Morphology does not covary with predicted behavioral correlations of the domestication syndrome in dogs

Abstract Domesticated animals display suites of altered morphological, behavioral, and physiological traits compared to their wild ancestors, a phenomenon known as the domestication syndrome (DS). Because these alterations are observed to co‐occur across a wide range of present day domesticates, the...

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Main Authors: Christina Hansen Wheat, Wouter vander Bijl, Christopher W. Wheat
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-06-01
Series:Evolution Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/evl3.168
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spelling doaj-8cd7838a86524260a5a7b642905a34bd2020-11-25T03:08:44ZengWileyEvolution Letters2056-37442020-06-014318919910.1002/evl3.168Morphology does not covary with predicted behavioral correlations of the domestication syndrome in dogsChristina Hansen Wheat0Wouter vander Bijl1Christopher W. Wheat2Department of Zoology Stockholm University Stockholm SE‐10961 SwedenDepartment of Zoology Stockholm University Stockholm SE‐10961 SwedenDepartment of Zoology Stockholm University Stockholm SE‐10961 SwedenAbstract Domesticated animals display suites of altered morphological, behavioral, and physiological traits compared to their wild ancestors, a phenomenon known as the domestication syndrome (DS). Because these alterations are observed to co‐occur across a wide range of present day domesticates, the traits within the DS are assumed to covary within species and a single developmental mechanism has been hypothesized to cause the observed co‐occurrence. However, due to the lack of formal testing it is currently not well‐resolved if the traits within DS actually covary. Here, we test the hypothesis that the presence of the classic morphological domestication traits white pigmentation, floppy ears, and curly tails predict the strength of behavioral correlations in support of the DS in 78 dog breeds. Contrary to the expectations of covariation among DS traits, we found that morphological traits did not covary among themselves, nor did they predict the strength of behavioral correlations among dog breeds. Further, the number of morphological traits in a breed did not predict the strength of behavioral correlations. Our results thus contrast with the hypothesis that the DS arises due to a shared underlying mechanism, but more importantly, questions if the morphological traits embedded in the DS are actual domestication traits or postdomestication improvement traits. For dogs, it seems highly likely that strong selection for breed specific morphological traits only happened recently and in relation to breed formation. Present day dogs therefore have limited bearing of the initial selection pressures applied during domestication and we should reevaluate our expectations of the DS accordingly.https://doi.org/10.1002/evl3.168Behaviordomesticationmorphological evolution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christina Hansen Wheat
Wouter vander Bijl
Christopher W. Wheat
spellingShingle Christina Hansen Wheat
Wouter vander Bijl
Christopher W. Wheat
Morphology does not covary with predicted behavioral correlations of the domestication syndrome in dogs
Evolution Letters
Behavior
domestication
morphological evolution
author_facet Christina Hansen Wheat
Wouter vander Bijl
Christopher W. Wheat
author_sort Christina Hansen Wheat
title Morphology does not covary with predicted behavioral correlations of the domestication syndrome in dogs
title_short Morphology does not covary with predicted behavioral correlations of the domestication syndrome in dogs
title_full Morphology does not covary with predicted behavioral correlations of the domestication syndrome in dogs
title_fullStr Morphology does not covary with predicted behavioral correlations of the domestication syndrome in dogs
title_full_unstemmed Morphology does not covary with predicted behavioral correlations of the domestication syndrome in dogs
title_sort morphology does not covary with predicted behavioral correlations of the domestication syndrome in dogs
publisher Wiley
series Evolution Letters
issn 2056-3744
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Domesticated animals display suites of altered morphological, behavioral, and physiological traits compared to their wild ancestors, a phenomenon known as the domestication syndrome (DS). Because these alterations are observed to co‐occur across a wide range of present day domesticates, the traits within the DS are assumed to covary within species and a single developmental mechanism has been hypothesized to cause the observed co‐occurrence. However, due to the lack of formal testing it is currently not well‐resolved if the traits within DS actually covary. Here, we test the hypothesis that the presence of the classic morphological domestication traits white pigmentation, floppy ears, and curly tails predict the strength of behavioral correlations in support of the DS in 78 dog breeds. Contrary to the expectations of covariation among DS traits, we found that morphological traits did not covary among themselves, nor did they predict the strength of behavioral correlations among dog breeds. Further, the number of morphological traits in a breed did not predict the strength of behavioral correlations. Our results thus contrast with the hypothesis that the DS arises due to a shared underlying mechanism, but more importantly, questions if the morphological traits embedded in the DS are actual domestication traits or postdomestication improvement traits. For dogs, it seems highly likely that strong selection for breed specific morphological traits only happened recently and in relation to breed formation. Present day dogs therefore have limited bearing of the initial selection pressures applied during domestication and we should reevaluate our expectations of the DS accordingly.
topic Behavior
domestication
morphological evolution
url https://doi.org/10.1002/evl3.168
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