Saturday, 17 December 2011


                    Dog    
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Domestic dog
Temporal range: 0.015–0 Ma
Pleistocene – Recent

List of dog breeds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This Chihuahua mix and Great Dane show some of the tremendous variety of dog breeds.
Dogs have been selectively bred for thousands of years, sometimes by inbreeding dogs from the same ancestral lines, sometimes by mixing dogs from very different lines.[1] The process continues today, resulting in a wide variety of breeds, hybrids and types of dog. Dogs are the only animal with such a wide variation in appearance without speciation, "from the Chihuahua to the Great Dane".[2]
The following list uses a wide interpretation of "breed". Breeds are usually categorized by the functional type from which the breed was developed. The basic types are companion dogs, guard dogs, hunting dogs, herding dogs, and working dogs, although there are many other types and subtypes. Breeds listed here may be traditional breeds with long histories as registered breeds, rare breeds with their own registries, or new breeds that may still be under development.
Contents
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[edit] List with classification and standards

Breed Origin Fédération Cynologique Internationale American Kennel Club Australian National Kennel Council Canadian Kennel Club The Kennel Club New Zealand Kennel Club United Kennel Club Image
Affenpinscher Germany, France[3] Group 02 Section 01 #186 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05 - (Toys) Toy Toy Companion Dog Affenpinscher.jpg
Afghan Hound Afghanistan[4] Group 10 Section 01 #228 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - (Hounds) Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah Afghan Hound.jpg
Aidi Morocco[5] Group 02 Section 02 #247




Guardian Dog Aidi.jpg
Airedale Terrier England[6] Group 03 Section 01 #007 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - (Terriers) Terrier Terrier Terrier Airedale Terrier.jpg
Akbash Dog Turkey[7]





Guardian Dog Turkish akbash.jpg
Akita Inu Japan[8] Group 05 Section 05 #255 Working Group *None in Australia, see American Akita Group 03 - (Working Dogs) Utility Utility Northern Breed Japaneseakita.jpg
Alano Español Spain[9]






Alano-espanol-0003.jpg
Alapaha Blue Blood Bulldog United States






Alapahabulldog.jpg
Alaskan Klee Kai United States





Northern Breed WOWAKK-Kukai-Alaskan-Klee-Kai.jpg
Alaskan Malamute United States[10] Group 05 Section 01 #243 Working Group[10] Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 – (Working Dogs) Working Utility Northern Breed Alaskanmalamute0b.jpg
Alpine Dachsbracke Austria Group 06 Section 02 #254




Scenthound Alpejski gończy krótkonożny g99.jpg
Alpine Spaniel Switzerland, Savoy Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Alpine spaniel.jpg
American Alsatian United States






CanyonAS.jpg
American Akita Japan Group 05 Section 05 #344 Working Group Group 6 (Utility) Group 03 - (Working Dogs) Utility Utility Northern Breed American akita.jpg
American Bulldog United States





Guardian Dog Saylor's Doc Holliday.jpg
American Bully United States







American Cocker Spaniel United States[11] Group 08 Section 02 #167 Sporting Group[11] Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog AmericanCockerSpaniel wb.jpg
American Eskimo Dog Germany[12]
Non-Sporting Group[12]
Group 06, Non-sporting

Northern Breed American Eskimo Dog.jpg
American Foxhound United States[13] Group 06 Section 01 #303 Hound Group[13]
Group 02 (Hounds)

Scenthound AmericanFoxhound2.jpg
American Hairless Terrier United States





Terrier TagnonPond9-6-03.jpg
American Mastiff United States






American Mastiff.jpg
American Pit Bull Terrier United States





Terrier American Pit Bull Terrier - Seated.jpg
American Staffordshire Terrier United States Group 03 Section 03 #286 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terrier
Terrier
Amerykański staford 222.jpg
American Water Spaniel United States Group 08 Section 03 #301 Sporting Group Group 01 (Sporting Dogs)
Gun Dog
Gun Dog Chien d'eau americain champion 1.JPG
Anatolian Shepherd Dog Turkey Group 02 Section 02 #331 Working Group Group 06(Utility)
Pastoral Utility Guardian Dog Anatolian 589.jpg
Anglo-Français de Petite Vénerie France Group 06 Section 01 #032




Scenthound Anglo-Français de petite vénerie.jpg
Antebellum Bulldog United States






Antebellum Bulldog Puppies.jpg
Appenzeller Sennenhund Switzerland Group 02 Section 03 #406 FSS



Guardian Dog Appenzeller czerń 045.jpg
Argentine Dogo Argentina Group 02 Section 02 #292 FSS (Miscellaneous)



Guardian Dog Dogo.jpg
Ariege Pointer France Group 07 Section 01 #177




Gun Dog Pointer of Ariege from 1915.JPG
Ariegeois France Group 06 Section 01 #020




Scenthound Gończy 059.jpg
Armant Egypt







Armenian Gampr dog Armenia






Gampr Hamlik Parsanyan 2.jpg
Artois Hound France Group 06 Section 01 #028





D'Artois Hound1.jpg
Australian Bulldog Australia







Australian Cattle Dog Australia Group 01 Section 02 #287 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - (Herding Dogs) Pastoral Working Herding Dog Australian Cattle Dogs red and blue.jpg
Australian Kelpie Australia Group 01 Section 01 #293
Group 07 (Herding)

Working Herding Dog Hilu.jpg
Australian Shepherd United States Group 01 Section 01 #342 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - (Herding Dogs) Pastoral Working Herding Dog Redtriaussie01.jpg
Australian Silky Terrier Australia Group 03 Section 04 #236 Toy Group Group 1 (Toys) Group 05 - Toys Toy Toy Terrier Silkyterrier125.jpg
Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog Australia

Group 05 - (Working dogs) Group 07 (Herding)
Working Herding Dog Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog.jpg
Australian Terrier Australia Group 03 Section 02 #008 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terrier) Group 04 - Terriers Terriers Terrier Terrier Australian Terrier 002 U.jpg
Austrian Black and Tan Hound Austria Group 06 Section 01 #063





Brandlbracke.JPG
Austrian Pinscher Austria Group 02 Section 01 #064




Terrier Pinczer austiacki 678.jpg
Azawakh Mali Group 10 Section 03 #307 FSS

Hound
Sighthound and Pariah Azawakh-Red male black mantle.jpg
Bakharwal Dog India







Barbet France Group 08 Section 03 #105 FSS
Group 01 (Sporting)

Gun Dog Barbet.jpg
Basenji Democratic Republic of the Congo Group 05 Section 06 #043 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah Basenji 600.jpg
Basque Shepherd Dog Spain, France






Pastor vasco m 14months loby 3018.jpg
Basset Artésien Normand France Group 06 Section 01 #034




Scenthound Basset artezyjsko-normandzki. Umbra z Romiszówki.jpg
Basset Bleu de Gascogne France Group 06 Section 01 #035

Hound

Scenthound Basset bleu de Gascogne.jpg
Basset Fauve de Bretagne France




Hound
Basset Fauve de Bretagne 600.jpg
Gascon Saintongeois France Group 06 Section 01 #21




Scenthound Virelade from 1915.JPG
Grand Basset Griffon Vendéen France
FSS



Scenthound G Basset Griffon Vendeen 600.jpg
Petit Basset Griffon Vendéen France Group 06 Section 01 #067 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hound Hound Hounds Scenthound P Basset Griffon Vendeen 600.jpg
Basset Hound France Group 06 Section 01 #163 Hound Group 4 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Scenthound Bluebasset.jpeg
Bavarian Mountain Hound Germany






2005-12 Zoran2.jpg
Beagle England Group 06 Section 01 #161 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 – Hounds Hound Hound Scenthound Beagle 600.jpg
Beagle-Harrier France Group 06 Section 01 #290




Scenthound Beagle-Harrier-fr.jpg
Bearded Collie Scotland Group 01 Section 01 #271 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - Herding Pastoral Working Herding Dog Bearded Collie 600.jpg
Beauceron France Group 01 Section 01 #044 Herding Group

Working
Herding Dog Owczarek francuski beauceron 009pl.jpg
Bedlington Terrier United Kingdom Group 03 Section 01 #009 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Bedlington Terriers.jpg
Belgian Shepherd Dog (Groenendael) Belgium Group 01 Section 01 #015 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog European Groenendael male.jpg
Belgian Shepherd Dog (Laekenois) Belgium Group 01 Section 01 #015 FSS Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog Fang-sitt-040728.jpg
Belgian Shepherd Dog (Malinois) Belgium Group 01 Section 01 #015 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog Malinois rybnik-kamien pl.jpg
Belgian Shepherd (Tervuren) Belgium Group 01 Section 01 #015 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog Tervueren.jpg
Bergamasco Shepherd Italy Group 01 Section 01 #194 FSS (Miscellaneous)
Pastoral
Working Herding Dog Ortensia di Valle Scrivia.jpg
Berger Blanc Suisse Switzerland Group 01 Section 01 #347 Provisional





A-Wurf von den Spessartraeubern.jpg
Berger Picard France Group 01 Section 07 #176 FSS
Group 07 (Herding)

Herding Dog BergerPicard.jpg
Berner Laufhund Switzerland






Gonczy bernenski pl1.jpg
Bernese Mountain Dog Switzerland Group 02 Section 03 #045,046 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Dogs Working Utility Guardian Dog Berner sennhund.jpg
Bichon Frisé Spain, Belgium Group 09 Section 01 #215 Non-Sporting Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 06 - Non-Sporting Toy Toy Companion Dog Bichon Frisé - studdogbichon.jpg
Billy France Group 06 Section 01 #025




Scenthound
Bisben India







Black and Tan Coonhound United States Group 06 Section 01 #300 Hound Group
Group 02 - Hounds
Hound Scenthound Black and Tan Coonhound.jpg
Black and Tan Virginia Foxhound United States







Bulldog Campeiro Brazil






Buldogue Campeiro.jpg
Bullenbeisser Germany Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Bullenbeiser.jpg
Black Norwegian Elkhound Norway Group 05 Section 02 #242,268
Group 04 (Hounds)

Hounds
Paying attention, sort of.jpg
Black Russian Terrier Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Group 02 Section 01 #327 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Working Utility Guardian Dog Czarny terier rosyjski 64.jpg
Blackmouth Cur United States





Scenthound MurphysKassieBlackmouthAlabama2.jpg
Grand Bleu de Gascogne France Group 06 Section 01 #022




Scenthound Oldblue.jpg
Petit Bleu de Gascogne France Group 06 Section 01 #031




Scenthound Mały gończy gaskoński Cita z Beckova Cb5.jpg
Bloodhound Belgium, France Group 06 Section 01 #084 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Scenthound Bloodhound 800.jpg
Blue Lacy United States






BlueLacyPhoto1.jpg
Blue Paul Terrier Scotland Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex
Bluetick Coonhound United States
Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds)

Hound Scenthound BluetickCoonhound.jpg
Boerboel South Africa
FSS (Miscellaneous)




Boerboel.jpg
Bohemian Shepherd Czech Republic






Gabslalom.jpg
Bolognese Italy Group 09 Section 01 #196 FSS

Toy Toy Companion Dog Bolończyk 5e3.jpg
Border Collie Scotland, England, Wales Group 01 Section 01 #297 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - Herding Pastoral Working Herding Dog Border Collie 600.jpg
Border Terrier Scotland, England Group 03 Section 01 #010 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Border Terrier.jpg
Borzoi Russia Group 10 Section 01 #193 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah Borzoi female.jpg
Bosnian Coarse-haired Hound Bosnia and Herzegovina Group 06 Section 01 #155




Scenthound Gonic.jpg
Boston Terrier United States Group 09 Section 11 #140 Non-Sporting Group Group 07 (Non-Sporting) Group 06 - Non-Sporting Utility Non Sporting Companion Dog BostonTerrierBrindleStand w.jpg
Bouvier des Ardennes Belgium







Bouvier des Flandres Belgium Group 01 Section 02 #191 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - Herding Dogs Working Working Herding Dog Bouvier.JPG
Boxer Germany Group 02 Section 02 #144 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Working Utility Guardian Dog Boxer (dog).jpg
Boykin Spaniel United States
Sporting Group



Gun Dog Boykin spaniel.jpg
Bracco Italiano Italy Group 07 Section 01 #202 FSS

Gundogs Gundogs Gun Dog Umago.dei.Ronchi.JPG
Braque d'Auvergne France Group 07 Section 01 #180




Gun Dog Braque d Auvergne.jpg
Braque du Bourbonnais France Group 07 Section 01 #179




Gun Dog Braque du Bourbonnais.jpg
Braque du Puy France Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Dupuy Pointer from 1915.JPG
Braque Francais France #133, 134





Wyżeł pirenejski 308.jpg
Braque Saint-Germain France Group 07 Section 01 #115




Gun Dog Braque saint-germain 666.jpg
Brazilian Terrier Brazil Group 03 Section 01 #341





Brazilian terrier.JPG
Briard France Group 01 Section 01 #113 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog Briard fauve.JPG
Briquet Griffon Vendéen France Group 06 Section 01 #019





Briquet Griffon Vendeen.jpg
Brittany France Group 07 Section 01 #095 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Epagneul Breton.jpg
Broholmer Denmark Group 02 Section 02 #315




