In the sense of the effect that they had on canines already living in the Americas.
I am taking the liberty, hopefully without getting my wrist slapped, of republishing a recent article that appeared on The Smithsonian Magazine website.
Simply because it offers some very interesting insights into the history of canines in The Americas.
Enjoy!
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European Dogs Devastated Indigenous American Pup Populations
Disease, cultural change wiped out pre-contact populations, leaving no trace of ancient dogs’ DNA in modern counterparts

By Meilan Solly, SMITHSONIAN.COM
The first humans to populate the Americas arrived from Siberia via the Bering land bridge around 16,000 years ago. Man’s best friend, the domesticated dog, didn’t arrive for another 6,000 years or so, crossing over just in time to avoid the land bridge’s collapse, but archaeological evidence suggests that the two species lived in harmony for thousands of years—at least until 1492, the year Columbus sailed the ocean blue.
According to a study published in Science on Thursday, “pre-contact” American dogs possessed a unique genetic signature derived not from the North American wolf, as previously thought, but from domesticated Siberian ancestors. Today, that singular genome has all but disappeared, eradicated by the 15th-century arrival of European settlers and their canine companions.
National Geographic’s Maya Wei-Haas explains that European dogs, like their human owners, probably carried diseases that pre-contact dogs were unequipped to fend off. The colonists preferred European breeds and discouraged their pets from mating with the native dogs, which study co-author Angela Perri, a zooarchaeologist at Durham University, says were viewed as “wild” and “vicious.”
“This study demonstrates that the history of humans is mirrored in our domestic animals,” Greger Larson, director of the Palaeo-BARN at Oxford and senior author of the study, said in a statement. “People in Europe and the Americas were genetically distinct, and so were their dogs. And just as indigenous people in the Americas were displaced by European colonists, the same is true of their dogs.”
To trace the story of these pre-contact dogs, researchers studied DNA found in the mitochondria of 71 North American and Siberian dog bones. The remains, which date from roughly 10,000 to 1,000 years ago, included those of the Koster dogs, a group of four domesticated canines discovered at a burial site in western Illinois during the 1970s. (A second study, newly published in pre-print server Biorxiv, further discusses these early dogs.) As Science’s David Grimm notes, the Koster pups lived about 10,000 years ago, making them the oldest known dogs in the Americas. Perri, referencing the animals’ small, slender stature, tells Grimm that “it wouldn’t be surprising if they were all used as hunting dogs.”
DNA analysis allowed the scientists to identify pre-contact dogs’ closest relatives: a group of dogs native to Zhokhov Island, a frigid Arctic site situated about 300 miles north of the Russian mainland. The Atlantic’s Ed Yong writes that these dogs were the first to be bred for a specific purpose, namely pulling their humans’ sleds.
In addition to shedding light on the first American dogs’ origins, the study offers insights on pre-contact dogs’ connections—or rather, lack of connections—with modern dogs. Researchers compared the 71 ancient genomes with DNA from more than 5,000 modern dogs, including breeds like chihuahuas and Carolina dogs, which are commonly thought to be descended from indigenous populations. The highest level of pre-contact DNA conclusively found in any of the modern dogs was four percent, a negligible result, the New York Times’ James Gorman reports.
The team’s findings suggest that modern American dogs are descended solely from Eurasian breeds introduced by European settlers. Perri tells Wei-Haas that the scientists expected to find evidence of interbreeding between the pre-contact pups and the new arrivals. Instead, they realized that the native dogs had virtually vanished.
“It is fascinating that a population of dogs that inhabited many parts of the Americas for thousands of years, and that was an integral part of so many Native American cultures, could have disappeared so rapidly,” Laurent Frantz, study co-author and evolutionary geneticist at Queen Mary University of London, said in a statement.
Oddly enough, scientists found that the closest surviving trace of pre-contact dogs’ DNA is found in a sexually transmitted canine cancer. The Los Angeles Times’ Deborah Netburn writes that the disease, known as canine transmissible venereal tumor, stems from the genetic mutation of a single North American dog that lived up to 8,225 years ago. The tumor cells spread through mating and carry a copy of that original DNA, allowing researchers to paint a clear picture of the “founding dog,” or patient zero.
Elaine Ostrander, chief of the cancer genetics and comparative genomics branch at the National Human Genome Research Institute, tells Wei-Haas, “It’s the world’s oldest continuously propagated cell line, which is really, really remarkable.”
………
Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/how-european-dogs-devastated-indigenous-american-pup-populations-180969561/#8bYPIFJtvBrqzb3I.99
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“This study demonstrates that the history of humans is mirrored in our domestic animals,”
Best not to go too far into that observation from Dr. Greger Larson!
What a fascinating article, Paul. I thought that most dogs were descended from an Asian species. It would be interesting to see an artist rendering of the Koster canines. Great share!
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Me too, in terms of lineage. Not surprised in the slightest to hear that you found the article fascinating! Thanks Susan!
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Very interesting, Paul. Thanks
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Delighted, Emma!
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Gosh, that is really interesting.
It makes me wonder that if Man had not developed such a wanderlust to travel and conquer, if biodiversity would have become much more stable? Or has our constant changing of the environment caused more adaptation and diversity?
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Colette, You raise some deep, fundamental questions. Questions that are way beyond my skills to answer. But as tomorrow’s post will confirm, the question of the role of Man in terms of the immediate future of our species, and many others, is not a question that is going to remain unanswered for decades!
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Thank you for sharing!
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My very great pleasure!
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It was fascinating to read this. It led me to also read about the oldest known grave where humans and dogs were buried together, some 14000 years ago in Germany, a site which provides the earliest evidence of pet/human bonding.
https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2018/02/ancient-pet-puppy-oberkassel-stone-age-dog/
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Yes, Margaret, that is a wonderful article in Nat Geo. that I came across some time ago. Many thanks for including the link in your lovely response.
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I’ve researched, rescued and written books on dogs, but never came across this study. Thanks for sharing, great story. Dogs are not only mans best friend…but, our oldest best friends. Cheers, Steven Monahan – Art of the Black Dog, Rescue Renew Rehome.
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Steve, welcome to this place and so good to make your acquaintance. Hope to see you again!
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I am taking the liberty, hopefully without getting my wrist slapped, of republishing…
I think that the chances of you getting your wrist slapped are slim to none. The publishing industry still hasn’t caught up with the realities of the Internet — as demonstrated by the recent item on the BBC news about the farcical legal boilerplate click-throughs we all have to, err, click through to use services (the BBC report said that many of these agreements required a degree to comprehend!).
It’s a bit old, but perhaps this will allow you to rest easy: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-26187730
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Thanks Colin. Both for your supportive reply and that fascinating new item courtesy of the BBC. Makes sense, really!!
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