4.2 Article

Domestic dog skull diversity across breeds, breed groupings, and genetic clusters

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jveb.2014.04.007

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dog; skull; breed groups; genotype; dolichocephalic; brachycephalic

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Domestic dogs have become a model organism for studying the extent and consequences of morphological diversity, especially in the skull. It has been demonstrated that Cephalic Index (CI, skull width/skull length) correlates with central concentration of ganglion cells in the retina and with ventral rotation of the cerebral hemispheres. These changes may be reflected in the behavior of breeds with different skulls shapes. This study explored skull variation in the breed groups (n = 7) described by the Australian National Kennel Club to determine if CI differed significantly among the breed groups; groups were expected to differ not last in behavior. The CI of 12 representative dogs (females, n = 6; males, n = 6) of the most popular breeds (n = 80; total n = 960 dogs) were measured. Multivariate analysis of variance was performed to determine CI variance among the breed groups and between previously reported clusters of breeds with similar DNA, which identifies common ancestry. Although CI differed significantly among some breed groups, neither the breed groupings nor the DNA clusters satisfactorily explained all the variance in CI. The results show that breed groupings and genetic clusters only partially explain CI differences. They also suggest that CI is on a continuum and that the definition of three categories of canine skull as dolichocephalic, mesocephalic, and brachycephalic may be overly arbitrary. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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