Guardian Dog Ivarr03.JPG
Bruno Jura Hound Switzerland, France






09057110 Jura Laufhund.jpg
Bucovina Shepherd Dog Romania Group 02 Section 02





Bucovina Sheepdog.jpg
Bull and Terrier United Kingdom






Benjamin Marshall - Dustman - Bulldog and Terrier Mix.jpg
Bull Terrier England Group 03 Section 03 #011 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Bull Terrier Chico 10.jpg
Bull Terrier (Miniature) England Group 03 Section 03 #011b Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Bull terier i bull terier miniatura d46.jpg
Bulldog England Group 02 Section 02 #149 Non-sporting Group Group 7 (Non-Sporting) Group 06 - (Non-sporting) Utility Non Sporting Companion Dog Racibórz 2007 082.jpg
Bullmastiff England Group 02 Section 02 #157 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Dogs Working Utility Guardian Dog Brutus bullmastiff.jpg
Bully Kutta Pakistan






BullyKutta1.jpg
Cairn Terrier Scotland Group 03 Section 02 #004 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Cairn-Terrier-Garten1.jpg
Canaan Dog Israel Group 05 Section 06 #273 Herding Group Group 07 (Nonsporting) Group 03 - Working Dogs Utility Non Sporting Sighthound and Pariah CanaanDog3.jpg
Canadian Eskimo Dog Canada

Group 06 (Utility) Working Dogs Working Utility Northern Breed Spoonsced.jpg
Canadian Pointer United States






Canadian pointer.jpg
Cane Corso Italy Group 02 Section 02 #343 Working Group


Utility Guardian Dog Cane corso temi 2 1024x768x24.png
Cão da Serra de Aires Portugal Group 01 Section 01 #093




Herding Dog Cao de Serra de Aires600.jpg
Cão de Castro Laboreiro Portugal Group 02 Section 02 #015




Guardian Dog Cao de castro laboreiro.jpg
Cão Fila de São Miguel Portugal Group 02 Section 02 #340





Caofila.jpg
Carolina Dog United States





Sighthound and Pariah American Dingo aka Carolina Dog1.jpg
Carpathian Shepherd Dog Romania Group 01 Section 01 #305


Pastoral
Herding Dog Carpatin.jpg
Catahoula Cur United States
FSS



Herding Dog Ch-Catahoula 002.jpg
Catalan Sheepdog Spain Group 01 Section 01 #087





Gos d'Atura Català.JPG
Caucasian Shepherd Dog Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan Group 02 Section 02 #328 FSS



Guardian Dog CaucasianOvcharka-Julius.jpg
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel England Group 09 Section 07 #136 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05 - Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog Miss Betty.jpg
Central Asian Shepherd Dog Russia Group 02 Section 02 #335 FSS


Utility Guardian Dog Centralasianovcharka.jpg
Cesky Fousek Czech Republic Group 07 Section 01 #245



Gundogs Gun Dog Czeski fousek 777.jpg
Cesky Terrier Czech Republic Group 03 Section 02 #246 FSS (Miscellaneous) Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Cesky-Terier.jpg
Chesapeake Bay Retriever United States Group 08 Section 01 #263 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog CH Chesapeake.jpg
Chien-gris France Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex
Chien Français Blanc et Noir France Group 06 Section 01 #220




Scenthound
Chien Français Blanc et Orange France Group 06 Section 01 #316




Scenthound
Chien Français Tricolore France Group 06 Section 01 #219




Scenthound
Chihuahua Mexico Group 09 Section 06 #218 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05—Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog Chihuahua1 bvdb.jpg
Chilean Fox Terrier Chile






Fox terrier chileno.JPG
Chinese Chongqing Dog China







Chinese Crested Dog China Group 09 Section 04 #288 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05—Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog IndyStands.jpg
Chinese Imperial Dog China






Chinese Imperial Dog.jpg
Chinook United States
FSS (Miscellaneous)



Northern Breed Wikichinook.JPG
Chippiparai India






Female Chippiparai sitting.jpg
Chow Chow China
Non-Sporting Group Group 07 (Non-sporting) Group 06 Non-sporting Utility Non Sporting Northern Breed ChowChow2Szczecin.jpg
Cimarrón Uruguayo Uruguay Group 02 Section 02 #353 Provisional




Guardian Dog Boqueron de Quilligan.JPG
Cierny Sery Slovakia Group canpanion dog Herding Dog




8s45heryprobaobraz 018.jpg
Cirneco dell'Etna Italy Group 05 Section 07 #199 FSS

Hound

Cirneco dell Etna 611.jpg
Clumber Spaniel England Group 08 Section 02 #109 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Clumber spaniel 767.jpg
Rough Collie Scotland Group 01 Section 01 #156 Herding Group Group 05 (Working dogs) Group 07 - Herding dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog Rough Collie 600.jpg
Smooth Collie Scotland Group 01 Section 01 #296 Herding Group Group 05 (Working dogs) Group 07 - Herding dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog SmoothCollieTri2 wb.jpg
Combai India







Cordoba Fighting Dog Argentina Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Cordoba profile.jpg
Coton de Tulear Madagascar Group 01 Section 01 #283 FSS FSS Toy Toy
Companion Dog Coton de Tular 1.jpg
Cretan Hound Greece






Kritikosichnilatis 1.jpg
Croatian Sheepdog Croatia Group 01 Section 01 #277




Herding Dog Gera062005sed.jpg
Cumberland Sheepdog England Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex
Curly Coated Retriever England Group 08 Section 01 #110 Sporting Group
Group 01 - Sporting Gundogs Gundogs Gun Dog Curly Coated Retriever.jpg
Cursinu Corsica (France)






Cursinu 1.jpg
Czechoslovak Wolfdog Czechoslovakia Group 01 Section 01 #332 Hunting group FSS




TWH-jolly.JPG
Dachshund Germany Group 06 Section 01 #148 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds)

Hound Scenthound Short-haired-Dachshund.jpg
Dalmatian Croatia Group 06 Section 03 #153 Non-Sporting Group Group 07 (Non-Sporting) Group 06 (Non-Sporting) Utility Non Sporting Companion Dog Dalmatian liver stacked.jpg
Dandie Dinmont Terrier Scotland Group 03 Section 02 #168 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Dandie Dinmont Terrier 600.jpg
Danish Swedish Farmdog Denmark, Sweden
FSS




Danish Swedish Farmdog.jpg
Deutsche Bracke Germany






DeutscheBracke.jpg
Doberman Pinscher Germany Group 02 Section 01 #143 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Dogs Working Utility Guardian Dog European Dobermann.jpg
Dogue de Bordeaux France Group 02 Section 02 #116 Working Group Group 6 (Utility)
Working Utility Guardian Dog Dogo de Burdeos.jpg
Dogo Cubano Cuba Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex DogoCubano2.jpg
Dogo Guatemalteco Guatemala






Dogo1.jpg
Dogo Sardesco Italy







Drentse Patrijshond Netherlands Group 07 Section 01 #224 FSS



Gun Dog Drentse Patrijshond.jpg
Drever Sweden Group 06 Section 01 #130

Canadian Kennel Club Group 02

Scenthound Drever NUCh Tanjo.jpg
Dunker Norway Group 06 Section 01 #203




Scenthound Dunker.jpg
Dutch Shepherd Dog Netherlands Group 01 Section 01 #223




Herding Dog DutchShepherdRoughCoat.jpg
Dutch Smoushond Netherlands Group 02 Section 01 #308




Terrier Hollandsche smoushonden 2.JPG
East-European Shepherd Russia






Owczarek wschodnioeuropejski MB 01.jpg
East Siberian Laika Russia






East Siberian Laika.jpg
Elo Germany






Elo.jpg
English Cocker Spaniel England Group 08 Section 02 #005 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundog Gun Dog EnglishCockerSpaniel wb.jpg
English Coonhound United States
FSS (Miscellaneous)



Scenthound English Coonhound.jpg
English Foxhound England Group 06 Section 01 #159 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Scenthound English Foxhound portrait.jpg
English Mastiff England Group 02 Section 02 #264 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Working Utility Guardian Dog EnglishMastiffChurchill.JPG
English Setter England Group 07 Section 02 #002 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog EnglishSetter9 fx wb.jpg
English Shepherd United States





Herding Dog TricolorEnglishShepherdDog.jpg
English Springer Spaniel England Group 08 Section 02 #125 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog English-Springer-Spaniel show.jpg
English Toy Terrier (Black & Tan) England Group 03 Section 04 #013
Toy
Toy Toy
English Toy Terrier 600 01.jpg
English Water Spaniel United Kingdom Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex English Water Spaniel.jpg
English White Terrier United Kingdom Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Old English White Terrier.jpg
Entlebucher Mountain Dog Switzerland Group 02 Section 03 #047 Herding Group
Group 03 - Working Dogs Working
Guardian Dog Elio v Schaerlig im Juni 2007 klein.jpg
Épagneul Bleu de Picardie France Group 07 Section 01 #106

Group 01 - Sporting

Gun Dog Epagneul bleu de picardie 868.jpg
Estonian Hound Estonia






Gończy estoński MB 01.jpg
Estrela Mountain Dog Portugal Group 02 Section 02 #173 FSS

Pastoral Utility Guardian Dog Estrela Mountain Dog 6 month old male.jpg
Eurasier Germany Group 05 Section 05 #291 FSS Group 07 (Non-Sporting) Group 03 - Working Dogs Utility Non Sporting Northern Breed Eurasier Image 001.jpg
Field Spaniel England Group 08 Section 02 #123 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Field spaniel 581.jpg
Fila Brasileiro Brazil Group 02 Section 02 #225



Utility
Fila brasileiro ppk9.jpg
Finnish Hound Finland Group 06 Section 01 #051




Scenthound Nuori-suomenajokoira.jpg
Finnish Lapphund Finland Group 05 Section 03 #189 FSS (Miscellaneous) Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 Pastoral Working Northern Breed Finnish Lapphund Glenchess Revontuli.jpg
Finnish Spitz Finland Group 05 Section 02 #049 Non-Sporting Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Northern Breed Finnish Spitz 600.jpg
Flat-Coated Retriever United Kingdom Group 08 Section 01 #121 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Flat Coated Retriever - black.jpg
Formosan Mountain Dog Taiwan Group 05 Section 07 #348





Formosan nina.jpg
Fox Terrier (Smooth) England Group 03 Section 01 #012 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Patrickinfield.jpg
Wire Fox Terrier England Group 03 Section 01 #169 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Elias1červen2006.jpg
French Brittany France Group 07 Section 01





Timba arret.jpg
French Bulldog England Group 09 Section 11 #101 Non-Sporting Group Group 07 (Non-Sporting) Group 06 - Non-Sporting Utility Non Sporting Companion Dog Tiger the French Bulldog.jpg
French Spaniel France Group 07 Section 01 #175

Group 01 (Sporting)

Gun Dog 04031137 Epagneul Francais.jpg
Galgo Español Spain Group 10 Section 03 #285




Sighthound and Pariah Galgo espagnol Hembra.jpg.jpg
German Longhaired Pointer Germany
FSS FSS Group 01 (Sporting)
Gundogs Gun Dog DeutschLanghaarneu.jpg
German Pinscher Germany Group 02 Section 01 #184 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 06 - Non-Sporting Working Utility Terrier German Pinscher.JPG
German Shepherd Dog Germany Group 01 Section 01 #166 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog Berger allemand en montagne.jpg
German Shorthaired Pointer Germany Group 07 Section 01 #119 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Duitse staande korthaar 10-10-2.jpg
German Spaniel Germany Group 08 Section 02 #104




Gun Dog Deutscher Wachtel 2.jpg
German Spitz Germany Group 05 Section 04 #097 FSS Group 07 (Non Sporting)
Utility Non Sporting Northern Breed Spitz.jpg
German Wirehaired Pointer Germany Group 07 Section 01 #098 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog GermanWirehrPtr1 wb.jpg
Giant Schnauzer Germany Group 02 Section 01 #181 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Dogs Working Utility Herding Dog GiantSchnauzer.jpg
Glen of Imaal Terrier Ireland Group 03 Section 01 #302 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers)
Terrier Terrier Terrier Glen of Imaal Terrier.jpg
Golden Retriever Scotland Group 08 Section 01 #111 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Sporting Dog Gundogs Gun Dog Golden Retriever standing Tucker.jpg
Gordon Setter Scotland Group 07 Section 02 #006 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Orrvilas enska w800px.jpg
Grand Anglo-Français Blanc et Noir France Group 06 Section 02 #322




Scenthound Grand anglo francais noir.jpg
Grand Anglo-Français Blanc et Orange France Group 06 Section 02 #324




Scenthound 06101298 Grand anglo francais orange.jpg
Grand Anglo-Français Tricolore France Group 06 Section 02 #322




Scenthound Grand anglo francais tricol.jpg
Grand Griffon Vendéen France Group 06 Section 01 #282





Rosa Bonheur Grand Griffon Vendeen.jpg
Gran Mastín de Borínquen Puerto Rico







Great Dane Germany Group 02 Section 02 #235 Working Group

Working Non Sporting Guardian Dog Kehleyr1.jpg
Great Pyrenees France, Spain Group 02 Section 02 #137 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Dogs Pastoral Utility Guardian Dog Pyreneittenkoira.jpg
Greater Swiss Mountain Dog Switzerland Group 02 Section 03 #058 Working Group
Working

