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"domesticated" Definitions
  1. (of a wild animal) used to living with or working for humans
  2. (of a plant or crop) grown for human use synonym cultivated (3)
  3. (often humorous) good at cooking, caring for a house, etc; enjoying home life

558 Sentences With "domesticated"

How to use domesticated in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "domesticated" and check conjugation/comparative form for "domesticated". Mastering all the usages of "domesticated" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Przewalski's horses, therefore, come from domesticated stock—albeit domesticated stock that existed some 5,500 years ago.
Reindeer are indeed a domesticated animal, and man has domesticated reindeer over many thousands of years.
They are believed to have domesticated themselves thousands of years ago, instead of being purposefully domesticated by humans.
After analyzing 1000 different tree surveys from across the Amazon basin, the team found that these domesticated trees were five times more common than their non-domesticated counterparts.
Reindeer are fully domesticated, and though the herd lives a semi-wild lifestyle, as a species, there are some key differences between animals that are considered domesticated or captive.
And in that residue, they found evidence of domesticated cacao.
Bonnie was a domesticated animal facing a cruel northeastern winter.
That difference is in how they live, even when domesticated.
Because his own wildness had been domesticated by my mother.
Australia has a cat problem — both feral and domesticated, apparently.
Humans domesticated dogs some tens of thousands of years ago.
They also looked at domesticated animals as compared to wild animals.
Bonobos, it seems, have domesticated themselves in response to their environment.
Through all of recorded history, sea lions have never been domesticated.
Here's what fruits and vegetables looked like before we domesticated them
At law it is property, a domesticated animal that is owned.
But there is one innovative new way of protecting domesticated bees.
"The dogs seem to be OK because they're domesticated," he said.
It was the first time okapis had been domesticated in Epulu.
The big question: Was this the only time rice was domesticated?
By week four, the fungus had evolved to its domesticated form.
They included the test because it was used for domesticated puppies.
The foxes "are domesticated, but they are not pets," she said.
Turkeys weren't the only animals that the Mitla Fortress residents domesticated.
But where Theobroma cacao was domesticated has been a matter of debate.
Domesticated animals have been bred, for centuries perhaps, to live with humans.
It's used domesticated animals in place of wild ones at least twice.
But there's a line between a tamed animal and a domesticated animal.
But the divine mystery cannot be domesticated into a fixed petrified image.
Stay in bed, read, meditate, force-cuddle a small animal, preferably domesticated.
By living in groups, says Mr Wrangham, humans have been domesticated, too.
DISCLAIMER: VICE does not condone the arming of wild or domesticated animals.
"I've used domesticated Norwegian and Black rats in many videos," she said.
As with any cute domesticated animal, they're all over social media too.
The rodents are domesticated and customers have the chance to adopt one.
Australia has a cat problem — and it's not of the domesticated variety.
Vanessa Aspillaga ("Domesticated") and Daphne Rubin-Vega ("Rent") fill out this ensemble.
A pet cougar can be tamed, but it can never be domesticated.
It's possible the Wampanoag brought their own domesticated turkeys to the feast.
Or Cersei's henchman, the Mountain, is way more domesticated than we thought.
Do you feel like the people in the music industry are domesticated?
New findings indicate humans domesticated the birds at least 1,500 years ago.
But in certain cases, Dr. Coffin said, we have domesticated our viruses.
It is the combination of woodland trees and forage for domesticated animals.
It domesticated online expression, turning it into a vehicle for institutional will.
At a family performance, the moles domesticated themselves and declined to breed.
"Cats aren't domesticated quite as much as our K9 friends," she says.
Flowers, dolls, domesticated animals, babies and cartoon characters symbolise nature and family.
Where in South America potatoes first became domesticated, however, is still unknown.
They're not eating our big, fat, domesticated pigs that have white meat.
Facebook policy prohibits the sale of any animals — domesticated pets, livestock, or otherwise.
These canines were very likely among the first domesticated species to reach America.
Of the 22 species of cacao trees, only one has really been domesticated.
The finding could help improve treatment of these domesticated animals, the authors say.
Instead, it has everything to do with domesticated South American camelids — a.k.a. llamas.
With its 2:3 scale the model feels tiny and toylike, sanitized, domesticated.
In fact, some sources say they might have been humanity's first domesticated animal.
Settlement ceased, and logging and its slash heaps were more or less domesticated.
The first signal of the flu's arrival can be when domesticated birds die.
