The First Domestication: How Wolves and Humans Coevolved By Raymond Pierotti

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Raymond Pierotti is Associate Professor at the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Indigenous Nations Studies University of Kansas Dr Ray Pierottis research investigates the evolutionary biology of vertebrates with male parental care and socially monogamous breeding systems He collects data on individual variation in behavioral and ecological aspects of parental care His primary research question is how an individual organism becomes successful at reproduction and contributes to future generations Raymond Pierotti is Associate Professor at the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Indigenous Nations Studies University of Kansas Dr Ray Pierotti s research investigates the evolutionary biology of vertebrates with male parental care and socially monogamous breeding systems He collects data on individual variation in behavioral and ecological aspects of parental care His primary research question is how an individual organism becomes successful at reproduction and contributes to future generations site_link A riveting look at how dog and humans became best friends and the first history of dog domestication to include insights from indigenous peoples In this fascinating book Raymond Pierotti and Brandy Fogg change the narrative about how wolves became dogs and in turn humanity s best friend Rather than describe how people mastered and tamed an aggressive dangerous species the authors describe coevolution and mutualism Wolves particularly ones shunned by their packs most likely initiated the relationship with Paleolithic humans forming bonds built on mutually recognized skills and emotional capacity This interdisciplinary study draws on sources from evolutionary biology as well as tribal and indigenous histories to produce an intelligent insightful and often unexpected story of cooperative hunting wolves protecting camps and wolf human companionship This fascinating assessment is a must read for anyone interested in human evolution ecology animal behavior anthropology and the history of canine domestication The First Domestication How Wolves and Humans CoevolvedAnother entry in the dogs are wolves category this book suffers from extreme bias and mischaracterization of other scientists recent work In particular the authors represent the Coppinger s views as 180 degrees opposite of what the Coppingers said For instance on page 21 they represent the Coppingers views as the process of domestication began with wolves being dominated by humans when the Coppingers view was precisely the opposite wolves self domesticated into an opportunistic commensalism with humans i. The First Domestication booklet e taking advantage of leftover human resources At a couple of points they represent the Coppingers as arguing for the scientific reclassification of dogs as wolves when Ray Coppinger was precisely opposed to that move It makes me wonder if the authors have treated others of their sources with whom I am less familiar as cavalierly They also oversimplify and generalize both Eurocentric or western influence and conquest and indigenous peoples None of those categories were culturally monolithic but the authors would like you to believe they are However one of their ultimate points is that the domestication of dogs began prior to the advent of agriculture and permanent communities and in this regard there is science that backs them up This is pretty much the same thesis that Mark Derr proposes in his books and articles on the topic And while they are both dismissive of Coppinger they both propose a similar conclusion it was not man who domesticated wolf but wolf who domesticated himself into dog Pierotti and Fogg and Derr all suffer from ignoring or attempting to ignore the elephant in the room the village dog Whether the process of domestication began 250000 years ago or 10000 does not change the fact that the physiology of dogs changed markedly at about the same time that mankind began inhabiting permanent villages And our dogs of today even if they still occasionally crossbreed with wolves are not wolves but dogs and they come to us through the filter of the village dog Every dog that we call dog today exists primarily because of village dogs The occasional interbreeding that Derr Pierotti and Fogg would like us to believe is of primary concern are minor eddies on the banks of a great and massive river My conclusion and recommendation take a pass on this one It adds little to the conversation although in some ways Pierotti and Fogg do a better job of persuading the reader than Derr If you are determined to learn it can be worth reading so that you have some idea of the breadth of viewpoints that are currently out there but be mindful that this is only one If we revisit this topic in ten years time I believe there will be other books with better science on the topic Just as an example Science magazine published and article in 2015 on how dogs utilize the oxytocin feedback loop and wolves don t There is serious and major science going on in this field right now English One of the best books I have read about wolves and dogs English A persuasive book highlighting what traditional indigenous knowledge can teach us about the evolution of domestic dogs See my full review at English

The First Domestication: How Wolves and Humans Coevolved By Raymond Pierotti
0300226160
9780300226164
English
344
Hardcover
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The First Domestication: How Wolves and Humans Coevolved.

About the Author: Raymond Pierotti

Raymond Pierotti is Associate Professor at the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (Indigenous Nations Studies), University of Kansas. Dr. Ray Pierottis research investigates the evolutionary biology of vertebrates with male parental care and socially monogamous breeding systems. He collects data on individual variation in behavioral and ecological aspects of parental care. His primary research question is how an individual organism becomes successful at reproduction and contributes to future generations. Raymond Pierotti is Associate Professor at the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (Indigenous Nations Studies), University of Kansas. Dr. Ray Pierotti's research investigates the evolutionary biology of vertebrates with male parental care and socially monogamous breeding systems. He collects data on individual variation in behavioral and ecological aspects of parental care. His primary research question is how an individual organism becomes successful at reproduction and contributes to future generations. The First Domestication: How Wolves and Humans Coevolved