Guardian Dog Duży szwajcarski pies pasterski 72.jpg
Greek Harehound Greece Group 06 Section 1.2 #214




Scenthound Group
Greenland Dog Greenland Group 05 Section 01 #274

Group 03 - Working Dogs Working
Northern Breed Greenland Dog.jpg
Greyhound
Group 10 Section 03 #158 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah GraceTheGreyhound.jpg
Griffon Bleu de Gascogne France Group 06 Section 01 #032




Scenthound 04031124 Griffon Bleu de Gascogne.jpg
Griffon Bruxellois Belgium Group 09 Section 03 #080,081,082 Toy Group Group 01 (Toy) Group 05(Toy) Toy Toy Companion Dog Brussels Griffon Rembrant.png
Griffon Fauve de Bretagne France Group 06 Section 01 #066




Scenthound 08115500 Griffon Fauve Bretagne.jpg
Griffon Nivernais France Group 06 Section 01 #017




Scenthound Griffon nivernais.jpg
Gull Dong Pakistan







Gull Terr Pakistan







Hare Indian Dog Canada, United States Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Hareindiandog.jpg
Hamiltonstövare Sweden Group 06 Section 01 #132
Group 04 (Hounds)
Hound Hound Scenthound Hamiltonstovare 600.jpg
Hanover Hound Germany Group 06 Section 02 #213




Scenthound Hannoverscher Schweisshund.jpg
Harrier United Kingdom Group 06 Section 01 #295 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 (Hounds)
Hound Scenthound Harrier tricolour.jpg
Havanese Western Mediterranean Region Group 09 Section 01 #250 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05 — Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog Havanese cd1.jpg
Hawaiian Poi Dog United States Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex
Himalayan Sheepdog Nepal







Hokkaido Japan Group 05 Section 05 #261





Hokkaidou inu.jpg
Hortaya Borzaya Ukraine, Southern Russia, Belarus






Hortaya Borzaya.jpg
Hovawart Germany Group 02 Section 02 #190
FSS Group 02 - Working Working
Guardian Dog Hovawart black and tan.jpg
Hungarian Hound Hungary Group 06 Section 01 #241




Scenthound Erdelyi kopo VadaszNimrodSzeder01.jpg
New Zealand Huntaway New Zealand






Huntaway.JPG
Hygenhund Norway






Norwegian Hygenhound.jpg
Ibizan Hound Spain Group 05 Section 07 #089 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah Podenco z ibizy 645.jpg
Icelandic Sheepdog Iceland Group 05 Section 03 #289 Herding Group
Group 07 - Herding
Working Northern Breed Ulfur.jpg
Indian Spitz India






Indian spitz.jpg
Irish Red and White Setter Ireland Group 07 Section 02 #330 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Irish Red And White Setter 2005.jpg
Irish Setter Ireland Group 07 Section 02 #120 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Can Setter dog GFDL.jpg
Irish Terrier Ireland Group 03 Section 01 #139 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terrier Terrier Terrier Terrier Irish-terrier.jpg
Irish Water Spaniel Ireland Group 08 Section 03 #124 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Irlandzki spaniel wodny 676.jpg
Irish Wolfhound Ireland Group 10 Section 02 #160 Hound Group Group 04 (Hound) Group 02 (Hound) Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah Irish Wolfhound Sam.jpg
Istrian Shorthaired Hound Croatia Group 06 Section 01 #151




Scenthound Istrische Bracke.jpg
Istrian Coarse-haired Hound Croatia Group 06 Section 01 #152




Scenthound Istrian hound2.jpg
Italian Greyhound Italy Group 10 Section 03 #200 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05 - Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog Italian Greyhound standing gray.jpg
Jack Russell Terrier England Group 03 Section 02 #345
Group 2 (Terriers)

Terrier Terrier Jrt02.jpg
Jagdterrier Germany Group 03 Section 01 #103




Terrier Jagdterrier.jpg
Jämthund Sweden Group 05 Section 02 #042




Northern Breed Jämthund.jpg
Japanese Chin Japan Group 09 Section 08 #206 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05 (Toys) Toy Toy Companion Dog Czin japoński 554.jpg
Japanese Spitz Japan Group 05 Section 05 #262
7 (Non-Sporting) VI, Non-Sporting Utility Non Sporting Northern Breed Japspitzpup.jpg
Japanese Terrier Japan Group 03 Section 02 #259





Jonangi India






Benny-Basenji.jpg
Kaikadi India







Kai Ken Japan Group 05 Section 05 #317 FSS




Kai.jpg
Kangal Dog Turkey

Group 06 (Utility)

Utility Guardian Dog Varish.jpg
Kanni India






Kanni.png
Karakachan Dog Bulgaria






Karakatschan.jpg
Karelian Bear Dog Finland Group 05 Section 02 #048 FSS
Group 03 - Working Dogs

Northern Breed Karelski pies na niedźwiedzie 123.jpg
Karst Shepherd Slovenia Group 02 Section 02 #278




Guardian Dog Owczarek kraski 654.jpg
Keeshond Netherlands, Germany Group 05 Section 04 #097 Non-Sporting Group Group 07 (Non-sporting) Group 06 (Non-sporting) Utility Non Sporting Northern Breed Keeshond Majic standing cropped.jpg
Kerry Beagle Ireland






Kerry Beagle from 1915.JPG
Kerry Blue Terrier Ireland Group 03 Section 01 #003 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Kerry blue terier 545.jpg
King Charles Spaniel England Group 09 Section 07 #128 Toy Group Group 01 Toys Group 05 - Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog King Charles Spaniel 200.jpg
King Shepherd United States






SabreKingShepherd.JPG
Kintamani Indonesia






Kintamani dog black.jpg
Kishu Japan Group 05 Section 05 #318 FSS




Kishu.jpg
Komondor Hungary Group 01 Section 01 #053 Working Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 03 - Working Dogs Pastoral Working Guardian Dog Komondor delvin.jpg
Kooikerhondje Netherlands Group 08 Section 02 #314 FSS

Gundog
Gun Dog Kooiker03.jpg
Koolie Australia






Pete may01 web.JPG
Korean Jindo Dog South Korea Group 05 Section 05 #334 FSS



Northern Breeds Korean Jindo Dog.jpg
Korean Mastiff Korea






Kromfohrländer Germany Group 09 Section 10 #192




Terrier Kromfohrlaender glatt.jpg
Kunming Wolfdog China






Kunming Dog.jpg
Kurī New Zealand Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex
Kuvasz Hungary Group 01 Section 01 #054 Working Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 03 - Working Dogs Pastoral Working Guardian Dog Kuvasz Prince Juninho Poster.jpg
Kyi-Leo United States






KyiLeoGus.jpg
Labrador Husky Canada






Labrador huskies.JPG
Labrador Retriever Canada, England Group 08 Section 01 #122 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gun dogs) Group 01 — Sporting Dogs Gun dog Gundogs Gun Dog YellowLabradorLooking new.jpg
Lagotto Romagnolo Italy Group 08 Section 03 #298 FSS
Group 03 Gundogs Gundogs Gundogs Gun Dog Lagotto Romagnolo.jpg
Lakeland Terrier England Group 03 Section 01 #070 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terrier Terrier Terrier Terrier Lakeland Terrier.jpg
Lancashire Heeler England
FSS

Pastoral

Lancashire Heeler 600.jpg
Landseer Canada Group 02 Section 02 #226





Landseer.jpg
Lapponian Herder Finland Group 05 Section 03 #284




Herding Dog Lapskvallhund.jpg
Leonberger Germany Group 02 Section 02 #145 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Working Dogs Working Utility Guardian Dog Leonberg-Male-Adulte-Ursus.jpg
Lhasa Apso Tibet Group 09 Section 05 #227 Non-Sporting Group Group 07 (Non-Sporting) Group 06 - Non-sporting Dogs Utility Non Sporting Companion Dog Aishia.jpg
Lithuanian Hound Lithuania






Longhaired Whippet United States






Whippet długowłosy pies MB 01.jpg
Löwchen Germany, France, Netherlands, Spain Group 09 Section 01 #233 Non-Sporting Group Group 01(Toys) Group 06 (Non-Sporting) Toys Toys Companion Dog Lowchen.jpg
Magyar Agár Hungary, Transylvania






Magyar agár male.jpg
Maltese Italy Group 09 Section 01 #065 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05 - Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog Maltese 600.jpg
Manchester Terrier England Group 03 Section 01 #071 Terrier Group, Toy Group

Terrier Terrier Terrier Mancherster Terrier.jpg
Maremma Sheepdog Italy Group 01 Section 01 #201
Group 05 (Working Dogs)
Pastoral Working Guardian Dog Cane Pastore Abruzzese Abruzzo.jpg
McNab United States






McNab (dog).jpg
Mexican Hairless Dog Mexico Group 05 Section 06 #234 Non-Sporting Group
Toys/Non Sporting Utility
Sighthound and Pariah Mexico.Xoloitzcuintle.01.jpg
Miniature Australian Shepherd United States






Miniature Australian Shepherd red tricolour.jpg
Miniature Fox Terrier Australia






Miniature Fox Terrier.png
Miniature Pinscher Germany Group 02 Section 01 #185 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05 - Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog Gotti.JPG
Miniature Schnauzer Germany Group 02 Section 01 #183 Terrier Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 04 - Terriers Utility Utility Terrier Miniature Schnauzer 02.jpg
Mioritic Romania Group 01 Section 01 #349





Mioritic.jpg
Molossus Greece Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Molossian Hound, British Museum.jpg
Montenegrin Mountain Hound Montenegro Group 06 Section 01 #279






Moscow Watchdog Russia






Moscowwatchdog.jpg
Moscow Water Dog Russia Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex
Mountain Cur United States





Scenthound MountainCur.jpg
Mountain View Cur United States






Mountain View Cur.jpg
Mucuchies Venezuela






Mucuchies natural habitat.jpg
Mudi Hungary Group 01 Section 01 #238 FSS



Herding Dog Hondenras Mudi.jpg
Mudhol Hound India






Caravan hound Closeupfire.jpg
Large Münsterländer Germany Group 07 Section 01 #118
Group 03 (Gundogs)
Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog GrosserMuensterlaender.jpg
Small Münsterländer Germany Group 07 Section 01 #102 FSS
Miscellaneous Gundog
Gun Dog Kleiner Munsterlander edit.jpg
Murray River Curly Coated Retriever Australia






Three Murray River Curly Coated Retrievers.jpg
Neapolitan Mastiff Italy Group 02 Section 02 #197 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Miscellaneous Working Utility Guardian Dog Cannon - Male Neapolitan Mastiff 1998.jpeg
Newfoundland Canada Group 02 Section 02 #050 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Dogs Working Utility Guardian Dog Bear-Sparkle fx.jpg
Norfolk Spaniel United Kingdom Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Dash-II-Norfolk-Spaniel.jpg
Norfolk Terrier Great Britain Group 03 Section 02 #272 Terrier Group Group 02 Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Terrier Norfolk show.jpg
Norrbottenspets Sweden Group 05 Section 02 #276 FSS
Group 02 - Hounds

Northern Breed Nordic Spitz.jpg
North Country Beagle Great Britain Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex
Northern Inuit Dog England






Norwegian Buhund Norway Group 05 Section 03 #237 Herding Group Group 05 (Working Dogs) Group 07 - Herding Pastoral Working Northern Breed Norwegian Buhund 600.jpg
Norwegian Elkhound Norway Group 05 Section 02 #242 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Northern Breed Norwegian Elkhound.jpg
Norwegian Lundehund Norway Group 05 Section 02 #269 Non-Sporting Group
Group 02 - Hounds

Northern Breed Lundehund-2003.jpg
Norwich Terrier United Kingdom Group 03 Section 02 #072 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terriers) Group 04 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Norwichterrier.jpg
Nova Scotia Duck-Tolling Retriever Canada Group 08 Section 01 #312 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Tollers.jpg
Old Croatian Sighthound Croatia






Old Danish Pointer Denmark Group 07 Section 01 #281





Wyżeł duński 123.jpg
Old English Sheepdog England Group 01 Section 01 #016 Herding Group Working Group Group 07 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog Old english sheepdog Ch Bobbyclown's Dare for More.jpg
Old English Bulldog England Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex CribandRosa1811.jpg
Old English Terrier England






Old english terrier 041.jpg
Old German Shepherd Dog Germany






Altdeutscher Schaeferhund cropped.jpg
Olde English Bulldogge United States





CDHPR Barkley In Pose.jpg
Old Time Farm Shepherd United States






Sable and White Female OTFS Dog.JPG
Otterhound England Group 06 Section 02 #294 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Scenthound Two otterhounds.jpg
Pachon Navarro Spain







Paisley Terrier Scotland Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Paisley1903.jpg
Papillon Spain, Belgium, France Group 09 Section 09 #077 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 02- Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog RileyPapillon.JPG
Parson Russell Terrier England Group 03 Section 01 #339 Terrier Group Group 02 (Terrier) Terrier Terrier Terrier Terrier 05052881 PRT braun rau.jpg
Patterdale Terrier England





