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Cat competition drove extinction of ancient dog species

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Press Trust of India Geneva
Last Updated : Aug 13 2015 | 12:57 PM IST
Competition from cats played a more important role in the evolution of the dog family - wolves, foxes, and their relatives - than climate change, researchers say, citing the extinction of as many as 40 canid species.
An international team including scientists from the Universities of Gothenburg (Sweden), Sao Paulo (Brazil) and Lausanne (Switzerland) analysed over 2000 fossils and showed that the arrival of felids to North America from Asia had a deadly impact on the diversity of the dog family, contributing to the extinction of as many as 40 of their species.
"We usually expect climate changes to play an overwhelming role in the evolution of biodiversity. Instead, competition among different carnivore species proved to be even more important for canids," said leading author Daniele Silvestro at the Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Gothenburg.
The dog family originated in North America about 40 million years ago and reached a maximum diversity around 22 million years ago, when more than 30 species inhabited the continent.
Today, only nine species of the dog family live in North America. They progressively increased in body size and specialised into becoming large predators.
Some of them exceeded 30 Kg and were among the largest carnivores on the North American continent.

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Although several large carnivores today face a higher extinction risk than smaller species, the authors of the study found no evidence of a similar pattern in ancient canid species.
The evolutionary success of carnivorous animals is inevitably linked to their ability to obtain food. The limited amount of resources (preys) imposes strong competition among carnivores sharing the same geographic range.
For instance African carnivores such as wild dogs, hyenas, lions and other felids are constantly competing with each other for food.
North American carnivores in the past might have followed similar dynamics and much of the competition is found among species of the dog family and from ancient felids and dogs.
Interestingly, while felids appeared to have a strongly negative impact on the survival of ancient dogs, the opposite is not true.
This suggests that felids must have been more efficient predators than most of the extinct species in the dog family.
The study was published in the journal PNAS.

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First Published: Aug 13 2015 | 12:57 PM IST

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