Journal article
Wild dogs and village dogs in New Guinea: were they different?
Peter D Dwyer, Monica Minnegal
Australian Mammalogy | CSIRO Publishing | Published : 2016
DOI: 10.1071/AM15011
Abstract
Recent accounts of wild-living dogs in New Guinea argue that these animals qualify as an 'evolutionarily significant unit' that is distinct from village dogs, have been and remain genetically isolated from village dogs and merit taxonomic recognition at, at least, subspecific level. These accounts have paid little attention to reports concerning village dogs. This paper reviews some of those reports, summarises observations from the interior lowlands of Western Province and concludes that: (1) at the time of European colonisation, wild-living dogs and most, if not all, village dogs of New Guinea comprised a single though heterogeneous gene pool; (2) eventual resolution of the phylogenetic re..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Chris Ballard, Barry Craig, Eloise Deaux, Robin Hide, Janice Koler-Matznick, Sandrine Lefort, Peter Ogilivie, Alessia Ortolani, Jeffrey Willmer, two anonymous referees and the people of Gwaimasi and Suabi villages for assistance. Our research in Papua New Guinea has been supported, at different times, by periods of leave granted by The University of Queensland and The University of Melbourne and by grants from the Papua New Guinea Biological Foundation and the Australian Research Council.