Terrier Truf2.JPG
Pekingese China Group 09 Section 08 #207 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05- Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog Pekingese1904.jpg
Perro de Presa Canario Spain Group 02 Section 02 #346 FSS



Guardian Dog Dogo Canario.jpg
Perro de Presa Mallorquin Spain Group 02 Section 02 #249




Guardian Dog Ca de bou dog.jpg
Peruvian Hairless Dog Peru Group 05 Section 06 #310 FSS (Miscellaneous)


Non Sporting Sighthound and Pariah PHDStandardStanding - Perro Sin Pelo del Perú.jpg
Phalène Belgium, Spain






Spaniel miniaturowy kontynentalny phalene 00.jpg
Pharaoh Hound Malta Group 05 Section 06 #248 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah Pies faraona e34.jpg
Phu Quoc ridgeback dog Vietnam






Phu Quoc dog.jpg
Picardy Spaniel France Group 07 Section 01 #108

Miscellaneous

Gun Dog Epagneul picard 685.jpg
Plott Hound United States
Hound Group



Scenthound Plotthound.jpg
Podenco Canario Spain Group 05 Section 07 #329 FSS



Sighthound and Pariah Podenco canario hembra.jpg
Pointer England Group 07 Section 02 #001 Sporting Group Group 03 (Gundogs) Group 01 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog English pointer.jpg
Polish Greyhound Poland Group 10 Section 03 #333

Miscellaneous

Sighthound and Pariah Chart polski 67u7.jpg
Polish Hound Poland Group 06 Section 01 #052





PolishHound-MlChPl-OKSANA-ZOstregoBoru-wl.JoannaZembrzuska 3.JPG
Polish Hunting Dog Poland Group 06 Section 01 #354





PolishScenthound-"NUTKA Klusujaca Sfora wl A.Balcerzak.jpg
Polish Lowland Sheepdog Poland Group 01 Section 01 #251 Herding Group Group 05 (Working) Group 07 - Herding Pastoral Working Herding Dog Polski owczarek nizinny rybnik-kamien pl.jpg
Polish Tatra Sheepdog Poland Group 01 Section 01 #252




Guardian Dog Polski Owczarek Podhalanski.jpg
Pomeranian Germany, Poland Group 05 Section 04 #097 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05- Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog Pomeranian 600.jpg
Pont-Audemer Spaniel France Group 07 Section 01 #114





04031158 Epagneul Pont Audemer.jpg
Poodle Germany, France Group 09 Section 02 #172 Non-Sporting Group, Toy Group Group 07 (Non-Sporting) Group 06 - Non-Sporting, Group 05 - Toys Utility Utility Companion Dog, Gun Dog Silver Miniature Poodle stacked.jpg
Porcelaine France Group 06 Section 01 #030





Porcelaine.jpg
Portuguese Podengo Portugal Group 05 Section 07 #094 FSS

Hound
Sighthound and Pariah Evitarocks.jpg
Portuguese Pointer Portugal Group 07 Section 01 #187 FSS



Gun Dog Portuguese pointer 11yo.jpg
Portuguese Water Dog Portugal Group 08 Section 03 #037 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working dogs Working Utility Gun Dog Cão de agua Português 2.jpg
Posavac Hound Croatia Group 06 Section 01 #154




Scenthound
Pražský Krysařík Czech Republic






Prazsky krysarik 1.jpg
Pudelpointer Germany Group 07 Section 01 #216

Group 01 - Sporting Dogs

Gun Dog Pudelpointer on point.jpg
Pug China Group 09 Section 11 #253 Toy Group Group 01 (Toys) Group 05- Toys Toy Toy Companion Dog
Puli Hungary Group 01 Section 01 #055 Herding Group Group 05 (Working) Group 07 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog PuliBlack wb.jpg
Pumi Hungary Group 01 Section 01 #056 FSS (Miscellaneous) Group 05 (Working)

Working Herding Dog Pumi 2.jpg
Pungsan Dog North Korea






Poongsandogs.JPG
Pyrenean Mastiff Spain Group 02 Section 02 #092



Utility
MasPiri-Puma-FIN.jpg
Pyrenean Shepherd France Group 01 Section 01 #141 Herding Group
Group 07 (Herding) Pastoral Utility Herding Dog PyreneanShepSmooth wb.jpg
Rafeiro do Alentejo Portugal Group 02 Section 02 #096 FSS



Guardian Dog Rafeiro male.jpg
Rajapalayam India






Rajapalayam Hound.PNG
Rampur Greyhound India






Rampurgreyhound.jpg
Rastreador Brasileiro Brazil Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Brazilian Tracker (Rastreador Brasileiro).jpg
Ratonero Bodeguero Andaluz Spain






Ratonero Bodeguero Andaluz.jpg
Rat Terrier United States
FSS (Miscellaneous)



Terriers AmRatTerr2 wb.jpg
Redbone Coonhound United States
Miscellaneous



Scenthound Memphis 488.jpg
Rhodesian Ridgeback Zimbabwe Group 06 Section 03 #146 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah Rhodesian Ridgeback 600.jpg
Rottweiler Germany Group 02 Section 02 #147 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Working Utility Guardian Dog Rottweiler.jpg
Russian Spaniel Russia






Russpaniel.jpg
Russian Toy Russia Group 09 Section 09 #352 Provisional FSS



Companion Dog RusskiyToyWelpe.jpg
Russo-European Laika Russia Group 05 Section 02 #304





Russo European Laika 2.jpg
Russell Terrier England Group 03 Section 02 #345 FSS (Miscellaneous) Group 02 (Terriers)


Terrier FCI JRT.jpg
Saarlooswolfhond Netherlands, Germany Group 01 Section 01 #311




Herding Dog Bow bow.jpg
Sabueso Español Spain Group 06 Section 01 #204




Scenthound Angoi de A Fonsagrada.JPG
Saint-Usuge Spaniel France






EpagneuldeSaintUsuge.jpg
Sakhalin Husky Japan






Saluki Middle East Group 10 Section 01 #269 Hound Group Group 04 (Hounds) Group 02 - Hounds Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah Saluki dog breed.jpg
Samoyed Russia Group 05 Section 01 #212 Working Group Group 06 (Utility) Group 03 - Working Dogs Pastoral Utility Northern Breed Samoyed 600.jpg
Sapsali Korea






Sapsali.jpg
Šarplaninac Serbia, Republic of Macedonia Group 02 Section 02 #041

Miscellaneous List

Guardian Dog Шарпланинецот од Св.Јован Бигорски.jpg
Schapendoes Netherlands Group 03 Section 01 #313 FSS
Herding Group

Herding Dog Nederlandse-schapendoes-02.jpg
Schillerstövare Sweden Group 06 Section 01 #131




Scenthound Schillerstövare bearbeitet.jpg
Schipperke Belgium Group 01 Section 01 #083 Non-Sporting Group Group 07 (Non-sporting) Group 06 (Non-sporting) Utility Non Sporting Companion Dog Schipperke gismo 12.jpg
Giant Schnauzer Germany Group 02 Section 01 #181 Working Group Group 6 (Utility) Group 3 - Working Dogs Working Utility Herding Dog GiantSchnauzer.jpg
Standard Schnauzer Germany Group 02 Section 01 #182 Working Group Group 6 (Utility) Group 3 - Working Dogs Working Utility Herding Dog Emppumenossa.jpg
Schweizer Laufhund Switzerland Group 06 Section 01 #059





Swiss Hound.jpg
Schweizerischer Niederlaufhund Switzerland Group 06 Section 01 #060




Scenthound 08115491 Schwyzer Niederlaufhund.jpg
Scotch Collie Scotland






Smooth Collie 600.jpg
Scottish Deerhound Scotland Group 10 Section 02 #164 Hound Group Group 4 (Hounds) Group 2 - Hounds Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah Deerhound. F's K.jpg
Scottish Terrier Scotland Group 03 Section 02 #073 Terrier Group Group 2 (Terriers) Group 4 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier ScottishTerrier.jpg
Sealyham Terrier Wales Group 03 Section 02 #074 Terrier Group Group 2 (Terriers) Group 4 - Terrier Terrier Terrier Terrier SealyhamTerrier2.jpg
Segugio Italiano Italy Group 06 Section 01 #337 #198


Hound

Segugioitalianopelorasofulvo.JPG
Seppala Siberian Sleddog Canada






Seppala Siberian Sleddog.jpg
Serbian Hound Serbia Group 06 Section 01 #150





Serbian Hound Face.JPG
Serbian Tricolour Hound Serbia Group 06 Section 01 #229





Srpski Trobojni Gonic .gif
Shar Pei China Group 02 Section 02 #309 Non-Sporting Group Group 7 (Non-Sporting) Group 6 - Non-Sporting Utility Non Sporting Northern Breed BandWSharPei.JPG
Shetland Sheepdog Scotland Group 01 Section 01 #088 Herding Group Group 5 (Working Dogs) Group 7 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog Shetland Sheepdog 600.jpg
Shiba Inu Japan Group 05 Section 05 #257 Non-Sporting Group Group 6 (Utility) Group 6 - Non-Sporting Utility Utility Northern Breed Taka Shiba.jpg
Shih Tzu China Group 09 Section 05 #208 Toy Group Group 7 - Non-Sporting Group 6 - Non-Sporting Utility Non Sporting Companion Dog Shih-Tzu.JPG
Shikoku Japan Group 05 Section 05 #319




Northern Breed Shikokuken.jpg
Shiloh Shepherd Dog United States






Plushcoatshilohshepherd.jpg
Siberian Husky Russia Group 05 Section 01 #270 Working Group Group 6 (Utility) Group 3 (Working) Working Utility Northern Breed Siberian-husky.jpg
Silken Windhound United States





Sighthound and Pariah Fallon1.jpg
Sinhala Hound Sri Lanka






Skye Terrier Scotland Group 03 Section 02 #072 Terrier Group Group 2 (Terriers) Group 4 (Terriers) Terrier Terrier Terrier Skye terrier 800.jpg
Sloughi Morocco Group 10 Section 03 #188 FSS (Miscellaneous) Group 4 (Hounds)
Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah Sloughi sandcolor.jpg
Slovak Cuvac Slovakia Group 01 Section 01 #142 FSS



Guardian Dog Cuvac 1.jpg
Slovakian Rough-haired Pointer Slovakia Group 07 Section 01 #320





ICh Brita z Ruzenice.jpg
Slovenský Kopov Slovakia Group 06 Section 01 #244




Scenthound MVP Nitra 2004 (8).jpg
Smålandsstövare Sweden






Smaland-Stövare.jpg
Small Greek Domestic Dog Greece






SmallGreekDomesticDog.jpg
Soft-Coated Wheaten Terrier Ireland Group 03 Section 01 #040 Terrier Group Group 2 (Terriers) Group 4 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier Dog2wheaten.jpg
South Russian Ovcharka Russia Group 01 Section 01 #326




Guardian Dog South Russian Ovcharka.jpg
Southern Hound Britain Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Southern Hound.jpg
Spanish Mastiff Spain Group 02 Section 02 #091 FSS




Mastif hiszpanski pl.jpg
Spanish Water Dog Spain Group 08 Section 03 #336 FSS

Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Perro agua.jpg
Spinone Italiano Italy Group 07 Section 01 #165 Sporting Group Group 3 (Gundogs) Sporting Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Spinone italiano Oliver.jpg
Sporting Lucas Terrier England





Terrier LucasTerrier.jpg
St. Bernard Italy, Switzerland Group 02 Section 02 #061 Working Group Utility Group Working Group Working Group Utility Guardian Dog Stbernardinsnow.jpg
St. John's Water Dog Newfoundland, Canada Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex St Johns dog.jpg
Stabyhoun Netherlands Group 07 Section 01 #222 FSS



Gun Dog Frisianstaby.jpg
Staffordshire Bull Terrier England Group 03 Section 03 #076 Terrier Group Group 2 (Terriers) Group 4 - Terriers Terrier Terrier Terrier
Steinbracke Germany







Stephens Cur United States





Scenthound Stephens Cur.jpg
Styrian Coarse-haired Hound Austria Group 06 Section 01 #062




Scenthound Steirische Rauhhaarbracke.jpg
Sussex Spaniel England Group 08 Section 02 #127 Sporting Group Group 3 (Gundogs) Group 1 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Sussex spaniel t43.jpg
Swedish Lapphund Sweden Group 05 Section 03 #135 FSS


Working
Svensk lapphund.JPG
Swedish Vallhund Sweden Group 05 Section 03 #014 Herding Group Group 5 (Working Dogs) Group 7 (Herding Dogs) Pastoral Working Herding Dog SwedishVallhundAgility wb.jpg
Tahltan Bear Dog Canada Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Tahltan Bear Dog sketch2.jpg
Taigan Kyrgyzstan






Taigan.jpg
Talbot
Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Cartercrest.jpg
Tamaskan Dog Finland






Tamaskan.jpg
Teddy Roosevelt Terrier United States





Terrier Teddyterrier.jpg
Telomian Malaysia






Telomian.jpg
Tennessee Treeing Brindle United States






Sienna TTBD.jpg
Tenterfield Terrier Australia

Group 2 (Terriers)

