Now THIS is interesting
May. 26th, 2011 12:09 amFrom the March 2011 National Geographic.
Taming the Wild
While the foxes showing the same domesticated phenotype we see in dogs, horses, cows, and other domesticated animals is VERY interesting, what caught my eye is the changes in gene complex WBSCR17. Which, when deleted in humans, triggers Williams Syndrome - what LCN was studying at Salk Institute when I was that lab's sysadmin.
Taming the Wild
Mavrik, the object of Trut's attention, is about the size of a Shetland sheepdog, with chestnut orange fur and a white bib down his front. He plays his designated role in turn: wagging his tail, rolling on his back, panting eagerly in anticipation of attention. In adjacent cages lining either side of the narrow, open-sided shed, dozens of canids do the same, yelping and clamoring in an explosion of fur and unbridled excitement. "As you can see," Trut says above the din, "all of them want human contact." Today, however, Mavrik is the lucky recipient. Trut reaches in and scoops him up, then hands him over to me. Cradled in my arms, gently jawing my hand in his mouth, he's as docile as any lapdog.
Except that Mavrik, as it happens, is not a dog at all. He's a fox. Hidden away on this overgrown property, flanked by birch forests and barred by a rusty metal gate, he and several hundred of his relatives are the only population of domesticated silver foxes in the world. (Most of them are, indeed, silver or dark gray; Mavrik is rare in his chestnut fur.) And by "domesticated" I don't mean captured and tamed, or raised by humans and conditioned by food to tolerate the occasional petting. I mean bred for domestication, as tame as your tabby cat or your Labrador. In fact, says Anna Kukekova, a Cornell researcher who studies the foxes, "they remind me a lot of golden retrievers, who are basically not aware that there are good people, bad people, people that they have met before, and those they haven't." These foxes treat any human as a potential companion, a behavior that is the product of arguably the most extraordinary breeding experiment ever conducted.
While the foxes showing the same domesticated phenotype we see in dogs, horses, cows, and other domesticated animals is VERY interesting, what caught my eye is the changes in gene complex WBSCR17. Which, when deleted in humans, triggers Williams Syndrome - what LCN was studying at Salk Institute when I was that lab's sysadmin.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-26 03:52 pm (UTC)