When domesticated, they can be used for all disciplines of riding, including jumping.
Wild plants hold a lot of genetic variants lost when people domesticated crops.
None of the puppies, wolf or domesticated puppy, had experienced "fetch" before this.
I enjoyed the scenery; there was no need to hug illegally domesticated sloths.
The wild relatives of staple crops are generally hardier than their domesticated counterparts.
Several of the domesticated plants they identified are still grown by South Americans.
Our cats and dogs became stars, and our domesticated raccoons, and our hedgehogs.
These include the "domesticated disquiet" of Picabia's peculiar poem Platfonds Creux (Empty Rafters).
Wild art stands to art world art as wild plants to domesticated plants.
That timing and other genetic data point to dogs being domesticated just once.
He's also trying to unleash their wildness into his own painfully domesticated existence.
They're animal rights advocates who probably don't even believe parrots should be domesticated.
Central Americans domesticated a second variety that later was picked up by Europeans.
Now, if we're making animals compete, we're likely talking about domesticated or companion animals.
Thus, it's a mystery as to where and how these early domesticated dogs evolved.
The main commercial danger is to the indigenous Sami people, who herd domesticated reindeer.
Unlike dogs, which we domesticated, they sort of just showed up to hang out.
These domesticated species are ones that get ahead in evolution by gratifying our desire.
That may be because Eurasia was richer in large mammals that could be domesticated.
The majority of Otzi's clothes came from domesticated species including cattle, sheep and goat.
Reindeer are slightly smaller and were domesticated in northern Eurasia about 2000 years ago.
Many people don't understand that a domesticated animal is not necessarily a captive one.
The hedgeparty board has a few Pins of domesticated 'hogs, the internet's unofficial pet.
Because domesticated animals are economic assets, the law has always regarded animals as property.
The disease can emerge from fruit bats and infect domesticated animals such as pigs.
Many domesticated pets were transported to the Haven Humane Society, which is near Redding.
Gradually, Thailand succeeded in reducing such practices and improving the lives of domesticated elephants.
Dogs have likely been helping on the frontlines of conflict since they became domesticated.
The researchers believe the animal milk used came from domesticated cattle, goats or sheep.
Already, some domesticated crops are faltering in the face of extreme temperatures and drought.
The domesticated plants flourished near the archaeological sites, far more so than nondomesticated ones.
"Eighty percent of our calorie intake comes from 12 domesticated plant species," he emphasised.
Finally, they extracted DNA from the residue, again looking for mutations exclusive to domesticated cacao.
Anyone who owns a cat can tell you that felines were definitely domesticated long afterward.
Feral pigs are domesticated pigs — farm animals — that escaped and are living as wild animals.
Rinderpest has plagued Africa and other parts of the world ever since cattle were domesticated.
Bison, an apparently accepting bunch, don't seem to mind their formerly domesticated new squad member.
Cats were domesticated after dogs, beginning about 10,000 years ago in Near Eastern farming communities.
Mostly they are wild creatures, but sometimes they are domesticated to pull sleds and carriages.
"Donkeys are perhaps the most misunderstood and under appreciated of man's domesticated animals," Stiert says.
The research challenges an earlier study claiming dogs were domesticated twice — in Asia and Europe.
After all, it has been claimed that we are the only species who domesticated itself.
The Maine Coon is known as the largest breed of domesticated cat in the world.
The Humane Society of Ventura County is accepting dogs, cats, horses and other domesticated animals.
But as we've domesticated animals like cats and dogs, we've watched their brains shrink too.
They embody an otherness that refuses to be domesticated by language, that renders categories moot.
The wicked satirist Bruce Norris ("Clybourne Park" and "Domesticated") has sometimes aimed at easy targets.
Whatever the case, we adopted numerous flowering plants into an expanding circle of domesticated species.
For centuries, cheesemakers didn't know how it evolved from its untamed to its domesticated forms.
Feral dogs roamed the island; domesticated pigs and cows feasted at the community's refuse heap.
But it was a universal understanding when I was coming up: Girls, go do domesticated stuff.
That finding supports research suggesting that olive trees were domesticated about 6,000 to 8,000 years ago.
Scientists generally agree that there is good evidence that dogs were domesticated around 22013,230 years ago.
" According to Weiss, "Arya's not domesticated, and it makes total sense her wolf wouldn't be either.
One way is to protect domesticated animals from the excreta of waterfowl, which can spread infection.