Terrier
TenterfieldTerrier.jpg
Thai Bangkaew Dog Thailand






Bangkaew.jpg
Thai Ridgeback Thailand Group 05 Section 08 #338 FSS



Sighthound and Pariah Thai-Ridgeback.jpg
Tibetan Mastiff China Group 02 Section 02 #230 Working Group Group 6 (Utility)
Working Utility Guardian Dog Bea Miu Nan Šan, CAC.jpg
Tibetan Spaniel Tibet Group 09 Section 05 #231 Non-Sporting Group Group 1 (Toys) Group 6 - Non-Sporting Dogs Utility Non Sporting Companion Dog Tibetansk spaniel.jpg
Tibetan Terrier Tibet Group 09 Section 05 #209 Non-Sporting Group Group 1 (Toys) Group 6 - Non-Sporting Dogs Utility Non Sporting Companion Dog Tibetan-terrier-Blue-Blossom-Guldborg-Denmarkjpg.jpg
Tornjak Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia Group 02 Section 02 #355 (provisional)





BosnianTornjak2.jpg
Tosa Japan Group 02 Section 02 #260 FSS



Guarding Dog Tosa inu - głowa.jpg
Toy Bulldog
Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Toy Bulldog Little Knot 1903.jpg
Toy Fox Terrier United States
Toy Group



Terrier Toy Fox Terrier 2.jpg
Toy Manchester Terrier England, United States
Toy Group Toy Group


Terrier Toy-manchester-terrier-weave.png
Toy Trawler Spaniel United Kingdom Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Trawler spaniel goblin.jpg
Transylvanian Hound Hungary






Erdelyi kopo VadaszNimrodSzeder01.jpg
Treeing Cur United States







Treeing Walker Coonhound United States
FSS (Miscellaneous)



Scenthound Treeing-walker-coonhound-standing.jpg
Trigg Hound Kentucky, United States






Ned (Trigg).png
Tweed Water Spaniel United Kingdom Extinct Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Tweed Water Spaniel.jpg
Tyrolean Hound Austria Group 06 Section 01 #068





Tiroler Bracke.jpg
Utonagan United Kingdom






Oka Snow.jpg
Vizsla Hungary Group 07 Section 01 #057 Sporting Group Group 3 (Gundogs) Group 1 - Sporting Dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Vizsla.jpg
Volpino Italiano Italy Group 05 Section 04 #195





Volpino04.jpg
Weimaraner Germany Group 07 Section 01 #099 Sporting Group Group 3 (Gun dogs Group 1 - Sporting Gun dog Gundogs Gun Dog Weimaraner wb.jpg
Cardigan Welsh Corgi Wales Group 01 Section 01 #038 Herding Group Group 5 (Working Dogs) Group 7 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog Cardigan Welsh Corgi 600.jpg
Pembroke Welsh Corgi Wales Group 01 Section 08 #039 Herding Group Group 5 (Working Dogs) Group 7 - Herding Dogs Pastoral Working Herding Dog Pembroke Welsh Corgi 600.jpg
Welsh Sheepdog Wales






Welsh Sheepdog.jpg
Welsh Springer Spaniel Wales Group 08 Section 02 #126 Sporting Group Group 3 (Gundogs) Sporting dogs Gundog Gundogs Gun Dog Welsh Springer Spaniel 1.jpg
Welsh Terrier Wales Group 03 Section 01 #078 Terrier Group Group 2 (Terriers) Group 4 - Terrier Terrier Terrier Terrier Welch Terrier on sand - 2007.png
West Highland White Terrier Scotland Group 03 Section 02 #085 Terrier Group Group 2 (Terriers) Group 4 - Terrier Terrier Terrier Terrier West Highland White Terrier Krakow.jpg
West Siberian Laika Russia Group 05 Section 02 #306





West Siberian Laika.jpg
Westphalian Dachsbracke Germany Group 06 Section 01 #100




Scenthound Westfälische Dachsbracke.jpg
Wetterhoun Netherlands Group 08 Section 03 #221




Gun Dog Fryzyjski pies wodny u68.jpg
Whippet England Group 10 Section 03 #162 Hound Group Group 4 (Hounds) Group 2 (Hounds) Hound Hound Sighthound and Pariah WhippetWhiteSaddled wb.jpg
White English Bulldog United States






Hedden's Buddy Roe.jpg
White Shepherd Dog United States




Working Herding Dog Schweizer Schäferhund, 9 Monate.JPG
Wirehaired Vizsla Hungary Group 07 Section 01 ##239 FSS (Miscellaneous) Group 1 - Sporting Dogs Gundog

Gun Dog Drahthaarvizsla.jpg
Wirehaired Pointing Griffon Netherlands, France Group 07 Section 01 #107 Sporting Group
Group 1 - Sporting Dogs Gundog
Gun Dog Korthalsgriffon.jpg
Yorkshire Terrier England Group 03 Section 04 #086 Toy Group Group 1 (Toys) Group V, Toys Toy Group Toy Companion Dog Yorkshire Terrier WA Mozart Dolce Sinfonia.jpg
Breed Origin Fédération Cynologique Internationale American Kennel Club Australian National Kennel Council Canadian Kennel Club The Kennel Club New Zealand Kennel Club United Kennel Club Image

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Rice, Dan (1996). The Complete Book of Dog Breeding. Barron's Educational Series. ISBN 978-0-8120-9604-0.
  2. ^ Swaminathan, Nikhil. "Why are different breeds of dogs all considered the same species?". Scientific American. Retrieved July 14, 2008. "Dogs are highly unusual in their variation..."
  3. ^ "American Kennel Club - Affenpinscher". Akc.org. Retrieved 2010-08-15.
  4. ^ "American Kennel Club - Afghan Hound". Akc.org. 1948-09-14. Retrieved 2010-08-15.
  5. ^ Fédération Cynologique Internationale (05. 05. 2003). "ATLAS MOUNTAIN DOG (AIDI)". Retrieved 29 June 2011.
  6. ^ "Airedale Terrier | American Kennel Club". Akc.org. 1959-07-14. Retrieved 2010-08-15.
  7. ^ United Kennel Club (April 1, 1998). "AKBASH DOG". Retrieved 29 June 2011.
  8. ^ "American Kennel Club - Akita". Akc.org. Retrieved 2010-08-15.
  9. ^ Perfil Canino (01/03/2009). "Alano Español". Retrieved 29 June 2011.
  10. ^ a b "American Kennel Club - Alaskan Malamute". Akc.org. Retrieved 2010-08-15.
  11. ^ a b "AKC MEET THE BREEDS®: Cocker Spaniel". Akc.org. June 30, 1992. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
  12. ^ a b "American Kennel Club - American Eskimo Dog". Akc.org. Retrieved 2010-08-15.
  13. ^ a b "AKC MEET THE BREEDS®: American Foxhound". Akc.org. March 1, 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-26.

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Yellow Labrador Retriever, the most registered breed of 2009 with the AKC
More images of dogs.
Conservation status
Domesticated
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Canidae
Genus: Canis
Species: C. lupus
Subspecies: C. l. familiaris and C. l. dingo.[1][2]
Trinomial name
Canis lupus familiaris and Canis lupus dingo[1][2]
Synonyms
  • Canis familiaris
  • Canis familiaris domesticus
The domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris[3] and Canis lupus dingo[1][2]) is a domesticated form of the gray wolf, a member of the Canidae family of the order Carnivora. The term is used for both feral and pet varieties. The dog may have been the first animal to be domesticated, and has been the most widely kept working, hunting, and companion animal in human history. The word "dog" may also mean the male of a canine species,[4] as opposed to the word "bitch" for the female of the species.[5]
Dogs were domesticated from gray wolves about 15,000 years ago.[6] Their value to early human settlements led to them quickly becoming ubiquitous across world cultures. Dogs perform many roles for people, such as hunting, herding, pulling loads, protection, assisting police and military, companionship, and, more recently, aiding handicapped individuals. This impact on human society has given them the nickname "Man's Best Friend" in the Western world. In some cultures, dogs are also an important source of meat[7][8]. In 2001, there were estimated to be 400 million dogs in the world.[9]
Over the 15,000-year span in which the dog has been domesticated, it has diverged into only a handful of landraces, groups of similar animals whose morphology and behavior have been shaped by environmental factors and functional roles. Through selective breeding by humans, the dog has developed into hundreds of varied breeds, and shows more behavioral and morphological variation than any other land mammal.[10] For example, height measured to the withers ranges from a few inches in the Chihuahua to a few feet in the Irish Wolfhound; color varies from white through grays (usually called "blue") to black, and browns from light (tan) to dark ("red" or "chocolate") in a wide variation of patterns; coats can be short or long, coarse-haired to wool-like, straight, curly, or smooth.[11] It is common for most breeds to shed this coat.

Contents

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Etymology and related terminology

Dog is the common use term that refers to members of the subspecies Canis lupus familiaris (canis, "dog"; lupus, "wolf"; familiaris, "of a household" or "domestic"). The term can also be used to refer to a wider range of related species, such as the members of the genus Canis, or "true dogs", including the wolf, coyote, and jackals; or it can refer to the members of the tribe Canini, which would also include the African wild dog; or it can be used to refer to any member of the family Canidae, which would also include the foxes, bush dog, raccoon dog, and others.[12] Some members of the family have "dog" in their common names, such as the raccoon dog and the African wild dog. A few animals have "dog" in their common names but are not canids, such as the prairie dog.
The English word dog comes from Middle English dogge, from Old English docga, a "powerful dog breed".[13] The term may derive from Proto-Germanic *dukkōn, represented in Old English finger-docce ("finger-muscle").[14] The word also shows the familiar petname diminutive -ga also seen in frogga "frog", picga "pig", stagga "stag", wicga "beetle, worm", among others.[15] Due to the archaic structure of the word, the term dog may ultimately derive from the earliest layer of Proto-Indo-European vocabulary, reflecting the role of the dog as the earliest domesticated animal.[16]
Mbabaram is famous in linguistic circles for a striking coincidence in its vocabulary to English. When linguist R. M. W. Dixon began his study of the language by eliciting a few basic nouns among the first of these was the word for "dog" which coincidentally in Mbabaram is dog. The Mbabaram word for "dog" really is pronounced almost identically to the English word (compare true cognates such as Yidiny gudaga, Dyirbal guda, Djabugay gurraa and Guugu Yimidhirr gudaa, for example). The similarity is a complete coincidence: there is no discernible relationship between English and Mbabaram. This and other false cognates are often cited as a caution against deciding that languages are related based on a small number of comparisons.
In 14th-century England, hound (from Old English: hund) was the general word for all domestic canines, and dog referred to a subtype of hound, a group including the mastiff. It is believed this "dog" type of "hound" was so common it eventually became the prototype of the category “hound”.[17] By the 16th century, dog had become the general word, and hound had begun to refer only to types used for hunting.[18] Hound, cognate to German Hund, Dutch hond, common Scandinavian hund, and Icelandic hundur, is ultimately derived from the Proto-Indo-European *kwon- "dog", found in Welsh ci (plural cwn), Latin canis, Greek kýōn, Lithuanian šuõ.[19]
In breeding circles, a male canine is referred to as a dog, while a female is called a bitch (Middle English bicche, from Old English bicce, ultimately from Old Norse bikkja). A group of offspring is a litter. The father of a litter is called the sire, and the mother is called the dam. Offspring are, in general, called pups or puppies, from French poupée, until they are about a year old. The process of birth is whelping, from the Old English word hwelp (cf. German Welpe, Dutch welp, Swedish valpa, Icelandic hvelpur).[20]

Taxonomy

The domestic dog was originally classified as Canis familiaris and Canis familiarus domesticus by Carolus Linnaeus in 1758,[21][22] and was reclassified in 1993 as Canis lupus familiaris, a subspecies of the gray wolf Canis lupus, by the Smithsonian Institution and the American Society of Mammalogists. Overwhelming evidence from behavior, vocalizations, morphology, and molecular biology led to the contemporary scientific understanding that a single species, the gray wolf, is the common ancestor for all breeds of domestic dogs;[23][24] however, the timeframe and mechanisms by which dogs diverged are controversial.[23] Canis lupus familiaris is listed as the name for the taxon that is broadly used in the scientific community and recommended by ITIS; Canis familiaris, however, is a recognised synonym.[25]

