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Primitive dogs

In many countries there are breeds that can be seen as archetypes of the first dogs. After a subdivision of the Society for Animal Research, these included wild dogsthe wild dogs that  are found, for example in the equatorial region of Africa. There are dogs have joined the bulk of the people and are tolerated for eating waste.

The behavior of such dogs is the first step of domestication, and the historically conscious discipline followed by the desired behaviour.  Directly from such Schensihunden were bred as the Basenji breed and Chow. Also, the dingo was wild thousands of years ago in Australia and developed back in the direction of Wolf.

It is not recognized as a breed by the FCI, but by an Australian breeding association. Taxonomically, the dingo is not included among the domestic dogs (Canis lupus familiaris), but is formed beside the house dog, a separate subspecies (Canis lupus dingo).
Among the first dogs which were bred in Europe for certain desirable characteristics, include the livestock guardian, or the Old German sheepdogs Harzer Fuchs. For these they are as good as all of today’s breeds, which must meet a particular breed standard in appearance.

A recent example is the German shepherd, who was bred in 1900 from old German shepherd dogs.   In some Islamic countries the ordinary dog is despised as unclean and the greyhound as a hunting dog.  As recognized by the FCI breed standard and with a firm bearing the Canaan Dog Breed it exists as an Israeli/Arab breed.

Because these dogs need to live a life on the fringes of human society, they were chosen for them the term pariah.   On the American continent, the Mexican Hairless Dog (Mexican Hairless Dog) has for about 4,000 years ago used as evidence. His ancestors would have been about 13,000 years ago, the people at the immigration accompanied across the Bering Strait.

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