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Originally published Sunday, February 8, 2009 at 12:00 AM

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Dogs gave wolves, coyotes black coats

Research indicates black fur was bred into dogs by humans and inadvertently introduced into wild wolve and coyote populations. That the mutation has persisted in the wild animals for so long suggests it is beneficial in some way.

Los Angeles Times

Black wolves and coyotes, often the villains of cartoons and children's fairy tales, apparently inherited their color from a much more warm and fuzzy animal: the dog.

True, dogs are descended from wolves, but research Friday in the journal Science indicates black fur was bred into dogs by humans and inadvertently introduced into the wild species.

The trait shows up in the wild primarily in North America, and it was probably brought to the continent about 15,000 years ago, when the first immigrants crossed over the Bering land bridge, bringing their dogs along.

That the mutation has stayed in the wild population for so long suggests it is beneficial in some way.

The gene responsible for the color, beta-defensin, was discovered in 2007 by geneticist Greg Barsh, of Stanford University. It belongs to a family of genes thought to be involved in fighting infections.

When the gene appears in its normal form, the animal has a light or yellow coat. But when one copy of the gene is missing three nucleotides, the animal develops a black coat.

Studying genes from a large number of wolves, coyotes and dogs, Barsh and his colleagues concluded the current mutation appeared in dogs about 50,000 years ago.

They also concluded the mutation appeared in wolves and coyotes some time after the first humans reached North America. Its almost exclusive appearance in the New World is probably because it was much easier for dogs to mingle with the wild animals here than in Europe, said Barsh's graduate student Tovi Anderson.

Black coats occur in about 62 percent of wolves in the forested areas of the Canadian Arctic, compared with about 7 percent of them in the icy tundra. Researchers agreed the coat does not serve as camouflage for the animals to escape predators, but it may help them sneak up on prey.

The mutated gene might also provide a better immune defense against infectious agents that occur primarily in the warmer forests, Barsh said.

Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company

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