A: The Irish
Wolfhound is considered the world’s tallest breed of dog. A male should
be at least 32 inches tall and can be up to 34 inches, while a female should be
at least 30 inches tall. The Great Dane is also a very tall dog, ranging
from 30 to 32 inches tall for the male, though some can be as much as 34 inches
tall.
Q: What
if you want the heaviest dog, not the tallest dog?
A: While the Irish Wolfhound and
the Great Dane typically are a bit taller, the English Mastiff -- nicknamed the
gentle giant -- and the Saint Bernard are generally considered the heaviest
breeds.
The Mastiff generally comes in at about 180 pounds for
grown dogs, but some experts
say that they can be as heavy as 220 pounds. In comparison, Saint Bernard males
can be 184 pounds or even more.
The largest Irish Wolfhounds weigh in at about 120
pounds, while the Great Dane male is said
by some experts to
weigh from 120 to 200 pounds.
Mastiff males are about 30 inches in height compared
to 32 inches for the Wolfhound. The Saint Bernard male is expected to be
at least 27.5 inches.
Q: What dog breed
has the biggest ears?
A: In 2004, a
Basset
hound named Jack, from Fulda, Germany, holds the record for the longest
ears, measuring 33.2 cm or just over a remarkable
13
inches.
Q: What dog breeds
are least intelligent?
A: The same expert says the
least intelligent on his list of 79 breeds are Borzoi, Chow Chow, Bulldog,
Basenji and Afgan Hound, the Afgan being at the bottom of the list.
Q: What breeds are
least popular?
The 10 breeds with the fewest
individual registrations are;, German Pinscher, Plott, American Foxhound,
Komondorok, Skye Terrier, Finnish Spitz, Ibizan Hound, English Foxhound,
Harrier, and the Otterhound in the last spot, with just 17 dogs registered.
Q: What is the
oldest breed of dog?
A: This is a complicated
question, but there are helpful clues. It appears that two semi-domestic
dogs -- the Dingo of
Australia and the New
Guinea Singing Dog -- are considered the last existing representatives of
early dogs developed in southern Asia. These dogs are thought to have traveled
with their human companions all the way to Australia and New Guinea.
Another candidate is the Basenji, whose ancestor is
also thought to have developed in southern Asia; it then moved with people into
Africa, starting in Egypt. [See below for new confirmation from the latest dog
genetic research]. The Canaan
Dog of Israel traces to ancient pariah dog stock of the Middle East.
Now,
new genetic research
published in May 2004 has identified 14 ancient dog breeds, with the oldest
being the Chow Chow, Shar Pei, Akita, Shiba Inu and Basenji.
THE CANINE
EVES: MOTHERS OF ALL DOGS
THE CANINE EVES: THE MOTHERS OF THE FIRST
DOG The Eves of the dog world are five or six wolf females that lived
in or near China nearly 15,000 years ago, according to a series of genetic
research.
The findings indicated that most dogs had "a common
origin in a single gene pool." Genetic diversity was highest in East Asia,
suggesting that dogs have been domesticated there the longest.
THE OLDEST
BREEDS IN THE WORLD
THE OLDEST BREEDS The results revealed that
an unexpected and geographically diverse cluster of breeds-including the
Siberian husky, the Afghan hound, Africa's basenji, China's chow chow, Japan's
Akita, and Egypt's Saluki are most closely related to dog's ancient wolflike
ancestors. "Dogs from these breeds may be the best living
representatives of the ancestral dog gene pool," the researchers wrote.