History and evolution

Ancient Greek rhyton in the shape of a dog's head, made by Brygos, early 5th century BC. Jérôme Carcopino Museum, Department of Archaeology, Aleria
Domestic dogs inherited complex behaviors from their wolf ancestors, being pack hunters with complex body language. These sophisticated forms of social cognition and communication may account for their trainability, playfulness, and ability to fit into human households and social situations, and these attributes have given dogs a relationship with humans that has enabled them to become one of the most successful species on the planet today.[23]
Although experts largely disagree over the details of dog domestication, it is agreed that human interaction played a significant role in shaping the subspecies.[26] Shortly after domestication, dogs became ubiquitous in human populations, and spread throughout the world. Emigrants from Siberia likely crossed the Bering Strait with dogs in their company, and some experts[who?] suggest the use of sled dogs may have been critical to the success of the waves that entered North America roughly 12,000 years ago,[citation needed] although the earliest archaeological evidence of dog-like canids in North America dates from about 9,000 years ago.[27] Dogs were an important part of life for the Athabascan population in North America, and were their only domesticated animal. Dogs also carried much of the load in the migration of the Apache and Navajo tribes 1,400 years ago. Use of dogs as pack animals in these cultures often persisted after the introduction of the horse to North America.[28][page needed]
The current consensus among biologists and archaeologists is that the dating of first domestication is indeterminate.[26][28] There is conclusive evidence dogs genetically diverged from their wolf ancestors at least 15,000 years ago,[6][29][30] but some believe domestication to have occurred earlier.[26] It is not known whether humans domesticated the wolf as such to initiate dog's divergence from its ancestors, or whether dog's evolutionary path had already taken a different course prior to domestication. For example, it is hypothesized that some wolves gathered around the campsites of paleolithic camps to scavenge refuse, and associated evolutionary pressure developed that favored those who were less frightened by, and keener in approaching, humans.
The bulk of the scientific evidence for the evolution of the domestic dog stems from archaeological findings and mitochondrial DNA studies. The divergence date of roughly 15,000 years ago is based in part on archaeological evidence that demonstrates the domestication of dogs occurred more than 15,000 years ago,[23][28] and some genetic evidence indicates the domestication of dogs from their wolf ancestors began in the late Upper Paleolithic close to the Pleistocene/Holocene boundary, between 17,000 and 14,000 years ago.[31] But there is a wide range of other, contradictory findings that make this issue controversial.[citation needed]
Archaeological evidence suggests the latest dogs could have diverged from wolves was roughly 15,000 years ago, although it is possible they diverged much earlier.[23] In 2008, a team of international scientists released findings from an excavation at Goyet Cave in Belgium declaring a large, toothy canine existed 31,700 years ago and ate a diet of horse, musk ox and reindeer.[32]
Prior to this Belgian discovery, the earliest dog fossils were two large skulls from Russia and a mandible from Germany dated from roughly 14,000 years ago.[6][23] Remains of smaller dogs from Natufian cave deposits in the Middle East, including the earliest burial of a human being with a domestic dog, have been dated to around 10,000 to 12,000 years ago.[6][33] There is a great deal of archaeological evidence for dogs throughout Europe and Asia around this period and through the next two thousand years (roughly 8,000 to 10,000 years ago), with fossils uncovered in Germany, the French Alps, and Iraq, and cave paintings in Turkey.[23] The oldest remains of a domesticated dog in the Americas were found in Texas and have been dated to about 9,400 years ago.[34]

DNA studies

DNA studies have provided a wide range of possible divergence dates, from 15,000 to 40,000 years ago,[6] to as much as 100,000 to 140,000 years ago.[35] These results depend on a number of assumptions.[23] Genetic studies are based on comparisons of genetic diversity between species, and depend on a calibration date. Some estimates of divergence dates from DNA evidence use an estimated wolf-coyote divergence date of roughly 700,000 years ago as a calibration.[36] If this estimate is incorrect, and the actual wolf-coyote divergence is closer to one or two million years ago, or more,[37] then the DNA evidence that supports specific dog-wolf divergence dates would be interpreted very differently.
Furthermore, it is believed the genetic diversity of wolves has been in decline for the last 200 years, and that the genetic diversity of dogs has been reduced by selective breeding. This could significantly bias DNA analyses to support an earlier divergence date. The genetic evidence for the domestication event occurring in East Asia is also subject to violations of assumptions. These conclusions are based on the location of maximal genetic divergence, and assume hybridization does not occur, and that breeds remain geographically localized. Although these assumptions hold for many species, there is good reason to believe that they do not hold for canines.[23]
Genetic analyses indicate all dogs are likely descended from a handful of domestication events with a small number of founding females,[23][31] although there is evidence domesticated dogs interbred with local populations of wild wolves on several occasions.[6] Data suggest dogs first diverged from wolves in East Asia, and these domesticated dogs then quickly migrated throughout the world, reaching the North American continent around 8000 BC.[6] The oldest groups of dogs, which show the greatest genetic variability and are the most similar to their wolf ancestors, are primarily Asian and African breeds, including the Basenji, Lhasa Apso, and Siberian Husky.[38] Some breeds thought to be very old, such as the Pharaoh Hound, Ibizan Hound, and Norwegian Elkhound, are now known to have been created more recently.[38]
There is a great deal of controversy surrounding the evolutionary framework for the domestication of dogs.[23] Although it is widely claimed that "man domesticated the wolf,"[39] man may not have taken such a proactive role in the process.[23] The nature of the interaction between man and wolf that led to domestication is unknown and controversial. At least three early species of the Homo genus began spreading out of Africa roughly 400,000 years ago, and thus lived for a considerable time in contact with canine species. Despite this, there is no evidence of any adaptation of canine species to the presence of the close relatives of modern man. If dogs were domesticated, as believed, roughly 15,000 years ago, the event (or events) would have coincided with a large expansion in human territory and the development of agriculture. This has led some biologists to suggest one of the forces that led to the domestication of dogs was a shift in human lifestyle in the form of established human settlements. Permanent settlements would have coincided with a greater amount of disposable food and would have created a barrier between wild and anthropogenic canine populations.[23]

Roles with humans

Early roles

Wolves, and their dog descendants, would have derived significant benefits from living in human camps—more safety, more reliable food, lesser caloric needs, and more chance to breed.[40] They would have benefited from humans’ upright gait that gives them larger range over which to see potential predators and prey, as well as color vision that, at least by day, gives humans better visual discrimination.[40] Camp dogs would also have benefitted from human tool use, as in bringing down larger prey and controlling fire for a range of purposes.[40]
Humans would also have derived enormous benefit from the dogs associated with their camps.[41] For instance, dogs would have improved sanitation by cleaning up food scraps.[41] Dogs may have provided warmth, as referred to in the Australian Aboriginal expression “three dog night” (an exceptionally cold night), and they would have alerted the camp to the presence of predators or strangers, using their acute hearing to provide an early warning.[41] Anthropologists believe the most significant benefit would have been the use of dogs' sensitive sense of smell to assist with the hunt.[41] The relationship between the presence of a dog and success in the hunt is often mentioned as a primary reason for the domestication of the wolf, and a 2004 study of hunter groups with and without a dog gives quantitative support to the hypothesis that the benefits of cooperative hunting was an important factor in wolf domestication.[42]
The cohabitation of dogs and humans would have greatly improved the chances of survival for early human groups, and the domestication of dogs may have been one of the key forces that led to human success.[43]
Couple sitting on the lawn with a pet British Bulldog
A British Bulldog shares a day at the park.

As pets

“The most widespread form of interspecies bonding occurs between humans and dogs”[41] and the keeping of dogs as companions, particularly by elites, has a long history.[44] However, pet dog populations grew significantly after World War II as suburbanization increased.[44] In the 1950s and 1960s, dogs were kept outside more often than they tend to be today [45] (using the expression “in the doghouse” to describe exclusion from the group signifies the distance between the doghouse and the home) and were still primarily functional, acting as a guard, children’s playmate, or walking companion. From the 1980s, there have been changes in the role of the pet dog, such as the increased role of dogs in the emotional support of their owners.[46] People and dogs have become increasingly integrated and implicated in each other’s lives,[47] to the point where pet dogs actively shape the way a family and home are experienced.[48]
There have been two major trends in the changing status of pet dogs. The first has been the ‘commodification’ of the dog, shaping it to conform to human expectations of personality and behaviour.[48] The second has been the broadening of the concept of the family and the home to include dogs-as-dogs within everyday routines and practices.[48]
There are a vast range of commodity forms available to transform a pet dog into an ideal companion.[49] The list of goods, services and places available is enormous: from dog perfumes, couture, furniture and housing, to dog groomers, therapists, trainers and care-takers, dog cafes, spas, parks and beaches, and dog hotels, airlines and cemeteries.[49] While dog training as an organized activity can be traced back to the 18th century, in the last decades of the 20th century it became a high profile issue as many normal dog behaviors such as barking, jumping up, digging, rolling in dung, fighting, and urine marking became increasingly incompatible with the new role of a pet dog.[50] Dog training books, classes and television programs proliferated as the process of commodifying the pet dog continued.[51]
An Australian Cattle Dog in reindeer antlers sits on Santa's lap
A pet dog taking part in Christmas traditions
The majority of contemporary dog owners describe their dog as part of the family,[48] although some ambivalence about the relationship is evident in the popular reconceptualisation of the dog-human family as a pack.[48] A dominance model of dog-human relationships has been promoted by some dog trainers, such as on the television program Dog Whisperer. However it has been disputed that "trying to achieve status" is characteristic of dog–human interactions.[52] Pet dogs play an active role in family life; for example, a study of conversations in dog-human families showed how family members use the dog as a resource, talking to the dog, or talking through the dog, to mediate their interactions with each other.[53] Another study of dogs’ roles in families showed many dogs have set tasks or routines undertaken as family members, the most common of which was helping with the washing-up by licking the plates in the dishwasher, and bringing in the newspaper from the lawn.[48] Increasingly, human family members are engaging in activities centred on the perceived needs and interests of the dog, or in which the dog is an integral partner, such as Dog Dancing and Doga.[49]
According to the statistics published by the American Pet Products Manufacturers Association in the National Pet Owner Survey in 2009–2010, it is estimated there are 77.5 million dog owners in the United States.[54] The same survey shows nearly 40% of American households own at least one dog, of which 67% own just one dog, 25% two dogs and nearly 9% more than two dogs. There does not seem to be any gender preference among dogs as pets, as the statistical data reveal an equal number of female and male dog pets. Yet, although several programs are undergoing to promote pet adoption, less than a fifth of the owned dogs come from a shelter.

Work

Dogs have lived and worked with humans in so many roles that they have earned the unique nickname, "man's best friend",[55] a phrase used in other languages as well. They have been bred for herding livestock,[56] hunting (e.g. pointers and hounds),[57] rodent control,[3] guarding, helping fishermen with nets, detection dogs, and pulling loads, in addition to their roles as companions.[3]

Gaston III, Count of Foix, Book of the Hunt, 1387–88
Service dogs such as guide dogs, utility dogs, assistance dogs, hearing dogs, and psychological therapy dogs provide assistance to individuals with physical or mental disabilities.[58][59] Some dogs owned by epileptics have been shown to alert their handler when the handler shows signs of an impending seizure, sometimes well in advance of onset, allowing the owner to seek safety, medication, or medical care.[60]
Dogs included in human activities in terms of helping out humans are usually called working dogs. Dogs of several breeds are considered working dogs. Some working dog breeds include Akita, Alaskan Malamute, Anatolian Shepherd Dog, Bernese Mountain Dog, Black Russian Terrier, Boxer, Bullmastiff, Doberman Pinscher, Dogue de Bordeaux, German Pinscher, German Shepherd,[61] Giant Schnauzer, Great Dane, Great Pyrenees, Great Swiss Mountain Dog, Komondor, Kuvasz, Mastiff, Neapolitan Mastiff, Newfoundland, Portuguese Water Dog, Rottweiler, Saint Bernard, Samoyed, Siberian Husky, Standard Schnauzer, and Tibetan Mastiff.

Sports and shows

Owners of dogs often enter them in competitions[62] such as breed conformation shows or sports, including racing and sledding.
In conformation shows, also referred to as breed shows, a judge familiar with the specific dog breed evaluates individual purebred dogs for conformity with their established breed type as described in the breed standard. As the breed standard only deals with the externally observable qualities of the dog (such as appearance, movement, and temperament), separately tested qualities (such as ability or health) are not part of the judging in conformation shows.