Humans have been modifying plants this way since they were first domesticated some 10,000 years ago.
Betty Gabriel, who played the suspiciously domesticated housekeeper Georgina was absolutely snubbed for Best Supporting Actress.
This dapper fellow is Uni, a domesticated raccoon living in Taiwan and a social media star.
The dogs domesticated in Asia later replaced some of the early European dog population, they reported.
They're also used to being watched over by humans: Reindeer were domesticated about 2,000 years ago.
Like Gladys, Snowy had a tough upbringing, having spent years on the streets before becoming domesticated.
Unlike, say, the lovable parasites that are dogs, the benefits of domesticated cattle are immediately obvious.
These range from domesticated animals such as bulls to traditional lab animals like rats and mice.
Only in zoos a Rhino can be approached as if it was a domesticated animal. pic.twitter.
Unlike domesticated animals, they have to be heavily sedated for vets to safely care for them.
If farmers hadn't domesticated the wild eggplant, it wouldn't be nearly as suggestive as an emoji.
Is there not something almost poetic about a domesticated mammal the size of a small car?
Different wolves in different parts of Asia and Europe might have been domesticated by different people.
Three other tanks nearby stand empty for the time being, awaiting future generations of domesticated bluefin.
I was so inspired to get her bladder domesticated that I'd wake up at 3 a.m.
Instead, it's possible that this behavior can be traced back before wolves were domesticated into dogs.
She cautioned, however, that there is an enormous difference between a domesticated animal and a pet.
In some plots, more than half of the plant life consisted of domesticated trees and palms.
Domesticated for about 5,000 years, donkeys have been put to work for humanity's historically changing needs.
According to the latter studies, South Americans domesticated sweet potatoes, which were then acquired by Polynesians.
And while there are different varieties of domesticated trees, they're all called the same thing: Theobroma cacao.
What's more, cacao was initially domesticated in the equatorial regions of South America, and not Central America.
And the Georgian grapes came from Vitis vinifera, the only grapevine species known to have been domesticated.
But the hurricanes put particular stress on honeybees, which live in colonies and can easily be domesticated.
Those last two function here as a sort of domesticated variation on C-3PO and R2-D2.
Other than people, facial mimicry has been observed in gorillas, orangutans, two monkey species and domesticated dogs.
Natural History Museums avoid even domesticated organisms as being too boring or too far removed from nature.
Farming bigger domesticated animals like cows, pigs, and sheep requires multiples times more water and grazing land.
The Epipaleolithic period bread was made of domesticated cereals and club-rush tubers, according to the study.
Wild bees are declining too, and some studies suggest that they do more pollination than domesticated honeybees.
"Donkeys in my opinion are the most misunderstood and underappreciated of man's domesticated animals," Mr. Stiert said.
It was domesticated by humans—originally, probably for food—and then was later used to carry messages.
In comparison to other domesticated animals like dogs or cats, they usually have their own small enclosures.
Depictions of domesticated, passive, and overly sexualized women have governed commercial promotions all throughout the 20th century.
The number of both wild and domesticated elephants has dropped significantly in Thailand over the past century.
Mr. Gendel used his privileged access to produce photographs that showed a domesticated side to the royals.
The rescuers were dreading Easter season, when the number of domesticated ducks dumped in city parks increases.
One domesticated fox refused to look at the camera until his assistant began howling like a wolf.
Native to the Andes in Peru and northwest Bolivia, potatoes were domesticated more than 10,000 years ago.
One way the team determined that a plant had been domesticated was a look at its fruit.
A lot of you want to talk about domesticated raccoons, and who are we to say no?
The pre-Columbian natives who domesticated tomatoes were themselves selecting for bigger fruit that has less sugar.
So for that robot in the museum, it may not ever be domesticated but it can be tamed.
Fascinatingly, the Andean highlanders also acquired the ability to digest potatoes, a domesticated crop derived from wild tubers.
Her debut fiction collection, Domesticated Wild Things, and Other Stories, won the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction.
Dr. Larson and Dr. Dobney showed that pigs were domesticated twice, once in Anatolia and once in China.
Dogs have long been man's best friend, living as our domesticated companions for as long as 32,000 years.
Luckily, it was recently renewed, so we'll find out soon what's next in this domesticated and bloody program.
These behavioural shifts mirror those of creatures domesticated from their wild cousins, such as dogs or farm animals.
Economic history owes a lot to geographic endowment; for example, Africa lacked large mammals that could be domesticated.