When the geneticists clustered the breeds whose genes
showed shared lineages, they found that the more-ancient breeds:
Basenji
Saluki
Afghan
Lhasa Apso
Pekingese
Shar-Pei
Shih Tzu
Akita
Alaskan Malamute
Siberian Husky
Samoyed
These old breeds had the closest genetic relationship
to the wolf ancestors. The 14 ancient dog breeds with "genetic fingerprints"
said to be similar to those of wolves are:
Afghan Hound
Akita
Alaskan Malamute
Basenji
Chow Chow
Lhasa Apso
Pekingese
Saluki
Samoyed
Shar-pei
Shiba Inu
Shih Tzu
Siberian Husky
Tibetan Terrier
GENETIC
SURPRISES
The study did have some surprises, especially the
suggestion that three breeds -- the Norwegian Elkhound, Pharaoh Hound and
Ibizan Hound -- are not as old as typically stated, but rather are more recent
recreations of old types. Also, six pairs of breeds are closely related:
Alaskan Malamute and Siberian
Husky, Belgian Sheepdog and Belgian Turvuren, Collie and Shetland
Sheepdog, Greyhound and Whippet, Bernese Mountain Dog and Greater
Swiss Mountain Dog, Bullmastiff and Mastiff.
OTHER breeds in the study, in their
specific grouping, adapted from the explanations of the four groups.
Mastiff Breeds: Mastiff Bulldog
Boxer Bullmastiff French Bulldog Miniature Bulldog Perro de Presa Canario
Rottweiler Newfoundland Bernese Mountain Dog German Shepherd Dog
Herding Breeds: Belgian Sheepdog
Belgian Turvuren Collie Shetland Sheepdog Irish Wolfhound* Greyhound* Borzoi*
Saint Bernard* *
Not known as livestock
dogs, these four may have been ancestors to the herding dogs.
Hunting Breeds: Basset Hound Beagle
Cairn Terrier Cocker Spaniel Golden Retriver Irish Setter Labrador Retriever
Pointer and other spaniels, terriers, pointers, retrievers, and scent
hounds.
THE TEN
ORIGINAL DOG TYPES
The 10 progenitors identified by the researchers are:
sight hounds, scent hounds, working and guard dogs, northern breeds, flushing
spaniels, water spaniels and retrievers, pointers, terriers, herding dogs and
toy and companion dogs.
The sight hound, specialized for
coursing game, is thought to have emerged in Mesopotamia around 4000 to 5000
BC. Modern breeds such as the greyhound and Afghan hound are found at the end
of this branch of the canine family tree.
The scent hound meanwhile appeared
around 3000 BC, characterized by a highly sensitized sense of smell and a body
suited to warm weather. The bloodhound, foxhound, and dachshund are all thought
to have descended from this dog.
Working and guard dogs probably
emerged in Tibet around 3000 BC, with modern descendents including the
rottweiler, all Mastiffs, the Great Dane, the St Bernard's and the bulldog. At
roughly the same time, toy and companion breeds apparently emerged in Malta.
Modern descendents include the poodle and pug.
DOGS WERE DOGS
TEN THOUSAND YEARS AGO
In 1997, a biology professor startled
the dog world by announcing that their genetic research suggested dogs were
first domesticated as early as 100,000 years ago. They also
confirmed, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that dogs are descended only from
wolves, not jackals or coyotes as some had surmised.
FROM WOLF TO
DOG AND BACK AGAIN
THE JOURNEY FROM WOLF TO
DOG
Today, it is generally accepted
that dogs are the descendants of Eurasian grey wolves, and there is evidence
that they may have originated in east Asia.
The dog may be a very young species at only 14 000
years old, although genetic evidence suggests dog may have began to diverge
from the wolf as long as 135 000 years ago.
However, even though dogs are the recent descendants
of wolves and are very similar to wolves in terms of both behavior and
morphology, they are in several ways quite different from wolves. Dogs display
a large number of characters not seen in wolves, such as piebald coats, floppy
ears, and curly tails.
Wolves are also seasonal breeders, with both males and
females becoming fertile once per year. Dogs are not seasonal breeders, and
most female dogs (with some rare exceptions) come into season twice per year,
and male dogs are fertile year round.
Dogs also have smaller skulls relative to their
overall size than wolves and are able to form social bonds for a longer period
of time during their early lives than are wolves.
DIFFERENCES
BETWEEN DOGS AND WOLFS
Interestingly, many of the morphological and
physiological differences that exist between dogs and wolves may not have been
intentionally selected for by humans, and could have been a result of selection
for tameness in dogs.