As a food source

Dog meat is consumed in some East Asian countries, including Korea, China, and Vietnam, a practice that dates back to antiquity.[63] It is estimated that 13–16 million dogs are killed and consumed in Asia every year.[64] The BBC claims that, in 1999, more than 6,000 restaurants served soups made from dog meat in South Korea.[65] In Korea, the primary dog breed raised for meat, the nureongi (누렁이), differs from those breeds raised for pets that Koreans may keep in their homes.[66] The most popular Korean dog dish is gaejang-guk (also called bosintang), a spicy stew meant to balance the body's heat during the summer months; followers of the custom claim this is done to ensure good health by balancing one's gi, or vital energy of the body. A 19th century version of gaejang-guk explains that the dish is prepared by boiling dog meat with scallions and chili powder. Variations of the dish contain chicken and bamboo shoots. While the dishes are still popular in Korea with a segment of the population, dog is not as widely consumed as beef, chicken, and pork.[67]
Other cultures, such as Polynesia and pre-Columbian Mexico, also consumed dog meat in their history. However, Western, South Asian, African, and Middle Eastern cultures, in general, regard consumption of dog meat as taboo. In some places, however, such as in rural areas of Poland, dog fat is believed to have medicinal properties—being good for the lungs for instance.[68]
A CNN report in China dated March 2010 interviews a dog meat vendor who states that most of the dogs that are available for selling to restaurant are raised in special farms but that there is always a chance that a sold dog is someone's lost pet, although dog pet breeds are not considered edible.[69]

Health risks to humans

In the USA, cats and dogs are a factor in more than 86,000 falls each year.[70] It has been estimated around 2% of dog-related injuries treated in UK hospitals are domestic accidents. The same study found that while dog involvement in road traffic accidents was difficult to quantify, dog-associated road accidents involving injury more commonly involved two-wheeled vehicles.[71]
Toxocara canis (dog roundworm) eggs in dog feces can cause toxocariasis. In the United States, about 10,000 cases of Toxocara infection are reported in humans each year, and almost 14% of the US population is infected.[72] In Great Britain, 24% of soil samples taken from public parks contained T. canis eggs.[73] Untreated toxocariasis can cause retinal damage and decreased vision.[73] Dog feces can also contain hookworms that cause cutaneous larva migrans in humans.[74][75][76][77]
The incidence of dog bites, and especially fatal dog bites, is extremely rare in America considering the number of pet dogs in the country.[78] Fatalities from dog bites occur in America at the rate of one per four million dogs.[78] A Colorado study found bites in children were less severe than bites in adults.[79] The incidence of dog bites in the US is 12.9 per 10,000 inhabitants, but for boys aged 5 to 9, the incidence rate is 60.7 per 10,000. Moreover, children have a much higher chance to be bitten in the face or neck.[80] Sharp claws with powerful muscles behind them can lacerate flesh in a scratch that can lead to serious infections.[81]
In the UK between 2003 and 2004, there were 5,868 dog attacks on humans, resulting in 5,770 working days lost in sick leave.[82]

Health benefits for humans

Small dog laying between the hands
A human cuddles a Doberman puppy.
A growing body of research indicates the companionship of a dog can enhance human physical health and psychological wellbeing.[83] Dog and cat owners have been shown to have better mental and physical health than nonowners, making fewer visits to the doctor and being less likely to be on medication than nonowners.[84] In one study, new pet owners reported a highly significant reduction in minor health problems during the first month following pet acquisition, and this effect was sustained in dog owners through to the end of the study. In addition, dog owners took considerably more physical exercise than cat owners and people without pets. The group without pets exhibited no statistically significant changes in health or behaviour. The results provide evidence that pet acquisition may have positive effects on human health and behaviour, and that for dog owners these effects are relatively long term.[85] Pet ownership has also been associated with increased coronary artery disease survival, with dog owners being significantly less likely to die within one year of an acute myocardial infarction than those who did not own dogs.[86]
The health benefits of dogs can result from contact with dogs, not just from dog ownership. For example, when in the presence of a pet dog, people show reductions in cardiovascular, behavioral, and psychological indicators of anxiety.[87] The benefits of contact with a dog also include social support, as dogs are able to not only provide companionship and social support themselves, but also to act as facilitators of social interactions between humans.[88] One study indicated that wheelchair users experience more positive social interactions with strangers when they are accompanied by a dog than when they are not.[89]
The practice of using dogs and other animals as a part of therapy dates back to the late 18th century, when animals were introduced into mental institutions to help socialize patients with mental disorders.[90] Animal-assisted intervention research has shown that animal-assisted therapy with a dog can increase a person with Alzheimer’s disease’s social behaviours, such as smiling and laughing.[91] One study demonstrated that children with ADHD and conduct disorders who participated in an education program with dogs and other animals showed increased attendance, increased knowledge and skill objectives, and decreased antisocial and violent behavior compared to those who were not in an animal-assisted program.[92]

Shelters

Every year, between 6 and 8 million dogs and cats enter US animal shelters.[93] The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) estimates that approximately 3 to 4 million dogs and cats are euthanized yearly in shelters across the United States.[94] However, the percentage of dogs in US animal shelters that are eventually adopted and removed from the shelters by their new owners has increased since the mid 1990s from around 25% up to around 60–75% in the mid first decade of the 21st century.[95]
Pets entering the shelters are euthanized in countries all over the world because of the lack of financial provisions to take care of these animals. Most shelters complain of not having enough resources to feed the pets and by being constrained to kill them, as the likelihood for all of them to find an owner is very small. In poor countries, euthanasia is usually violent.

Biology

Domestic dogs have been selectively bred for millennia for various behaviors, sensory capabilities, and physical attributes.[3] Modern dog breeds show more variation in size, appearance, and behavior than any other domestic animal. Nevertheless, their morphology is based on that of their wild ancestors, gray wolves.[3] Dogs are predators and scavengers, and like many other predatory mammals, the dog has powerful muscles, fused wrist bones, a cardiovascular system that supports both sprinting and endurance, and teeth for catching and tearing. Dogs are highly variable in height and weight. The smallest known adult dog was a Yorkshire Terrier, that stood only 6.3 centimetres (2.5 in) at the shoulder, 9.5 cm (3.7 in) in length along the head-and-body, and weighed only 113 grams (4.0 oz). The largest known dog was an English Mastiff which weighed 155.6 kilograms (343 lb) and was 250 cm (98 in) from the snout to the tail.[96] The tallest dog is a Great Dane that stands 106.7 cm (42.0 in) at the shoulder.[97]

Senses

Vision

Like most mammals, dogs are dichromats and have color vision equivalent to red-green color blindness in humans (deuteranopia).[98][99][100][101] Dogs are less sensitive to differences in grey shades than humans and also can detect brightness at about half the accuracy of humans.[102]
The dog's visual system has evolved to aid proficient hunting.[98] While a dog's visual acuity is poor (that of a poodle's has been estimated to translate to a Snellen rating of 20/75[98]), their visual discrimination for moving objects is very high; dogs have been shown to be able to discriminate between humans (e.g., identifying their owner) at a range of between 800 and 900 m, however this range decreases to 500–600 m if the object is stationary.[98] Dogs have a temporal resolution of between 60 and 70 Hz, which explains why many dogs struggle to watch television, as most such modern screens are optimized for humans at 50–60 Hz.[102] Dogs can detect a change in movement that exists in a single diopter of space within their eye. Humans, by comparison, require a change of between 10 and 20 diopters to detect movement.[103][104]
As crepuscular hunters, dogs often rely on their vision in low light situations: They have very large pupils, a high density of rods in the fovea, an increased flicker rate, and a tapetum lucidum.[98] The tapetum is a reflective surface behind the retina that reflects light to give the photoreceptors a second chance to catch the photons. There is also a relationship between body size and overall diameter of the eye. A range of 9.5 and 11.6 mm can be found between various breeds of dogs. This 20% variance can be substantial and is associated as an adaptation toward superior night vision.[105]
The eyes of different breeds of dogs have different shapes, dimensions, and retina configurations.[106] Many long-nosed breeds have a "visual streak" – a wide foveal region that runs across the width of the retina and gives them a very wide field of excellent vision. Some long-muzzled breeds, in particular, the sighthounds, have a field of vision up to 270° (compared to 180° for humans). Short-nosed breeds, on the other hand, have an "area centralis": a central patch with up to three times the density of nerve endings as the visual streak, giving them detailed sight much more like a human's. Some broad-headed breeds with short noses have a field of vision similar to that of humans.[99][100] Most breeds have good vision, but some show a genetic predisposition for myopia – such as Rottweilers, with which one out of every two has been found to be myopic.[98] Dogs also have a greater divergence of the eye axis than humans, enabling them to rotate their pupils farther in any direction. The divergence of the eye axis of dogs ranges from 12-25° depending on the breed.[103]
Experimentation has proven that dogs can distinguish between complex visual images such as that of a cube or a prism. Dogs also show attraction to static visual images such as the silhouette of a dog on a screen, their own reflections, or videos of dogs; however, their interest declines sharply once they are unable to make social contact with the image.[107]

Hearing

The frequency range of dog hearing is approximately 40 Hz to 60,000 Hz,[108] which means that dogs can detect sounds far beyond the upper limit of the human auditory spectrum.[100][108][109] In addition, dogs have ear mobility, which allows them to rapidly pinpoint the exact location of a sound.[110] Eighteen or more muscles can tilt, rotate, raise, or lower a dog's ear. A dog can identify a sound's location much faster than a human can, as well as hear sounds at four times the distance.[110]

Smell


The wet, textured nose of a dog
While the human brain is dominated by a large visual cortex, the dog brain is dominated by an olfactory cortex.[98] The olfactory bulb in dogs is roughly forty times bigger than the olfactory bulb in humans, relative to total brain size, with 125 to 220 million smell-sensitive receptors.[98] The bloodhound exceeds this standard with nearly 300 million receptors.[98] Subsequently, it has been estimated that dogs, in general, have an olfactory sense ranging from one hundred thousand to one million times more sensitive than a human's. In some dog breeds, such as bloodhounds, the olfactory sense may be up to 100 million times greater than a human's.[111] The wet nose is essential for determining the direction of the air current containing the smell. Cold receptors in the skin are sensitive to the cooling of the skin by evaporation of the moisture by air currents.[112]

Physical characteristics

Coat


A heavy winter coat with countershading in a mixed-breed dog
The coats of domestic dogs are of two varieties: "double" being common with dogs (as well as wolves) originating from colder climates, made up of a coarse guard hair and a soft down hair, or "single", with the topcoat only.
Domestic dogs often display the remnants of countershading, a common natural camouflage pattern. A countershaded animal will have dark coloring on its upper surfaces and light coloring below,[113] which reduces its general visibility. Thus, many breeds will have an occasional "blaze", stripe, or "star" of white fur on their chest or underside.[114]

Tail

There are many different shapes for dog tails: straight, straight up, sickle, curled, or cork-screw. As with many canids, one of the primary functions of a dog's tail is to communicate their emotional state, which can be important in getting along with others. In some hunting dogs, however, the tail is traditionally docked to avoid injuries.[115] In some breeds, puppies can be born with a short tail or no tail at all.[116]

Types and breeds


Cavalier King Charles Spaniels demonstrate with-breed variation.
While all dogs are genetically very similar,[6] natural selection and selective breeding have reinforced certain characteristics in certain populations of dogs, giving rise to dog types and dog breeds. Dog types are broad categories based on function, genetics, or characteristics.[117] Dog breeds are groups of animals that possess a set of inherited characteristics that distinguishes them from other animals within the same species. Modern dog breeds are non-scientific classifications of dogs kept by modern kennel clubs. Purebred dogs of one breed are genetically distinguishable from purebred dogs of other breeds,[38] but the means by which kennel clubs classify dogs is unsystematic. Systematic analyses of the dog genome has revealed only four major types of dogs that can be said to be statistically distinct.[38] These include the "old world dogs" (e.g., Malamute and Shar Pei), "Mastiff"-type (e.g., English Mastiff), "herding"-type (e.g., Border Collie), and "all others" (also called "modern"- or "hunting"-type).[38][118]

Health

Dogs are susceptible to various diseases, ailments, and poisons, some of which can affect humans. To defend against many common diseases, dogs are often vaccinated.

A mixed-breed dog
Some breeds of dogs are prone to certain genetic ailments such as elbow or hip dysplasia, blindness, deafness, pulmonic stenosis, cleft palate, and trick knees. Two serious medical conditions particularly affecting dogs are pyometra, affecting unspayed females of all types and ages, and bloat, which affects the larger breeds or deep-chested dogs. Both of these are acute conditions, and can kill rapidly. Dogs are also susceptible to parasites such as fleas, ticks, and mites, as well as hookworm, tapeworm, roundworm, and heartworm.
Dogs are highly susceptible to theobromine poisoning, typically from ingestion of chocolate. Theobromine is toxic to dogs because, although the dog's metabolism is capable of breaking down the chemical, the process is so slow that even small amounts of chocolate can be fatal, especially dark chocolate.
Dogs are also vulnerable to some of the same health conditions as humans, including diabetes, dental and heart disease, epilepsy, cancer, hypothyroidism, and arthritis.[119]

Mortality

The typical lifespan of dogs varies widely among breeds, but for most the median longevity, the age at which half the dogs in a population have died and half are still alive, ranges from 10 to 13 years.[120][121][122][123] Individual dogs may live well beyond the median of their breed.
The breed with the shortest lifespan (among breeds for which there is a questionnaire survey with a reasonable sample size) is the Dogue de Bordeaux, with a median longevity of about 5.2 years, but several breeds, including Miniature Bull Terriers, Bloodhounds, and Irish Wolfhounds are nearly as short-lived, with median longevities of 6 to 7 years.[123]
The longest-lived breeds, including Toy Poodles, Japanese Spitz, Border Terriers, and Tibetan Spaniels, have median longevities of 14 to 15 years.[123] The median longevity of mixed-breed dogs, taken as an average of all sizes, is one or more years longer than that of purebred dogs when all breeds are averaged.[121][122][123][124] The dog widely reported to be the longest-lived is "Bluey," who died in 1939 and was claimed to be 29.5 years old at the time of his death; however, the Bluey record is anecdotal and unverified.[125] On December 5, 2011, Pusuke, the world's oldest living dog recognized by Guinness Book of World Records, died aged 26 years and 9 months.[126]

Predation

Although wild dogs, like wolves, are apex predators, they can be killed in territory disputes with wild animals.[127] Furthermore, in areas where both dogs and other large predators live, dogs can be a major food source for big cats or canines. Reports from Croatia indicate wolves kill more dogs more frequently than they kill sheep. Wolves in Russia apparently limit feral dog populations. In Wisconsin, more compensation has been paid for dog losses than livestock.[127] Some wolf pairs have been reported to prey on dogs by having one wolf lure the dog out into heavy brush where the second animal waits in ambush.[128] In some instances, wolves have displayed an uncharacteristic fearlessness of humans and buildings when attacking dogs, to the extent that they have to be beaten off or killed.[129] Coyotes and big cats have also been known to attack dogs. Leopards in particular are known to have a predilection for dogs, and have been recorded to kill and consume them regardless of the dog's size or ferocity.[130] Tigers in Manchuria, Indochina, Indonesia, and Malaysia, are reputed to kill dogs with the same vigor as leopards.[131] Striped Hyenas are major predators of village dogs in Turkmenistan, India, and the Caucasus.[132] Reptiles such as alligators and pythons have been known to kill and eat dogs.

