The iconographic evolution of Patagonian and Fuegian canids

IF 1.3 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Revista Chilena de Historia Natural Pub Date : 2024-07-19 DOI:10.1186/s40693-024-00129-5
Marcelo Mayorga, Natasha Barrios, César González-Lagos, Sergio A. Castro, Fabián Jaksic
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Abstract

We assess the putative identity of canids accompanying the Patagonian and Fuegian aborigines through an iconographic timeline encompassing 1699–1894, when a number of narratives provided written descriptions and illustrations of those aborigines and their canids. We determine what type of “dogs” were those canids, disentangling their type or breed group, to reveal their characteristics, composition, and development during that period. We searched for illustrations published by navigators and explorers where the presence of canids was reported in the historical territory of the Patagonian aborigines (Aónikenk, Kawésqar, Manek'enk, Sélk'nam, and Yahgan). We constructed a matrix to record the descriptions of all canids represented in those illustrations. Their characterization included body size, coat, tail, ears, skull, and attitude, among others. We then classified whether they were morphologically closer to domestic dogs or to foxlike canids. We used the morphological appearance of dogs to classify them into breed types, whenever possible. We identified and classified 61 canids from 26 illustrations in accounts published between 1699 and 1894. From a historical perspective, those accounts suggest that soon after the first contacts with Europeans, the Patagonian and Fuegian aborigines began to exchange and breed dogs of non-native origin, initiating an extended process of mixing between aboriginal foxlike canids and European dogs. From a cynological perspective, the foxlike canids associated with the aborigines were widely present only before 1833, exhibing an homogeneous appearance with a solid coat, pointed snout, small erect ears of high insertion, and fallen and bushy tail. After 1833, the canids depicted show a more varied appearance and mixed coat, with blunter snout, drooping ears at lower insertion, and erect fine tail with sparse hair. Most of these were hunting dogs morphologically similar to modern breeds such as pointers/setters, hounds, terriers, and retrievers.
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巴塔哥尼亚犬科动物和富格尔犬科动物的图腾演变
我们通过 1699-1894 年的图标时间轴,评估了与巴塔哥尼亚和富埃吉尼土著人相伴的犬科动物的假定身份,当时的一些叙述提供了关于这些土著人及其犬科动物的书面描述和插图。我们确定了这些犬科动物的 "犬 "的类型,区分了它们的类型或品种群,以揭示它们在这一时期的特征、组成和发展。我们搜索了航海家和探险家发表的插图,这些插图都报道了在巴塔哥尼亚原住民(Aónikenk、Kawésqar、Manek'enk、Sélk'nam 和 Yahgan)的历史领地上存在犬科动物。我们建立了一个矩阵,记录这些插图中所有犬科动物的描述。它们的特征包括体型、皮毛、尾巴、耳朵、头骨和姿态等。然后,我们对它们在形态上更接近家犬还是类似狐狸的犬科动物进行了分类。在可能的情况下,我们利用狗的形态外观将它们划分为不同的品种类型。我们从 1699 年至 1894 年间出版的描述中的 26 幅插图中识别出 61 种犬科动物并进行了分类。从历史的角度来看,这些记载表明,在与欧洲人首次接触后不久,巴塔哥尼亚和富埃吉尼土著就开始交换和饲养非本地犬类,从而开启了土著狐科犬类与欧洲犬类的长期混合过程。从犬科动物学的角度来看,与原住民有关的狐狸犬在 1833 年前才广泛出现,它们的外观非常一致,有坚实的被毛、尖尖的鼻子、高高竖起的小耳朵以及下垂而茂密的尾巴。1833 年之后,被描绘的犬科动物的外观和被毛更加多样化,吻部较钝、耳朵下垂、尾巴直立且毛发稀疏。这些犬类中的大多数都是猎犬,在形态上与指北犬/猎犬、猎犬、梗犬和猎犬等现代犬种相似。
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来源期刊
Revista Chilena de Historia Natural
Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
18.20%
发文量
9
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: Revista Chilena de Historia Natural (RCHN) publishes original research dealing with past and present phenomena from organismic to higher levels of biological organization, considering both empirical and theoretical studies on all kinds of taxa and environments. The major areas covered by RCHN are: botany and zoology; physiological and behavioral ecology; population biology; community and ecosystem ecology; systematics, biogeography and evolution.
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Correction: Unveiling emerging interdisciplinary research challenges in the highly threatened sclerophyllous forests of central Chile Genomics resources for the Rapa Nui (Eastern Island) spiny lobster Panulirus pascuensis (Crustacea: Decapoda: Achelata) Where is dinner? The spatiality of the trophic niche of terrestrial mammalian carnivores in Chile, a systematization for their conservation Unveiling emerging interdisciplinary research challenges in the highly threatened sclerophyllous forests of central Chile The iconographic evolution of Patagonian and Fuegian canids
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