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pink poodles...what are they all about?
Quote from: neilep on 11/04/2007 13:29:31Quote from: Karen W. on 11/04/2007 04:11:48I don't know Is that a shot from one of your wedding fayres?yes it is !!..can't ewe see all the brides and wedding cakes ?...LOL...no ..it's just some piccy of a crowd I found !!wedding fayres are a little more discrete with all fluffy wedding stufff all over the place !!Thats alot of people wherever it is!
Quote from: Karen W. on 11/04/2007 04:11:48I don't know Is that a shot from one of your wedding fayres?yes it is !!..can't ewe see all the brides and wedding cakes ?...LOL...no ..it's just some piccy of a crowd I found !!wedding fayres are a little more discrete with all fluffy wedding stufff all over the place !!
I don't know Is that a shot from one of your wedding fayres?
Pink poodles and an audio fair................cant resist!In a Noel Coward double entendre stylee.I'd love to be a pink poodle in panties,and get stroked by my friends all day,a lovely pink poodle in panties,I wouldn't want it any other way,With a diamond collar round my neck,and a matrix by my sideplaying with my bone,that is sometimes hard to hide,I'd love to be a pink poodle in panties and play with my friends all day. []TMM
Quote from: neilep on 11/04/2007 13:36:17Any ideas what the ratio is to pure breeds to ' artificial' ones are ?I assume there must be a ' foundation template' of a few thoroughbreds ?Could the ratio be as high as i think it might ?.(Wild guestimate 80:20)........in that I expect there to be far more ' manufactured ' breeds than thoroughbreds !!......but what about other types of multi-variety animal ?As far as I am aware, there is only one natural breed of dog, and that is the wolf, and everything else is an artificial breed.Clearly, there is some variety amongst wolves, but none of that variety directly correlates to a modern breed of dog.Trying to find a natural breed dog is like trying to find a natural breed of cow - no domestic animal is ultimately natural.
Any ideas what the ratio is to pure breeds to ' artificial' ones are ?I assume there must be a ' foundation template' of a few thoroughbreds ?Could the ratio be as high as i think it might ?.(Wild guestimate 80:20)........in that I expect there to be far more ' manufactured ' breeds than thoroughbreds !!......but what about other types of multi-variety animal ?
Coyotes DO interbreed with the common dog. They are also a different species.
Coyotes have a much different genetic make-up than dogs. Interbreeding is allowed because of gene number - when the zygotes are able in may cases to survive. Obviously, a horse and a donkey(ass)are different species. A donkey's coat is not waterproof. Asses are still found in the wild while horses are not. But these two different species can interbreed. The result is a donkey. There is one known example of an artificial insemination cross between a lion and a tiger. Alpacas and Llamas have been interbreed by ranchers in order to obtain a finer type of wool on an animal larger in size than an alpaca. There are many other types of examples in nature where the meeting of two species has led to other species - corals, fish, etc.
But the point you make about what differentiates a species begs the question of are there other types of dogs. There obviously are, or the African Wild Dog would not be named as it is. Jackals are also closely related to wolves. They were domesticated - at least breed - by the Egyptians. And, if you look up wolf taxonomy, there are more than 17 different sub-species that are differentiated. None that share habitat with each other will interbreed. So what is a species? The American Red wolf, not listed in Wiki, is being driven out of it's habitat and going to extinction from competition with the grey wolf or plains wolf. If lack of interbreeding describes difference in species then there should be 17 + wolf species. Taxonomy today is dependent on genetic sequencing. I am no expert on sequencing so I cannot speak to genetic taxonomy. But the old idea of if it interbreeds, it must be the same species and if it doesn't interbreed it is a different species was dead in the early '80's.
For decades, the Red Wolf has been indistinguishable genetically from either the Gray Wolf or the Coyote. The Red Wolf breeds with both species and may again be in peril as contact with other species in the wild resumes
Canis is a genus that includes several of the modern wolf and jackal species, including the Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) which is thought to be the ancestor of the Domestic Dog (Canis lupus familiaris). There are between 7 and 10 species, depending on the source that is used. The jackals used to be placed in their own genus: Thor, but that classification is never used now. Molecular evidence indicate that Cuon (Asiatic wild dog) is actually part of Canis. Other closely related genera are Lycaon (African wild dog) and, more distantly, Pseudalopex and other South American Foxes.