and grinding depending on the candid s dietary adaptation On the lower carnassial the trigonid is used for slicing and the talonid is used for grinding The ratio between the trigonid and the talonid indicates a carnivore s dietary habits with a larger trigonid indicating a hypercarnivore and a larger talonid indicating a more omnivorous diet 18 19 Because of its low variability the length of the lower carnassial is used to provide an estimate of a carnivore s body size 18 A study of the estimated bite force at the canine teeth of a large sample of living and fossil mammalian predators when adjusted for their body mass found that for placental mammals the bite force at the canines in Newtons kilogram of body weight was greatest in the extinct dire wolf 163 followed among the modern canids by the four hypercarnivores that often prey on animals larger than themselves the African hunting dog 142 the gray wolf 136 the dhole 112 and the dingo 108 The bite force at the carnassials showed a similar trend to the canines A predator s largest prey size is strongly influenced by its biomechanical limits 20 Behavior editDescription and sexual dimorphism edit nbsp Male coyote nbsp Female coyote nbsp Male gray wolf nbsp Female gray wolf There is little variance among male and female canids Canids tend to live as monogamous pairs Wolves dholes coyotes and jackals live in groups that include breeding pairs and their offspring Wolves may live in extended family groups To take prey larger than themselves the African wild dog the dhole and the gray wolf depend on their jaws as they cannot use their forelimbs to grapple with prey They work together as a pack consisting of an alpha pair and their offspring from the current and previous years 21 Social mammal predators prey on herbivores with a body mass similar to that of the combined mass of the predator pack 22 23 The gray wolf specializes in preying on the vulnerable individuals of large prey 24 and a pack of timber wolves can bring down a 500 kg 1 100 lb moose 25 26 Mating behaviour edit The genus Canis contains many different species and has a wide range of different mating systems that varies depending on the type of canine and the species 27 In a study done in 2017 it was found that in some species of canids females use their sexual status to gain food resources The study looked at wolves and dogs Wolves are typically monogamous and form pair bonds whereas dogs are promiscuous when free range and mate with multiple individuals The study found that in both species females tried to gain access to food more and were more successful in monopolizing a food resource when in heat Outside of the breeding season their efforts were not as persistent or successful This shows that the food for sex hypothesis likely plays a role in the food sharing among canids and acts as a direct benefit for the females 27 Another study on free ranging dogs found that social factors played a significant role in the determination of mating pairs The study done in 2014 looked at social regulation of reproduction in the dogs 28 They found that females in heat searched out dominant males and were more likely to mate with a dominant male who appeared to be a quality leader The females were more likely to reject submissive males Furthermore cases of male male competition were more aggressive in the presence of high ranking females This suggests that females prefer dominant males and males prefer high ranking females meaning social cues and status play a large role in the determination of mating pairs in dogs 28 Canids also show a wide range of parental care and in 2018 a study showed that sexual conflict plays a role in the determination of intersexual parental investment 29 The studied looked at coyote mating pairs and found that paternal investment was increased to match or near match the maternal investment The amount of parental care provided by the fathers also was shown to fluctuated depending on the level of care provided by the mother Another study on parental investment showed that in free ranging dogs mothers modify their energy and time investment into their pups as they age 30 Due to the high mortality of free range dogs at a young age a mother s fitness can be drastically reduced This study found that as the pups aged the mother shifted from high energy care to lower energy care so that they can care for their offspring for a longer duration for a reduced energy requirement By doing this the mothers increasing the likelihood of their pups surviving infancy and reaching adulthood and thereby increase their own fitness A study done in 2017 found that aggression between male and female gray wolves varied and changed with age 31 Males were more likely to chase away rival packs and lone individuals than females and became increasingly aggressive with age Alternatively females were found to be less aggressive and constant in their level of aggression throughout their life This requires further research but suggests that intersexual aggression levels in gray wolves relates to their mating system Tooth breakage