It has already been noted that selecting animals for a
behavioral trait can change the amount of hormones and
neurotransmitters produced by the animals because an animal's behavior
is often controlled by such chemicals.
The early development of an animal is also, in part,
controlled by these chemicals, so a small change in the animal's endocrine and
neurochemical systems may result in changes to the early development of the
animal. In wolves, this window closes at about three weeks, and it dogs it
closes at 8 to 12 weeks, depending on the breed.
Many researchers consider dogs to be
paedomorphic wolves, meaning that they have retained
characteristics that are typical of juvenile wolves as adults.
HOW DOGS ARE
DIFFERENT FROM WOLFS
FLOPPY EARS
The floppy ears that
characterize most dog breeds may be paedomorphic trait, as very young wolf pups
have floppy ears, which straighten shortly after birth. Even the erect-eared
dogs, such as huskies and German shepherds, have ears which straighten up later
than do the ears of wolf pups.
THE CURLY TAIL
The curled tail of most
domestic dogs is also a neotenous trait. Adult wolves typically have straight
tails that are carried at a downward-pointing angle, whereas wolf pups, like
many adult domestic dogs, have tails that are carried up above the back
THE BARK
The bark of domestic dogs is
another juvenile trait. Adult wolves can and do bark as an alarm call, but they
rarely do. However, wolf pups bark more often than adult wolves, which makes
them similar to many domestic dogs.
THE SKULL
Adult dogs also have skull
characteristics that make them rather similar to four-month-old wolf pups. When
a dog reaches four months of age, its head's growth rate slows down relative to
the growth rate of the rest of its body. A four month old wolf's head will
continue to grow at a more rapid rate relative to a dog's until it is about
seven or eight months old. The result is that adult wolf-sized dogs have head
sizes that are similar to that of a juvenile wolf's.
Much of the diversity found in the domestic dog may be
a result of a selection for tameness around people. The farm fox experiment
started by Dr. Belyaev decades ago has demonstrated that selecting animals for
a behavioral trait (such as a lack of fear of novel stimuli) effectively
selects for animals with lower levels of adrenal hormones and higher levels of
certain neurotransmitters (such as serotonin). Since these chemicals play
a part in regulating the early development of an animal, selecting an animal
for a behavioral trait could alter its development and thus its morphology.
MAN VERSUS
NATURE
ARTIFICIAL SELECTION vs.
NATURAL SELECTION
Although it is often assumed
that the dog is a result of artificial selection, it is possible that early
dogs evolved via natural selection. As humans began to form permanent
settlements, a new niche was opened for animals to exploit. They could steal
and scavenge scraps from villages. To live in such a niche, an animal would
have to be unafraid of people.
Thus, wild dogs living in this niche would be selected
for tameness around people. This would alter the animals' morphology because,
as stated above, selection for a behavioral trait selects for changes in
hormones that regulate the development of the animal. These naturally tame
"proto-dogs" could be the ancestor's of today's modern dog breeds.
HOW WOLVES
ARE SO SUCCESSFUL
HOW WOLVES DO IT Wolves walk, trot, lope,
or gallop. Their legs are long, and they walk at about 4 miles (6.4 kilometers)
per hour, but can reach speeds of 35 m.p.h. during a chase.
Their usual mode of travel is to trot, which they do
at various speeds, generally between 8 to 10 miles (12.8 to 16 kilometers) per
hour.
Wolves can keep up this pace for hours on end and have
been known to cover 60 miles (96 kilometers) in a single night. They have been
clocked at speeds of over 40 miles (64 kilometers) per hour for a distance of
several miles
.
THE FIVE
SENSES OF THE WOLF
SMELL The sense of smell in the wolf is
highly developed, as would be expected in an animal possessing numerous scent
glands. The distance at which any scent can be detected is governed by
atmospheric conditions but, even under the most favorable conditions 1.75 miles
denotes a particularly keen sense of smell.
The wolves usually travel until they encounter the
scent of some prey species ahead of them. They then move directly toward their
prey in an effort to capture it.