Our furry friends likely evolved from a population of wolves domesticated sometime between 2000,224 and 2000,000 years ago.
Dogs were probably domesticated by accident, when wolves began trailing ancient hunter-gatherers to snack on their garbage.
They usually prey on deer, elk, moose and other wild animals but sometimes attack domesticated pets and livestock.
An expansive international study of Amazon tree species in the journal Science has revealed that trees domesticated—i.e.
It does belong to the canidae family, so it's a distant cousin of wolves, foxes, and domesticated dogs.
And if they were domesticated in two separate locations, it could cast the relationship in a new light.
Because animals were already domesticated by the Copper Age, researchers previously thought that Ötzi probably didn't hunt much.
So the Times piece presented a woman of dignified prudence, whose deviations are of the mature, domesticated kind.
People who know they're allergic to cats either avoid our domesticated feline overlords or dose up on antihistamines.
The pool made surfing feel tame, domesticated, almost like an indoor, fixed-program sport—gymnastics, or figure skating.
The result is a picture of democracy domesticated by remembrance, fixed as the granite likeness of the Rev.
In addition to being overpopulated with kangaroos, today Australia is home to domesticated grazers like sheep and cows.
Ms. Porter has described her play as surrealist, but it's a little too domesticated to fit that label.
Now the IEO is raising domesticated bluefin to adulthood indoors at the new center, which opened in 2015.
They said earlier evidence had suggested these particular ancient humans had domesticated dogs before they began keeping cattle.
Unicorns paw through the trash cans; small domesticated house dragons are kept as pets and sleep in kennels.
The cordial coyote, called Carmine, came looking for her pal Ruth Bader, the domesticated dog, nearly every day.
I figured it was either the North American Snow Goose or the domesticated form of the Greylag Goose.
Domesticated dogs, cats and horses would still be allowed to be used in circus acts, the Times noted.
According to new research published in Biology Letters, domesticated goats use their gaze in communicative ways as well.
The development of self-conscious AIs will follow this model closely, as robots have already become our domesticated pals.
First, there are domesticated honeybees, managed by beekeepers and often transported from field to field to provide pollination services.
Oddly, despite the ubiquity of domesticated cattle, there isn't a common nongendered singular term in English for the animal.
Horses, domesticated as early 222 B.C. and pulling chariots no later than 22 B.C., were particularly worth the chase.
The big cat is as spoiled as a domesticated kitty, and he has the Instagram account to prove it!
Before it was fully domesticated, that placenta lacked the high amounts of lycopene that give it the red color.
And though these storied brands make more domesticated, "practical" machines, it's the super-sexy supercars that capture the imagination.
However, there's at least one reported instance of a domesticated Pikachu living for over 900 episodes (approximately 19 years).
" Mr. Weatherly, 48, was "domesticated properly," he said of his Connecticut childhood, "like a golden retriever in the country.
Though some countries had domesticated cattle 10,000 years ago, the animals came to the United States with European settlers.
Since then, it has actively sought to sway lawmakers to support legislation that would protect animals, wild and domesticated.
In fact, some believe we've essentially domesticated ourselves, creating evolutionary pressure to communicate and collaborate that's helped civilization thrive.
She's not even the only one to dress up her domesticated opossum in costumes and kisses for social media.
In fact, they'd taken affront at the suggestion, claiming that as their tarsiers were domesticated, they didn't travel far.
She and her colleagues raised both wolf puppies and domesticated puppies from the time they were 10 days old.
These wolves evolved after generations of exposure to humans, were domesticated and became the canine companions we know today.
Wolves are reticent to eat in front of people, for example, while domesticated dogs beg for dinner table scraps.
"It's the earliest solid evidence of domesticated turkey in southern Mexico that we have to date," Dr. Feinman said.
New direct evidence, like fossils of domesticated plants at the archaeological sites, would help advance such theories, she said.
The vault ships out wild seeds to gene banks worldwide where researchers grow and compare them to domesticated seeds.
We often think about crops as being domesticated by humans, but I would argue that the reverse is also true.
Rice is said to have first been domesticated in the Yangtze River valley in China more than 10,000 years ago.
In 2004, researchers published the findings of a study comparing the genes of 85 common domesticated dog breeds in Science.
The 20,000 species of wild bees are even more important than the domesticated kind, through their role in pollinating crops.
What was a fortress on a swamp for their parents was a domesticated home with reading and governesses for them.
