Animal evolution during domestication: the domesticated fox as a model
Russian Academy of Sciences · Institute of Cytology and Genetics
Abstract
We review the evolution of domestic animals, emphasizing the effect of the earliest steps of domestication on its course. Using the first domesticated species, the dog (Canis familiaris), for illustration, we describe the evolutionary peculiarities during the historical domestication, such as the high level and wide range of diversity. We suggest that the process of earliest domestication via unconscious and later conscious selection of human-defined behavioral traits may accelerate phenotypic variations. The review is based on the results of a long-term experiment designed to reproduce early mammalian domestication in the silver fox (Vulpes vulpes) selected for tameability or amenability to domestication. We…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 8.48
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 83
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Domestication
- Vulpes
- Biology
- Evolutionary biology
- Adaptation (eye)
- Selection (genetic algorithm)
- Canis
- Zoology
- Life in Land