enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Techichi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Techichi

    Techichis were larger than modern Chihuahuas, but were bred into the smaller, lighter dog known today by the Aztecs. [3] [7] The first European to encounter the dog breed was the Spanish explorer Francisco Hernandez, who reported its existence in 1578. He wrote that the native people ate them as commonly as they ate rabbits.

  3. Canidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canidae

    Canidae (/ ˈ k æ n ɪ d iː /; [3] from Latin, canis, "dog") is a biological family of dog-like carnivorans, colloquially referred to as dogs, and constitutes a clade. A member of this family is also called a canid (/ ˈ k eɪ n ɪ d /). [4] The family includes three subfamilies: the Caninae, and the extinct Borophaginae and Hesperocyoninae. [5]

  4. Dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog

    In the developing world, it is estimated that three-quarters of the world's dog population lives in the developing world as feral, village, or community dogs. [153] Most of these dogs live as scavengers and have never been owned by humans, with one study showing that village dogs' most common response when approached by strangers is to run away ...

  5. List of canids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_canids

    Canidae is a family of mammals in the order Carnivora, which includes domestic dogs, wolves, coyotes, foxes, jackals, dingoes, and many other extant and extinct dog-like mammals. A member of this family is called a canid; all extant species are a part of a single subfamily, Caninae, and are called canines. They are found on all continents ...

  6. Caninae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caninae

    Caninae (whose members are known as canines (/ k eɪ n aɪ n z /) [6]: 182 is the only living subfamily within Canidae, alongside the extinct Borophaginae and Hesperocyoninae. [7] [1] They first appeared in North America, during the Oligocene around 35 million years ago, subsequently spreading to Asia and elsewhere in the Old World at the end of the Miocene, [6]: 122 some 7 million to 8 ...

  7. Canine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canine

    Animals of the family Canidae, more specifically the subfamily Caninae, which includes dogs, wolves, foxes, jackals and coyotes. Canis, a genus that includes dogs, wolves, coyotes, and jackals; Dog, the domestic dog; Canine tooth, in mammalian oral anatomy

  8. Domestication of the dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestication_of_the_dog

    Clade A included 64% of the modern dogs sampled, and these are a sister group to a clade containing three fossil pre-Columbian New World dogs dated between 1,000 and 8,500 YBP. This finding supports the hypothesis that pre-Columbian New World dogs share ancestry with modern dogs and that they likely arrived with the first humans to the New World.

  9. Cerdocyonina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerdocyonina

    Cerdocyonina is an extant subtribe of the canines that is endemic to the Americas. Often described to be "fox-like" in appearance and behavior, they are more closely related to the wolf-like canids such as Canis than they are to the fox genus Vulpes. [1] Its members are colloquially known as the South American canids [2] and there are 10 extant ...