Earlier researchers had proposed that the " dog was the dog before it was domesticated ", and that the ancestor of " Canis familiaris " was a wild " Canis familiaris ".
12.
Earlier researchers had proposed that the " dog was the dog before it was domesticated ", and that the ancestor of " Canis familiaris " was a wild " Canis familiaris ".
13.
The study concluded that " It is very likely that this species is the ancestor of the domestic dog " Canis familiaris ", a hypothesis that has been proposed by previous authors ."
14.
In many places, populations of feral dogs ( " Canis familiaris " ) have increased sharply from the disappearance of " Gyps " vultures as the main scavenger of wild and domestic ungulate carcasses.
15.
For example, length changes in tandemly repeating regions in the Runx2 gene lead to differences in facial length in domesticated dogs ( " Canis familiaris " ), with an association between longer sequence lengths and longer faces.
16.
:: : Here is some research with the snappy title " Effects of Age on Measures of Complex Working Memory Span in the Beagle Dog ( Canis familiaris ) Using Two Versions of a Spatial List Learning Paradigm ".
17.
She is known for her research on prostate cancer and for conducting genetic investigations with the " canis familiaris ", the domestic dog model, used to study disease susceptibility and frequency and other aspects of natural variation in mammals.
18.
The "'domestic dog "'( " Canis lupus familiaris " or " Canis familiaris " ) is a member of genus " Canis " ( canines ) that forms part of the selectively bred over millennia for various behaviors, sensory capabilities, and physical attributes.
19.
The Coppingers, both biologists ( he's a professor at Hampshire College, she's written extensively about dogs ) have turned their keen scientific minds to Canis familiaris in a new book, " Dogs : A Startling New Understanding of Canine Origin, Behavior, and Evolution ."
20.
Although sarcocysts were first reported in the muscles of birds by Kuhn in 1865 not until 1977 was the first life cycle involving a bird ( " Gallus gallus " ) and a carnivore ( " Canis familiaris " ) described by Munday et al.