HEARING Next to smell, the sense of hearing
is the most acute of the wolf's senses. Wolves can hear as far as six miles
away in the forest and ten miles in the open.
Wolves can hear well up to a frequency of 25 kHz. Some
researchers believe that the actual maximum frequency detected by wolves is
actually much higher, perhaps up to 80 kHz (the upper auditory limits for
humans is 20 kHz), also according to some naturalist wolves' hearing is greater
than that of the dog.
SIGHT Wolves also have keen eye sight and
are quick to detect the slightest movement of anything in front of them. Being
major predators, their eyes are on the front of there heads, and they have
probably a little less than 180-degree vision, unlike their prey species, which
can see over 300 degrees of a circle.
TASTE Investigation
of taste are made difficult by the fact that the influence of smell often plays
a major role in the way a food "tastes." It is known that canines possess taste
receptors for the four taste categories: salty, bitter, sweet, and acidic.
Felines on the other hand, do not respond to
sweetness. The sweetness receptivity would be adaptive use to wolves, as sweet
berries and other fruits do play a minor role in their diet.
THE WOLF
PACK
THE WOLF PACK
Few
mammals anywhere are aware - and as loyal to - their group as the wolf.
Unlike coyotes and foxes, the wolf usually exists for its pack.
The rare exception is the
proverbial "lone wolf" - the runt, the outsider, ostracized from the pack. If
it is very lucky and finds a mate, and if there is enough territory available
for them, they might be able to start a new pack of their own.
For most wolves, however, their identity begins and
ends as part of a cohesive, eight to fifteen-member pack. The hierarchy of the
pack is known to all and reinforced by favors, rituals,
nips, and fights.
Each pack has a leading, dominate pair, The top male,
called the alpha male, who submits to no one and to whom all the other males
defer. Likewise, a top alpha female, to whom all other females must submit (The
subservient members are usually direct descendants of the Alpha parents).
Contrary to popular belief, a female
can lead the pack, in one study of 5 packs almost 50% were lead by a female
wolf.
Next in rank to the alphas are the beta male and beta
female. For each gender, every wolf has a rank or place in line where they must
submit to anyone higher than they are, but can bully or dominate the wolves
lower in rank.
At the bottom there is an omega male and omega
female. These wolves have no one under them and may be harassed to the point
where they disperse or are killed, or are forced to leave the pack.
Did You Know... Wolves do not look to
humans for help but dogs do.
AMERICAN KENNEL CLUB
DOG BREEDS
· Airedale Terrier
· Akita
· Alaskan Malamute
· American Staffordshire Terrier
· Australian Cattle Dog
· Australian Shepherd
· Basenji
· Basset Hound
· Beagle
· Bedlington Terrier
· Belgian Malinois
· Belgian Sheepdog
· Belgian Tervuren
· Bernese Mountain Dog
· Bichon Frise
· Black and Tan Coonhound
· Bloodhound
· Border Collie
· Border Terrier
· Borzoi
· Boston Terrier
· Bouvier des Flandres
· Boxer
· Briard
· Brittany
· Brussels Griffon
· Bull Terrier
· Bulldog
· Bullmastiff
· Cairn Terrier
· Cardigan Welsh Corgi
· Cavalier King Charles Spaniel
