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  1. Jun 28, 2021 · In our history, breeding is pretty recent. Dogs were originally kept around because they made good alarm systems when it came to intruders or animals. Over time, as humans and dogs became closer, humans began to want to improve them. They wanted dogs with more refined skills for what they used them for, for example, herding or retrieving. 1.

  2. In 1468, Jean Beisse, accused of bestiality with a cow on one occasion and a goat on another, was first hanged, then burned. The animals involved were also burned. In 1539, Guillaume Garnier, charged with intercourse with a female dog (described as "sodomy"), was ordered strangled after he confessed under torture.

  3. May 26, 2017 · An analysis of canine bones from Zhokhov suggests the dogs there were bred to pull sleds, making this the first evidence—by thousands of years—for dog breeding in the archaeological record.

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  5. Nov 3, 2021 · The connection between human and dog runs deep. Early signs of domestication date back to 33,000 years ago and unambiguously domesticated dogs are common in the archaeological record beginning 15,000 years ago. The pairing makes for a striking case in coevolution — no other species has been so thoroughly integrated into human society.

    • Richard Pallardy
    • Poodle — Despite its looks, the elegant poodle had jobs once. Poodles were a companion to hunters and we bred them to retrieve birds in dense woods, marshes, and lakes.
    • Bloodhound — Sherlock Holme’s favorite companion, this ‘super scenter’ was first bred in an 8th-century monastery in Belgium. They were the select dog for hunters due to their impeccable nose-sleuthing abilities.
    • Pointer — These 17th-century dogs came from Spain as hunting dogs. An interesting trait of pointers is that we bred them to seek out but not kill birds.
    • Basset Hound — This adorably funny dog breed with its short legs and long ears can be linked to St. Hubert, a Belgian monk who lived in the 1880s. These short-legged hounds became hunting companions to sniff out ground prey.
  6. May 30, 2009 · Today, we live with more than 400 dog breeds recognized by kennel clubs around the world, which govern dog shows, field trials, hunt tests, herding tests, and other measures of quality and working ...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dog_breedingDog breeding - Wikipedia

    Dog breeding is the practice of mating selected dogs with the intention of maintaining or producing specific qualities and characteristics. When dogs reproduce without such human intervention, their offspring's characteristics are determined by natural selection , while "dog breeding" refers specifically to the artificial selection of dogs, in ...

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