There's a beauty in the bovine's domesticated body that inspired Daniel Naudé to spend two years taking portraits of cows.
This kind of facial communication has only been observed before in domesticated dogs and some species of primates, said Taylor.
All domesticated elephants are subjected to a savage ritual called phajaan, or "crushing," that has existed in Asia for centuries.
While geneticists haven't previously ruled out this possibility, the most common theory so far is that dogs were domesticated once.
Inspiration is a much-used, domesticated, amorphous and secular word for what is actually a revolutionary, countercultural and spiritual phenomenon.
"There is nothing like the eroticized gaze of the third to challenge our domesticated perceptions of each other," she writes.
His research has shown that beans were domesticated twice: in Mesoamerica, where their wild forebears evolved, and in the Andes.
What's more, domesticated honeybees might be spreading lethal viruses to wild bee populations, according to a study published in June.
Domesticated dogs have been in North America for at least 203,000 years, according to new research published in American Antiquity.
Thailand alone has an estimated 4,000 domesticated elephants, many working in the tourism trade, along with about 2,500 wild elephants.
Of the 6,190 domesticated mammal breeds used in agriculture, more than 559 have gone extinct and 1,000 more are threatened.
This was the surprising conclusion of a new study that examined the similarities and differences between wolves and domesticated dogs.
Nanchong Stray Animal Rescue claims that authorities are killing domesticated animals outright amid fears that they can spread the coronavirus.
Cattle, chickens and pigs were domesticated by people in different parts of the world between 8,000 and 11,000 years ago.
Archaeologists are not exactly sure, but recent research suggests that humans domesticated the big bird at least 1,500 years ago.
Today's domesticated chicken has a gene that controls reproduction and allows them to lay hundreds of eggs throughout the year.
Out of 141 starch samples recovered from 14 tools, 50 "were consistent with cultivated or domesticated potatoes," Dr. Rumold said.
Max and Katie's apartment complex is home to a menagerie of domesticated animals and a cool collection of vocal talents.
Plus, horses are domesticated pets; people who own and ride horses have that direct emotional link, and I understand that.
They also carry diseases that have the potential to devastate cattle and domesticated pig operations, as well as infect humans.
Once domesticated, this lineage of cats, called IV-A, gradually migrated north where they founded feline lineages in central Eurasia.
The analysis suggests that people in this area likely collected, cultivated, or domesticated cannabis specifically for its effects on the mind.
The authors speculate that sometime around 3,000 BC, a different population of horses became the source of all modern domesticated sources.
If his mother knew what he did with her Christmas gift, she'd lose her final hope of him ever being domesticated.
The team was also able to get a radiocarbon date on one of the domesticated samples: 5,300 to 5,400 years ago.
He's apparently still trying to sell the place, which sounds great if you're into into living like a domesticated Lara Croft.
The legend says that if you kiss one of these safe and domesticated stingrays, you'll have good luck for seven years.
But populations descended from those that domesticated milk-producing animals such as goats and cattle often retain lactose-digestion into adulthood.
And farmers protect their domesticated flocks from pathogens by screening and controlling ventilation in barns and by regularly disinfecting farm equipment.
With his radio collar and lagging entourage of humans, jeeps and elephants, the man said he thought T3 was distinctly domesticated.
Meanwhile, the carbon count of domesticated poultry grew to three times higher than that of every species of wild bird combined.
Bread depends on it to make dough rise: yeasts, whether wild or lab-domesticated, consume the simple sugars found in flour.
In the ongoing debate over how many times dogs were domesticated from wolves, this new study suggests it happened just once.
Exactly who domesticated these wolves, when, and how many times, is still a mystery, and scientists don't agree on the answer.
HUMAN beings domesticated several of the animals they encountered during their colonisation of the Americas—notably guinea pigs, llamas and turkeys.
Wolves, meanwhile — the dog's closest relative and an animal that has never been domesticated — notably don't look to humans for help.
This eye contact is significant, as it's a trait only observed in a few other domesticated animals, including dogs and horses.
Cats may be domesticated but they are still furry predators, incredible killing machines, and they can cause havoc to native fauna.
Add in the weight of our domesticated animals—mostly cows and pigs—and that ratio climbs to twenty-three to one.
Scientists have argued for years about when rice, which now feeds more than half of the world's population, was first domesticated.
Achieving a neutral net outcome for species numbers cannot be considered acceptable if weighing wild fauna against relatively homogenous domesticated species.