· Chesapeake Bay Retriever
· Chihuahua
· Chinese Crested
· Chinese Shar-Pei
· Chow Chow
· Cocker Spaniel
· Collie
· Curly-Coated Retriever
· Dachshund
· Dalmatian
· Doberman Pinscher
· English Setter
· English Springer Spaniel
· Flat-Coated Retriever
· French Bulldog
· German Pinscher
· German Shepherd Dog
· German Shorthaired Pointer
· German Wirehaired Pointer
· Giant Schnauzer
· Golden Retriever
· Gordon Setter
· Great Dane
· Great Pyrenees
· Greyhound
· Havanese
· Ibizan Hound
· Irish Setter
· Irish Terrier
· Irish Wolfhound
· Italian Greyhound
· Keeshond
· Kerry Blue Terrier
· Labrador Retriever
· Lhasa Apso
· Maltese
· Mastiff
· Miniature Pinscher
· Miniature Schnauzer
· Newfoundland
· Norfolk Terrier
· Norwegian Elkhound
· Norwich Terrier
· Old English Sheepdog
· Pekingese
· Pembroke Welsh Corgi
· Pointer
· Pomeranian
· Poodle
· Portuguese Water Dog
· Pug
· Puli
· Rhodesian
Ridgeback
· Rottweiler
· Samoyed
· Schipperke
· Shetland Sheepdog
· Shiba Inu
· Shih Tzu
· Siberian Husky
· Silky Terrier
· Smooth Fox Terrier
· Soft Coated Wheaten Terrier
· St. Bernard
· Standard Schnauzer
· Tibetan Terrier
· Vizsla
· Weimaraner
· West Highland White Terrier
· Whippet
· Wire Fox Terrier
· Wirehaired Pointing Griffon
· Yorkshire Terrier
UNITED KENNEL CLUB
DOG BREEDS
Affenpinscher
Bichon Frise Bolognese Boston Terrier Brussels Griffon
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel Chihuahua Chinese Crested Coton de
Tulear Dalmatian English Bulldog English Toy Spaniel French
Bulldog Havanese Italian Greyhound Japanese Chin Lhasa Apso
Lowchen Maltese Miniature Pinscher Papillon Pekingese
Peruvian Inca Orchid Pomeranian Poodle (Miniature & Toy)
Pug Schipperke Shih Tzu Tibetan Spaniel Tibetan Terrier
Yorkshire Terrier
Ainu Akita Alaskan Klee Kai
Alaskan Malamute American Eskimo Canadian Eskimo Dog Chinese
Shar-Pei Chinook Chow Chow East Siberian Laika Eurasian
Finnish Lapphund Finnish Spitz Greenland Dog Iceland Dog
Jindo Kai Karelian Bear Dog Keeshond Lundehund
Norbottenspets Norwegian Buhund Norwegian Elkhound Russo-European
Laika Samoyed Shiba Siberian Husky Swedish Lapphund West
Siberian Laika
Akbash Dog American Bulldog Anatolian
Shepherd Appenzeller Bernese Mountain Dog Black Russian Terrier
Boxer Bull Mastiff Caucasian Ovtcharka Central Asian Shepherd
Dog Danish Broholmer Doberman Pinscher Dogo Argentino Dogue de
Bordeaux Entlebucher Estrela Mountain Dog Great Dane Great
Pyrenees Greater Swiss Mountain Dog Hovawart Kangal Dog
Komondor Krasky Ovcar Kuvasz Leonberger Maremma Sheepdog Mastiff Neapolitan
Mastiff Newfoundland Owczarek Podhalanski Perro de Presa
Canario Rottweiler Saint Bernard Sarplaninac Slovac Cuvac
South Russian Ovcharka Spanish Mastiff Tibetan Mastiff Tosa Ken
Alpine Dachsbracke American Black & Tan
Coonhound American Foxhound Anglo-Francais de Moyen Venerie Anglo-Francais de Petit Venerie Ariegeois
Basset Artesien Normand Basset Bleu de Gascogne Basset Fauve De
Bretagne Basset Hound Bavarian Mountain Hound Beagle Beagle
Harrier Billy Black Forest Hound Black Mouth Cur Bloodhound
Bluetick Coonhound Briquette Griffon Vendeen Chien D'Artois Chien
Francais Blanc et Noir Chien Francais Black et Orange Chien Francais
Tricolore Dachshund Deutsche Bracke Drever Dunker English
Coonhound English Foxhound Estonian Hound Finnish Hound Grand