Diet


Golden Retriever gnawing a pig's foot
Despite their descent from wolves and classification as Carnivora, dogs are variously described in scholarly and other writings as carnivores[133][134] or omnivores.[3][135][136][137] Unlike obligate carnivores, such as the cat family with its shorter small intestine, dogs can adapt to a wide-ranging diet, and are not dependent on meat-specific protein nor a very high level of protein in order to fulfill their basic dietary requirements. Dogs will healthily digest a variety of foods, including vegetables and grains, and can consume a large proportion of these in their diet.[3]
A number of common human foods and household ingestibles are toxic to dogs, including chocolate solids (theobromine poisoning), onion and garlic (thiosulphate, sulfoxide or disulfide poisoning),[138] grapes and raisins, macadamia nuts, as well as various plants and other potentially ingested materials.[139][140]

Reproduction


Two dogs copulating on a beach
In domestic dogs, sexual maturity begins to happen around age six to twelve months for both males and females,[3][141] although this can be delayed until up to two years old for some large breeds. This is the time at which female dogs will have their first estrous cycle. They will experience subsequent estrous cycles biannually, during which the body prepares for pregnancy. At the peak of the cycle, females will come into estrus, being mentally and physically receptive to copulation.[3] Because the ova survive and are capable of being fertilized for a week after ovulation, it is possible for a female to mate with more than one male.[3]
Dogs bear their litters roughly 56 to 72 days after fertilization,[3][142] with an average of 63 days, although the length of gestation can vary. An average litter consists of about six puppies,[143] though this number may vary widely based on the breed of dog. In general, toy dogs produce from one to four puppies in each litter, while much larger breeds may average as many as twelve.
Some dog breeds have acquired traits through selective breeding that interfere with reproduction. Male French Bulldogs, for instance, are incapable of mounting the female. For many dogs of this breed, the female must be artificially inseminated in order to reproduce.[144]

Neutering


A feral dog from Sri Lanka nursing her four puppies
Neutering refers to the sterilization of animals, usually by removal of the male's testicles or the female's ovaries and uterus, in order to eliminate the ability to procreate and reduce sex drive. Because of the overpopulation of dogs in some countries, many animal control agencies, such as the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), advise that dogs not intended for further breeding should be neutered, so that they do not have undesired puppies that may have to later be euthanized.[145]
According to the Humane Society of the United States, 3–4 million dogs and cats are put down each year in the United States and many more are confined to cages in shelters because there are many more animals than there are homes. Spaying or castrating dogs helps keep overpopulation down.[146] Local humane societies, SPCAs, and other animal protection organizations urge people to neuter their pets and to adopt animals from shelters instead of purchasing them.
Neutering reduces problems caused by hypersexuality, especially in male dogs.[147] Spayed female dogs are less likely to develop some forms of cancer, affecting mammary glands, ovaries, and other reproductive organs.[148] However, neutering increases the risk of urinary incontinence in female dogs,[149] and prostate cancer in males,[150] as well as osteosarcoma, hemangiosarcoma, cruciate ligament rupture, obesity, and diabetes mellitus in either gender.[151]

Intelligence and behavior

Intelligence


The Border Collie is considered to be one of the most intelligent breeds.
The domestic dog has a predisposition to exhibit a social intelligence that is uncommon in the animal world.[98] Dogs are capable of learning in a number of ways, such as through simple reinforcement (e.g., classical or operant conditioning) and by observation.[98]
Dogs go through a series of stages of cognitive development. As with humans, the understanding that objects not being actively perceived still remain in existence (called object permanence) is not present at birth. It develops as the young dog learns to interact intentionally with objects around it, at roughly 8 weeks of age.[98]
Puppies learn behaviors quickly by following examples set by experienced dogs.[98] This form of intelligence is not peculiar to those tasks dogs have been bred to perform, but can be generalized to myriad abstract problems. For example, Dachshund puppies that watched an experienced dog pull a cart by tugging on an attached piece of ribbon in order to get a reward from inside the cart learned the task fifteen times faster than those left to solve the problem on their own.[98][152] Dogs can also learn by mimicking human behaviors. In one study, puppies were presented with a box, and shown that, when a handler pressed a lever, a ball would roll out of the box. The handler then allowed the puppy to play with the ball, making it an intrinsic reward. The pups were then allowed to interact with the box. Roughly three-quarters of the puppies subsequently touched the lever, and over half successfully released the ball, compared to only 6% in a control group that did not watch the human manipulate the lever.[153] Another study found that handing an object between experimenters who then used the object's name in a sentence successfully taught an observing dog each object's name, allowing the dog to subsequently retrieve the item.[154]
Dogs also demonstrate sophisticated social cognition by associating behavioral cues with abstract meanings.[98] One such class of social cognition involves the understanding that others are conscious agents. Research has shown that dogs are capable of interpreting subtle social cues, and appear to recognize when a human or dog's attention is focused on them. To test this, researchers devised a task in which a reward was hidden underneath one of two buckets. The experimenter then attempted to communicate with the dog to indicate the location of the reward by using a wide range of signals: tapping the bucket, pointing to the bucket, nodding to the bucket, or simply looking at the bucket.[155] The results showed that domestic dogs were better than chimpanzees, wolves, and human infants at this task, and even young puppies with limited exposure to humans performed well.[98]
Psychology research has shown that human faces are asymmetrical with the gaze instinctively moving to the right side of a face upon encountering other humans to obtain information about their emotions and state. Research at the University of Lincoln (2008) shows that dogs share this instinct when meeting a human being, and only when meeting a human being (i.e., not other animals or other dogs). As such they are the only non-primate species known to do so.[156][157]
Stanley Coren, an expert on dog psychology, states that these results demonstrated the social cognition of dogs can exceed that of even our closest genetic relatives, and that this capacity is a recent genetic acquisition that distinguishes the dog from its ancestor, the wolf.[98] Studies have also investigated whether dogs engaged in partnered play change their behavior depending on the attention-state of their partner.[158] Those studies showed that play signals were only sent when the dog was holding the attention of its partner. If the partner was distracted, the dog instead engaged in attention-getting behavior before sending a play signal.[158]
Coren has also argued that dogs demonstrate a sophisticated theory of mind by engaging in deception, which he supports with a number of anecdotes, including one example wherein a dog hid a stolen treat by sitting on it until the rightful owner of the treat left the room.[98] Although this could have been accidental, Coren suggests that the thief understood that the treat's owner would be unable to find the treat if it were out of view. Together, the empirical data and anecdotal evidence points to dogs possessing at least a limited form of theory of mind.[98][158]
A study found a third of dogs suffered from anxiety when separated from others.[159]
A Border Collie named Chaser has learned the names for 1,022 toys after three years of training, so many that her trainers have had to mark the names of the objects lest they forget themselves. This is higher than Rico, another border collie who could remember at least 200 objects.[160]

Behavior

Although dogs have been the subject of a great deal of behaviorist psychology (e.g. Pavlov's dog), they do not enter the world with a psychological "blank slate".[98] Rather, dog behavior is affected by genetic factors as well as environmental factors.[98] Domestic dogs exhibit a number of behaviors and predispositions that were inherited from wolves.[98] The Gray Wolf is a social animal that has evolved a sophisticated means of communication and social structure. The domestic dog has inherited some of these predispositions, but many of the salient characteristics in dog behavior have been largely shaped by selective breeding by humans. Thus some of these characteristics, such as the dog's highly developed social cognition, are found only in primitive forms in grey wolves.[155]
The existence and nature of personality traits in dogs have been studied (15329 dogs of 164 different breeds) and five consistent and stable "narrow traits" identified, described as playfulness, curiosity/fearlessness, chase-proneness, sociability and aggressiveness. A further higher order axis for shyness–boldness was also identified.[161][162]

Sleep

The average sleep time of a dog is said to be 10.1 hours per day.[163] Like humans, dogs have two main types of sleep: Slow-wave sleep, then Rapid Eye Movement sleep, the state in which dreams occur.[164]

Dog growl

A new study in Budapest, Hungary has found that dogs are able to tell how big another dog is just by listening to its growl. A specific growl is used by dogs to protect their food. The research also shows that dogs do not lie about their size, and this is the first time research has shown animals can determine another’s size by the sound it makes. The test used image of many kind of dogs and together showed a small and big dog and also a growl. The result, showed that 20 of the 24 test dogs looked at the image of the appropriate-sized dog first and looked at it longest.[165]

Differences from wolves


Some dogs, like this Tamaskan, look very much like wolves.

Physical characteristics

Compared to equally sized wolves, dogs tend to have 20% smaller skulls, 30% smaller brains,[166] as well as proportionately smaller teeth than other canid species.[167] Dogs require fewer calories to function than wolves. It is thought by certain experts that the dog's limp ears are a result of atrophy of the jaw muscles.[167] The skin of domestic dogs tends to be thicker than that of wolves, with some Inuit tribes favoring the former for use as clothing due to its greater resistance to wear and tear in harsh weather.[167]

Behavior


A Golden Retriever at 12 years old
Dogs tend to be poorer than wolves at observational learning, being more responsive to instrumental conditioning.[167] Feral dogs show little of the complex social structure or dominance hierarchy present in wolf packs. For example, unlike wolves, the dominant alpha pairs of a feral dog pack do not force the other members to wait for their turn on a meal when scavenging off a dead ungulate as the whole family is free to join in. For dogs, other members of their kind are of no help in locating food items, and are more like competitors.[167] Feral dogs are primarily scavengers, with studies showing that unlike their wild cousins, they are poor ungulate hunters, having little impact on wildlife populations where they are sympatric. However, feral dogs have been reported to be effective hunters of reptiles in the Galápagos Islands,[168] and free ranging pet dogs are more prone to predatory behavior toward wild animals.
Domestic dogs can be monogamous.[169] Breeding in feral packs can be, but does not have to be restricted to a dominant alpha pair (such things also occur in wolf packs).[170] Male dogs are unusual among canids by the fact that they mostly seem to play no role in raising their puppies, and do not kill the young of other females to increase their own reproductive success.[168] Some sources say that dogs differ from wolves and most other large canid species by the fact that they do not regurgitate food for their young, nor the young of other dogs in the same territory.[167]
A dog displaying mastery of the command "sit"
An Australian Shepherd-Beagle mix displaying mastery of the "sit" command
However, this difference was not observed in all domestic dogs. Regurgitating of food by the females for the young as well as care for the young by the males has been observed in domestic dogs, dingos as well as in other feral or semi-feral dogs. Regurgitating of food by the females and direct choosing of only one mate has been observed even in those semi-feral dogs of direct domestic dog ancestry. Also regurgitating of food by males has been observed in free-ranging domestic dogs.[169][171]

Trainability

Labrador barking on command.theora.ogv
This Labrador Retriever has been trained to woof and bark on command.
Dogs display much greater tractability than tame wolves, and are, in general, much more responsive to coercive techniques involving fear, aversive stimuli, and force than wolves, which are most responsive toward positive conditioning and rewards.[172] Unlike tame wolves, dogs tend to respond more to voice than hand signals.[173]

Mythology

In mythology, dogs often serve as pets or as watchdogs.[174]
In Greek mythology, Cerberus is a three-headed watchdog who guards the gates of Hades.[174] In Norse mythology, a bloody, four-eyed dog called Garmr guards Helheim.[174] In Persian mythology, two four-eyed dogs guard the Chinvat Bridge.[174] In Philippine mythology, Kimat who is the pet of Tadaklan, god of thunder, is responsible for lightning. In Welsh mythology, Annwn is guarded by Cŵn Annwn[174]
In Judaism and Islam, dogs are viewed as unclean scavengers.[174] In Christianity, dogs represent faithfulness.[174] In Asian countries such as China, Korea, and Japan, dogs are viewed as kind protectors.[174]

Gallery of dogs in art

Ancient Greek black-figure pottery depicting the return of a hunter and his dog. Made in Athens between 550–530 BC, found in Rhodes.  
Riders and dogs. Ancient Greek Attic black-figure hydria, ca. 510–500 BC, from Vulci. Louvre Museum, Paris.  
This Roman mosaic shows a large dog with a collar hunting a lion.  
William McElcheran's Cross Section-dogs Dundas (TTC) Toronto  
Detail of The Imperial Prince and his dog Nero by Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux 1865 Marble. Photographed at the Musée d'Orsay.  
A woodcut illustration from The history of four-footed beasts and serpents by Edward Topsell, 1658  

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