edit nbsp Dentition of a wolf showing functions of the teeth Tooth breakage is a frequent result of carnivores feeding behaviour 32 Carnivores include both pack hunters and solitary hunters The solitary hunter depends on a powerful bite at the canine teeth to subdue their prey and thus exhibits a strong mandibular symphysis In contrast a pack hunter which delivers many shallower bites has a comparably weaker mandibular symphysis Thus researchers can use the strength of the mandibular symphysis in fossil carnivore specimens to determine what kind of hunter it was a pack hunter or a solitary hunter and even how it consumed its prey The mandibles of canids are buttressed behind the carnassial teeth to crack bones with their post carnassial teeth molars M2 and M3 A study found that the modern gray wolf and the red wolf C rufus possess greater buttressing than all other extant canids and the extinct dire wolf This indicates that these are both better adapted for cracking bone than other canids 33 A study of nine modern carnivores indicate that one in four adults had suffered tooth breakage and that half of these breakages were of the canine teeth The highest frequency of breakage occurred in the spotted hyena which is known to consume all of its prey including the bone The least breakage occurred in the African wild dog The gray wolf ranked between these two 32 34 The eating of bone increases the risk of accidental fracture due to the relatively high unpredictable stresses that it creates The most commonly broken teeth are the canines followed by the premolars carnassial molars and incisors Canines are the teeth most likely to break because of their shape and function which subjects them to bending stresses that are unpredictable in direction and magnitude 34 The risk of tooth fracture is also higher when taking and consuming large prey 34 35 In comparison to extant gray wolves the extinct Beringian wolves included many more individuals with moderately to heavily worn teeth and with a significantly greater number of broken teeth The frequencies of fracture ranged from a minimum of 2 found in the Northern Rocky Mountain wolf Canis lupus irremotus up to a maximum of 11 found in Beringian wolves The distribution of fractures across the tooth row also differs with Beringian wolves having much higher frequencies of fracture for incisors carnassials and molars A similar pattern was observed in spotted hyenas suggesting that increased incisor and carnassial fracture reflects habitual bone consumption because bones are gnawed with the incisors and then cracked with the carnassials and molars 36 Coyotes jackals and wolves editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The gray wolf C lupus the Ethiopian wolf C simensis and the African golden wolf C lupaster are three of the many Canis species referred to as wolves Species that are too small to attract the word wolf are called coyotes in the Americas and jackals elsewhere Although these may not be more closely related to each other than they are to C lupus they are as fellow Canis species more closely related to wolves and domestic dogs than they are to foxes maned wolves or other canids which do not belong to the genus Canis The word jackal is applied to the golden jackal C aureus found across southwestern and south central Asia and the Balkans in Europe African migration editThe first record of Canis on the African continent is Canis sp A from South Turkwel Kenya dated 3 58 3 2 million years ago 37 In 2015 a study of mitochondrial genome sequences and whole genome nuclear sequences of African and Eurasian canids indicated that extant wolf like canids have colonised Africa from Eurasia at least 5 times throughout the Pliocene and Pleistocene which is consistent with fossil evidence suggesting that much of the African canid fauna diversity resulted from the immigration of Eurasian ancestors likely coincident with Plio Pleistocene climatic oscillations between arid and humid conditions 38 S1 In 2017 the fossil remains of a new Canis species named Canis othmanii was discovered among remains found at Wadi Sarrat Tunisia from deposits that date 700 000 years ago This canine shows a morphology more closely associated with canids from Eurasia instead of Africa 39 Gallery edit nbsp Gray wolf Canis lupus nbsp Eastern wolf Canis lycaon includes latrans admixture nbsp Red wolf Canis rufus includes latrans admixture nbsp Coyote Canis latrans nbsp African wolf Canis lupaster nbsp Golden jackal Canis aureus nbsp Ethiopian wolf Canis simensis nbsp Himalayan wolf Canis lupus chanco nbsp Indian wolf Canis lupus pallipes nbsp Domestic dog Canis familiaris See also editList of canidsReferences edit a b c d e Wang Xiaoming Tedford Richard H 2008 Dogs Their Fossil Relatives and Evolutionary History Columbia University Press New York pp 1 232 ISBN 978 0 231 13529 0 OCLC 502410693 a b Linnaeus Carl 1758 Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis Tomus I in Latin 10th ed Holmiae Stockholm Laurentius Salvius p 38 Retrieved November 23 2015 Heptner V G Naumov N P 1998 Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol II Part 1a SIRENIA AND CARNIVORA Sea Cows Wolves and Bears Science Publishers Inc USA pp 124 129 ISBN 1 886106 81 9 Wayne R 1999 Origin genetic diversity and genome structure of the domestic dog BioEssays 21 3 247 57 doi 10 1002 SICI 1521 1878 199903 21 3 lt 247 AID BIES9 gt 3 0 CO 2 Z PMID 10333734 S2CID 5547543 Opinions and Declarations Rendered by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature Opinion 91 Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 73 4 1926 Francis Hemming ed 1955 Direction 22 Opinions and Declarations Rendered by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature Vol 1C Order of the International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature p 183 Tedford Richard H Wang Xiaoming Taylor Beryl E 2009 Phylogenetic Systematics of the North American Fossil Caninae Carnivora Canidae PDF Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 325 1 218 doi 10 1206 574 1 hdl 2246 5999 S2CID 83594819 Lindblad Toh Kerstin Wade Claire M Mikkelsen Tarjei S Karlsson Elinor K Jaffe David B Kamal Michael et al 2005 Genome sequence comparative analysis and haplotype structure of the domestic dog Nature 438 7069 803 819 Bibcode 2005Natur 438 803L doi 10 1038 nature04338 PMID 16341006 Koepfli Klaus Peter Pollinger John Godinho Raquel Robinson Jacqueline Lea Amanda Hendricks Sarah et al 2015 Genome wide evidence reveals that African and Eurasian Golden Jackals are distinct species Current Biology 25 16 2158 2165 doi 10 1016 j cub 2015 06 060 PMID 26234211 Wilson Paul J Grewal Sonya Lawford Ian D Heal Jennifer NM Granacki Angela G Pennock David Theberge John B Theberge Mary T Voigt Dennis R Waddell Will Chambers Robert E 2011 02 15 DNA profiles of the eastern Canadian wolf and the red wolf provide evidence for a common evolutionary history independent of the gray wolf Canadian Journal of Zoology 78 12 2156 2166 doi 10 1139 z00 158 Alvares Francisco Bogdanowicz Wieslaw Campbell Liz A D Godinho Rachel Hatlauf Jennifer Jhala Yadvendradev V Kitchener Andrew C Koepfli Klaus Peter Krofel Miha Moehlman Patricia D Senn Helen Sillero Zubiri Claudio Viranta Suvi Werhahn Geraldine 2019 Old World Canis spp with taxonomic ambiguity Workshop conclusions and recommendations CIBIO Vairao Portugal 28th 30th May 2019 PDF IUCN SSC Canid Specialist Group Retrieved 6 March 2020 Flynn John J Wesley Hunt Gina D 2005 Phylogeny of the Carnivora Basal Relationships Among the Carnivoramorphans and Assessment of the Position of Miacoidea Relative to Carnivora Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 3 1 28 doi 10 1017 s1477201904001518 S2CID 86755875 Fossilworks website Eucyon davisi a b Perri Angela R Mitchell Kieren J Mouton Alice Alvarez Carretero Sandra Hulme Beaman Ardern Haile James Jamieson Alexandra Meachen Julie Lin Audrey T Schubert Blaine W Ameen Carly 2021 01 13 Dire wolves were the last of an ancient New World canid lineage Nature 591 7848 87 91 Bibcode 2021Natur 591 87P doi 10 1038 s41586 020 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excavations at Rancho La Brea Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 37 52 Archived from the original PDF on June 24 2016 Retrieved August 10 2017 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Leonard Jennifer A Vila Carles Fox Dobbs Kena Koch Paul L Wayne Robert K Van Valkenburgh Blaire 2007 Megafaunal Extinctions and the Disappearance of a Specialized Wolf Ecomorph PDF Current Biology 17 13 1146 50 doi 10 1016 j cub 2007 05 072 hdl 10261 61282 PMID 17583509 S2CID 14039133 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 12 28 Retrieved 2017 07 13 Werdelin Lars Lewis Margaret E 2005 Plio Pleistocene Carnivora of eastern Africa Species richness and turnover patterns Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 144 2 121 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 2005 00165 x Koepfli Klaus Peter Pollinger John Godinho Raquel Robinson Jacqueline Lea Amanda Hendricks Sarah Schweizer Rena M Thalmann Olaf Silva Pedro Fan Zhenxin Yurchenko Andrey A Dobrynin Pavel Makunin Alexey Cahill James A Shapiro Beth Alvares Francisco Brito Jose C Geffen Eli Leonard Jennifer A Helgen Kristofer M Johnson Warren E o Brien Stephen J Van Valkenburgh Blaire Wayne Robert K 2015 Genome wide Evidence Reveals that African and Eurasian Golden Jackals Are Distinct Species Current Biology 25 16 2158 65 doi 10 1016 j cub 2015 06 060 PMID 26234211 Amri Lamjed Bartolini Lucenti Saverio Mtimet Moncef Said Karoui Yaakoub Narjess Ros Montoya Sergio Espigares Maria Patrocinio Boughdiri Mabrouk Bel Haj Ali Nebiha Martinez Navarro Bienvenido 2017 Canis othmanii sp nov Carnivora Canidae from the early Middle Pleistocene site of Wadi Sarrat Tunisia Comptes Rendus Palevol 16 7 774 doi 10 1016 j crpv 2017 05 004 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Canis nbsp Look up Canis in Wiktionary the free dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canis amp oldid 1206373667, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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