Anglo-Francais Grand Basset Griffon Vendeen Grand Bleu de Gascogne
Grand Gascon-Saintongeois Grand Griffon Vendeen Griffon Fauve de
Bretegne Griffon Nivernais Hamiltonstovare Hanoverian Hound
Harrier Large Spanish Hound (Sabueso Espanol de Monte) Leopard Cur
Mountain Cur Otterhound Petit Basset Griffon Vendeen Petit Bleu de
Gascone Petit Gascon-Saintongeois Petit Griffon Bleu de Gascogne
Plott Hound Poitevin Polish Hound Porcelaine Redbone
Coonhound Small Spanish Hound (Sabueso Espanol Lebero) Stephens'
Cur Treeing Cur Treeing Walker Coonhound Welsh Hound
American Water Spaniel Barbet
Boykin Spaniel Bracco Italiano Braque D'Auvergne Braque du
Bourbonnais Braque Francais, de Grande Taille Braque Francais, de
Petite Taille Braque Saint-Germain Brittany Spaniel Cesky
Fousek Chesapeake Bay Retriever Clumber Spaniel Cocker Spaniel
Curly-Coated Retriever Deutscher Wachtelhund (German Spaniel) Drentse
Patrijshond English Cocker Spaniel English Pointer English
Setter English Springer Spaniel Epagneul Blue de Picardie Epagneul
Breton Epagneul Picard Epagneul Pont-Audemer Field Spaniel
Flat-coated Retriever French Spaniel (Epagneul Francais) German
Longhaired Pointer German Shorthaired Pointer German Wirehaired
Pointer Golden Retriever Gordon Setter Irish Red & White
Setter Irish Setter Irish Water Spaniel Kooikerhondje Labrador
Retriever Large Munsterlander Novia Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever
Old Danish Bird Dog Perdiguero de Burgos Perdiguero Navarro
Portuguese Pointer (Perdiguero Portugueso) Portuguese Water Dog
Pudelpointer Small Munsterlander Spanish Water Dog Spinone
Italiano Stabyhoun Standard Poodle Sussex Spaniel Vizsla
Weimaraner Welsh Springer Spaniel Wirehaired Pointing Griffon
Afghan
Hound Azawakh Basenji Borzoi Canaan Dog Carolina Dog
Chart Polski Greyhound Ibizan Hound Irish Wolfhound Lurcher
New Guinea Singing Dog Pharaoh Hound Podengo Portugueso Rhodesian
Ridgeback Saluki Scottish Deerhound Sloughi Spanish
Greyhound Thai Ridgeback Whippet Xoloitzcuintli
Airedale Terrier American Hairless
Terrier American Pit Bull Terrier Australian Terrier Bedlington
Terriers Border Terrier Bull Terrier Cairn Terrier Cesky
Terrier Dandie Dinmont Terrier German Pinscher Glen of Imaal
Terrier Irish Terrier Jack Russell Terrier Jagdterrier Kerry
Blue Terrier Kromfohrlander Lakeland Terrier Manchester Terrier
Miniature Bull Terrier Miniature Schnauzer Norfolk Terrier Norwich
Terrier Patterdale Terrier Rat Terrier Russell Terrier Scottish
Terrier Sealyham Terrier Silky Terrier Skye Terrier Smooth Fox
Terrier Soft-Coated Wheaten Terrier Sporting Lucas Terrier
Staffordshire Bull Terrier Teddy Roosevelt Terrier Toy Fox Terrier
Treeing Feist Welsh Terrier West Highland White Terrier Wire Fox
Terrier
Australian Cattle
Dog Australian Kelpie Australian Shepherd Bearded Collie
Beauceron Belgian Shepherd Dogs (Groenendael, Laekenois, Malinois,
Tervueren) Bergamasco Berger Picard (Picardy Shepherd) Berger de
Pyrenees Border Collie Bouvier Des Flandres Briard Collie
Dutch Shepherd English Shepherd German Shepherd Dog Giant
Schnauzer Louisiana Catahoula Leopard Dog Mudi Old English Sheep
Dog Polski Owczarek Nizinny Puli Pumi Schapendoes Shetland
Sheepdog Standard Schnauzer Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog Swedish
Vallhund Welsh Corgi-Cardigan Welsh Corgi-Pembroke White Shepherd