The Food and Drug Administration, though, has not approved marijuana for domesticated animals, citing a lack of research showing its effectiveness.
The first donkeys were probably domesticated about 6,000 years ago, and their importance was evident in those 5,000-year-old burials.
Unlike the IEO's domesticated bluefin, ranched bluefin are caught wild and then fattened in ocean pens for two to ten months.
We're so used to eating domesticated plants that the idea of eating wild tree parts seems strange, primitive and possibly dangerous.
His foxes also showed physical changes, like piebald coats and floppy ears — characteristics shared by dogs, cows and other domesticated animals.
The fantasy of walking out on your life and aimlessly wandering around can beguile even the most contentedly domesticated among us.
Dogs were domesticated 15,000 or more years ago, scientists now think, perhaps in Asia or Europe or in both places independently.
Now, the creatures and the story beats have been domesticated, and they dutifully trot out for regular feedings on Disney's schedule.
Unlike domesticated pigs, feral hogs can become aggressive if they feel trapped, or if a female hog is defending her offspring.
Domesticated animals occupy a privileged sphere, but even they are often treated cruelly (think of puppy mills, or abandoned feral cats).
But ferret enthusiasts have argued that the animals are fully domesticated and less threatening to wildlife than, for example, house cats.
After the worldwide economic crisis of 2008, which hit the Emirates hard, the "Urban Archaeology" sculptures shrank in scale, became domesticated.
"When animals were domesticated they gave up that freedom to go under a bush and wait to die," said Dr. Villalobos.
The 13 artists in Natural Wonders: The Sublime in Contemporary Art straddle the line between natural and artificial, wild and domesticated.
And although it may be hard to believe, it seems that neither potpie nor chicken Parmesan was the reason humans domesticated them.
How to speak cat Usually, you don't have to write a 200-page book to figure out why we domesticated an animal.
Wild animal populations are disease reservoirs too, but domesticated poultry and swine are significant in the incubation and transmission of flu viruses.
We know that the Maya and the Aztecs and even the people before that, going back 3,900 years, were using domesticated cacao.
While this new study won't end the argument over how many times dogs were domesticated, it does offer a compelling, simple solution.
Like the city on two continents, the cats exist between worlds—domesticated and wild—but emerge with a character all their own.
It's important to know that there are domesticated pigs out there, but they are far more work than a cat or dog.
We domesticated grains so that we could mash them up and let them transform into intoxicating liquids that would bring us together.
There are about 3,700 elephants left in the wild in Thailand and up to 4,000 domesticated animals, says British conservation organization EleAid.
And to this day, my husband can endlessly brag about how he handled the treacherous road conditions like a domesticated Bear Grylls.
Humans domesticated themselves as well as their crops and animals, creating space for the drudgery of subsistence agriculture and oppressive political hierarchies.
The enormous, well-preserved head could yield important genetic information about the evolutionary history of wolves and the origin of domesticated dogs.
Towards the end of May, we stumbled upon "Kayako's Instagram account" which documented her domesticated life with her equally creepy son, Toshio.
They are investigating a case of suspected bird flu in a domesticated bird in Vorarlberg province and expect final results on Friday.
"Me and Pauly are like domesticated cheetahs — released in the wild of Las Vegas, full of strippers and Canadian girls," Vinny says.
In other words, the East Asian dogs and the European dogs were domesticated separately, in two different occasions, the study authors say.
Living in close proximity to domesticated animals led to diseases that crossed the species barrier, wreaking havoc in the densely settled communities.
It is too bad, then, that the camp of the Met Gala pink carpet this year was domesticated and defanged by earnestness.
The new dates are consistent with genetic evidence published last year, suggesting domesticated dogs were in the Americas around 270,22019 years ago.
The first domesticated dogs appeared in Eurasia no later than 16,000 years ago, and possibly as long ago as 40,000 years ago.
Legumes were domesticated some 10,000 years ago, and thousands of varieties of beans and lentils have grown all over the world since.
On a break from a hectic publicity schedule last month, she decided to commune with a more quotidian breed of domesticated animal.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads DETROIT — According to artist Koen Vanmechelen, the chicken is the most domesticated animal in the world.
In memoriam: Terrence McNally, 81, a Tony Award-winning American playwright whose work dramatized domesticated gay life, died in Florida on Tuesday.
Production of domesticated livestock on the country's farms is, compared to the sale of wildlife, subjected to far more regulation and inspection.
