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Coyotes-Wolves-Cougars.blogspot.com

Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

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Thursday, April 14, 2011

As the Senate, Congress and President have all now signed off on the budget bill that delists Wolves in the Northern Rockies from Endangered Species consideration into the forever, I thought it appropriate to publish Robert McGhee's tomb aptly titled: "TO BE TRULY HUMAN IS TO BE PARTLY WOLF"---ironic that we destroy the wolves that made us "truly human"......................I think that McGhee's article should be required reading for every citizen in the World.................and especially our Lawmakers in D.C. and in every one of our 50 State Houses

Co-Evolution: New Evidence Suggests
That To Be Truly Human Is To Be Partly Wolf
McGhee, Robert
2002
A recent advance in scientific techniques
has provided an unexpected insight into
our ancient past, and a suggestion that
our human heritage may not be totally
 derived from our primate ancestors.
Newly developed techniques of DNA analysis
 are helpful not only for solving crimes and
 learning about diseases, but also for
 assessing the genetic relationships
between various species, and tracing
their evolution from common ancestors.
 Most of this work has been based on
 comparisons of mitochondrial DNA, a
specific form of genetic material that is
inherited solely or largely from the mother.
Mutations leave a tell-tale signature in the
 descendants of the female in which the
 mutation originally occurred. When a similar
 mutation is found in two species, it can be
assumed that they descended from a common
ancestor, and by making assumptions about the
rate of such mutations, researchers can also
estimate how long it has been since the two
species split off from their common ancestor.
It was on the basis of such an analysis that
Carles Vila and colleagues of the University
of California at Los Angeles reported in 1997
 that all domestic dogs were descended from
 the wolf, rather than from coyotes or other wild
canids, as had been suggested for some breeds
 of dogs. In an article in the prestigious journal
 Science, they also calculated that the amount
of genetic change in dogs indicated they had
 separated from wild wolves as much as 135,000
 years ago. The biological separation of dogs from
wolves is almost certainly associated with the
domestication of dogs by humans.

 Canadian zoologist Susan Crockford views the
 process of domestication no tas one of the simple
 capture and taming of wild animals,
but one that involved a complex set of biological
 and behavioura lchanges based in hormone
 physiology, which accompanied the association
 of dogs with human groups. It was this process
 that created the new species Canis familiaris.
Until the report of Vila, et al., archaeologists had been able to
 trace the domestication of dogs back only about 14,000 years,
to the period immediately after the end of the last Ice Age and just
 before the invention of agriculture. Their evidence was not from the
 distinctive forms of skeleton that characterize the great variety of
 modern dogs, but from the deliberate burial of canids.
In both Eurasia and North America, archaeologists encountered
 instances of dogs that had been buried beneath the floors of huts
or tent-camps, curled in sleeping postures, and covered with the
red ochre that people of the time used in human burials, or in some
cases interred directly with humans. These buried canids were
 obviously not hunted prey, but family friends whose continued
 presence was desired.
The people who buried these dogs 14,000 years ago were, biologically
and culturally, fully modern humans. Within a few thousand years they
would be domesticating sheep and cattle, learning to cultivate wheat,
 rice and maize, and laying the foundations for the great cities of the
ancient world. The fact that they shared their camps with dogs is not
a surprise. In return for butchering-scraps, these animals would have
provided invaluable help in the hunt, as well as serving as camp sentinels
 and even protectors. In Siberia they were soon pulling sleds, and elsewhere
 must have carried the packs of their nomadic owners.
But an altogether different picture emerges if the DNA evidence is correct
 and dogs were domesticated in much more ancient times. It would be
difficult to argue that the people of 135,000 years ago were fully human.
 At that time, our small-brained and low-browed predecessors known as
Homo erectus had barely evolved into various archaic forms of Homo sapiens.
 Some of these resembled the Neanderthals beloved of cartoonists, although
soon a more modern-looking form would begin to appear in parts of Africa.
All of these early humans seem to have been effective hunters and scavengers,
 had control of fire, and possessed enough skill in sewing clothing and building
shelters to allow them to live in relatively cold climates. They carved crude tools
 from wood, bone and antler, using chipped-stone knives and scrapers. But there
is little evidence of further accomplishment....There is even a question about
whether these early humans possessed an effective language, or whether they
needed one. The archaeological remains show that groups were small and mobile,
 probably organized in a way which was not much more socially complex than a
chimpanzee band.
If the DNA evidence is correct, it is creatures such as these that domesticated
the wolf and turned it into a dog. People may have stolen wolf pups from their
dens to play with or just to keep for the enjoyment of watching them. Like the
young animals that are brought home as toys by tribal hunting peoples today,
most of these pups probably had short lives. As Susan Crockford argues, some
 may have possessed the hormonal characteristics that produced dog-like
behaviour and would have adapted to life in a human camp. Those that survived
to adulthood and produced pups of their own may have been the first ancestors
of the dogs, which have lived with humans ever since.
This was a new development in biology and history. For the first time, hunting
 parties and camp groups composed of two distinct species began to spread
 across the landscapes of the world. It makes little sense to think of this process
 as one in which early humans ''domesticated'' the wolf. Aside from the human
 use of simple tools, there was probably little difference in the complexity of
hunting patterns or social organization between early human bands and wolf
 packs. If humans domesticated the wolf, is it not equally probable that wolves
domesticated humans? Were the changes that developed between wolf and
dog any more significant than those that occurred to early humans through
their constant association with canids?
In a recent article in the magazine Discovering Archaeology, biologist Wolfgang
Schleidt notes the apparent temporal coincidence between the emergence of
 humankind and of dogkind, and suggests that, ''This intertwining process of
hominization and caninisation suggests co-evolution.'' Schleidt proposes a
 specific scenario, involving humans emulating wolves and eventually co-opting
wolves in hunting the migratory reindeer of Ice Age Eurasia. Yet a much broader
view of the interactions between humans and wolves, and the results of these
interactions, might be envisaged.
In comparing ourselves with other animals, we think of intelligence, self-awareness,
the ability to conceive new ideas and foresee long-term consequences as traits
that are uniquely human. In the animal world these traits are most clearly
mirrored by the great apes, and in a lesser way by our other primate relatives.
 But are all the characteristics that we think of as making us human inherited
only from our primate ancestry? What about qualities such as patience,
endurance, unthinking loyalty, co-operation, devotion to family and social
group? What of our abilities to organize co-operative activities based on a
 finely tuned sense of social hierarchy and mutual responsibilities?
Wolves seem to do these things significantly better than humans, and at
 least as well as most non-human primates. The biologists who have made
their life-work the study of wolves describe an animal that lives in a world of
complex social hierarchies, with well-organized co-operative work patterns,
 finely tuned communication skills, and outbreaks of spontaneous joy.
Together with their superior ability to scent prey, to run more swiftly and
 endure longer than humans, these social qualities are the basis of their
successful adaptation as hunters. And these are also qualities that would
have been useful in the environment that saw our early ancestors turn into
 true humans.
Given the situation of hunting bands composed of early humans and
their wolf-dog companions, animals with complementary character
and abilities, can we be sure that the process of domestication acted
in only one direction? The DNA evidence suggests that these animals
 lived and worked together for some 5000 human generations before the
 emergence of societies and cultures that we can describe as fully human.
 In the course of these generations. wolves were transformed into dogs,
 but did their dogs also transform ancient people into humans? Would
archaic humans have developed into such a successful and dominant
species if we had not had the opportunity to learn from, imitate and
absorb into our cultures the traits and abilities of the wolves with
whom we lived?
Hints of our unacknowledged debt to wolves may perhaps be found
 in the cultural memories of human societies....Romulus, Remus
and a continuing series of feral children are said to have been raised
 by wolves. These children are never saved and nurtured by bears
or tigers, badgers or wolverines, but always by wolves. Do we assign
this role to wolves as a vague recollection of our special and ancient
relationship with the species, or perhaps through recognition of our
common links through the dog?
If so, how do we explain the fear and loathing that seem to be the
central emotions that most human societies generate toward the wolf?
 Biologists assure us that, despite the tales of slavering packs pursuing
hapless troika-drivers across the Russian steppe, or of Canadian pioneers
passing winter nights in trees surrounded by leaping and snarling wolves,
 wolf attacks on humans are extremely rare. Bears and large cats do kill
people regularly; coyotes and cougars and feral dogs kill many more
 livestock than do wolves; yet it is the wolf that attracts our hatred and
 our fear. Can we see in this another hint of our special ties to the wolf?
As loathed villain and as rescuer of lost children, the wolf stands apart
 from all other animals in human consciousness, and perhaps in this
we may detect a deeply felt knowledge of our ancient kinship....
The view of wolves as fellow-beings is finally beginning to displace our
 society's traditional picture of the animals as unthinking, robotic killers
 to be exterminated wherever possible. The change is in part the result
of scientific studies of wolf behaviour that were undertaken over the past
 few decades. From these studies we learned of the complex social
organization of wolf packs, and of their efficient rather than wasteful
 use of the prey species on which their continued existence depends.
More importantly, over the past century there has been a growing
 recognition that non-human animals think, have emotions and feel
pain. It is now hard to believe that until recently scientists and
philosophers of Western cultures portrayed other animals as unthinking
 and unfeeling automatons. Grounded in the biblical command to have
dominion over non-human creatures, this attitude must have been
 perpetuated as a practical and convenient belief in rural societies
where most people were in direct daily contact with the killing,
confinement and coercion of animals.
In recognizing that animals such as wolves do have emotions --
perhaps not as complex as ours, but probably as deeply felt and
as powerful influences on their behaviour -- we begin to understand
the mechanisms that are at work to bond packs into long-term
social units of cooperative hunters, and which allow them to be
 such effective and efficient users of their environment. Having
 learned to what extent wolves resemble humans in their social
 behaviour and their capacity to form emotional bonds, we may
 begin to wonder how much of this similarity is due to the shared
 lives of our species over thousands of generations during a period
when humans were first learning to be human. Biologist Wolfgang
Schleidt suggests that ''wolves and dogs, with their remarkable
capacity for co-operation and loyalty, were both role models and
companions on this long trek toward humanity.''
If the arguments from prehistory are correct, we might begin to
think of wolves not as wilderness neighbours, but as our backwoods
 cousins. And with this recognition of kinship, there comes a
 responsibility to protect our distant relatives in the forest. Our
species has persecuted and continues to persecute wolves for
entirely irrational reasons. In view of the debt that humanity may
owe to wolves, perhaps for our very existence as the dominant
species on earth, the time has come to make amends.

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