No one knows when Aztec and Mayan Indians of pre-Colombian Mexia domesticated the millions-of-years-old North American wild turkey.
Will Kymlicka and Sue Donaldson have already done wonderful work on reciprocity and community with domesticated animals, but there's more to do.
It's funny, freakish and wild in ways that polite "new music," and especially the more domesticated forms of American minimalism, are not.
But a dog breed's present-day location may not reflect where dogs were actually domesticated more than 20,000 years ago, Veeramah says.
First, Zarrillo determined that there was cacao starch in the residue, but she couldn't tell whether the starch was domesticated cacao or wild.
Here, Cornell University scientists crossbreed domesticated crops with their wild ancestors to propagate superhardy strains that better withstand droughts, heat waves, and freezes.
The domesticated dog is actually a close evolutionary relation to humans, compared to many other animals, and its DNA is fairly well-studied.
Just a few years ago a woman like Sharma would have little more to look forward to than a life of domesticated drudgery.
Humans have come to exert enormous power over the lives of other animals, especially those we have domesticated and exploit by the billions.
This video about domesticated foxes is our take on a famous science story that began in the Soviet Union nearly 60 years ago.
It might have played a role in the way we've domesticated dogs to have big heads and eyes even as they get older.
For now, as the search for our domesticated hybrid yeast's origin continues, we're just going to sit back and enjoy a cold one.
He had this idea that was radical for its time: domesticated animals like dogs are friendly because of genes that govern their behavior.
These aren't domesticated animals (although they can be trained as such), something people often forget until a pig reaches 150 or 200 pounds.
And of course we will exert our own selection and genetic engineering upon our crops and domesticated animals to suit the changing climate.
Previous studies have concluded that dogs were likely domesticated just once, but the timing and origin of this event has been hotly debated.
The new study shows that dogs were likely domesticated on at least two different occasions and in two different parts of the world.
This comprehensive new family tree suggests that dogs were independently domesticated in two locations from distinct wolf populations separated by thousands of miles.
The animals are the descendants of domesticated horses that either survived shipwrecks or were abandoned by their owners during the Spanish colonization period.
A hundred million tonnes of it a year for all the world's domesticated ruminants, according to the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation.
These wild African pigs have co-evolved with the virus and are thus less susceptible to it than are non-African domesticated animals.
Frightened Hawk Hitches a Ride in a Taxi to Escape Hurricane Harvey It's not just domesticated animals who are spooked by the storm.
Most of the rogue swarms they collect are domesticated—escapees from a hobbyist's roof—but feral bees sometimes cluster in rotting tree trunks.
Though a privately owned cougar will eventually grow accustomed to its owners, it can never be domesticated like a dog or a cat.
Humans domesticated the modern cat thousands of years ago as a form of early pest control, normally to keep rodents away from crops.
Not only is Uni a domesticated raccoon living in Taiwan, he also has a distinct cinnamon color and love for outrageous fur styles.
I draw from my own memories and pay tribute to her domesticated role as a worker for the same family for 42 years.
Now on display at the Cincinnati Art Museum, the show describes our attraction to felines while paying homage to our other domesticated counterpart.
Trilobites You may have never eaten a groundcherry, but with common gene-editing techniques it and other fruits may be more easily domesticated.
At the beginning of the 20th century, Thailand was said to have had more than 300,000 wild elephants and about 100,000 domesticated ones.
It's also true they have been domesticated longer than cats, and have more breeds, thus having a greater potential for studying inherited diseases.
Vanmechelen is clearly delighted in the chance that brings these chickens, most domesticated of all species, to live in an explicitly domestic setting.
Chickens seem to have been domesticated about 8,000 years ago, and gradually bred to be larger and meatier than their jungle fowl ancestors.
Mr. Andernach said the Staten Island turkeys fall somewhere between being wild and being domesticated like those raised on a farm for food.
I could see a similar thing happening in any organism that is fully or partially domesticated and has the innate biology for culture.
But Spaniards who conquered Mexico took fat domesticated turkeys back to Spain in 1519, and they instantly became popular for taste and nutrition.
" Brieanah Schwartz, government relations and policy counsel of the American Wild Horse Campaign, said the procedure is "very rarely used on domesticated mares.
"Their work has absolutely been domesticated and appropriated by some of the institutions they question," the Danish art critic Cecilie Hogsbro Ostergaard said.
When domesticated cats emerged several thousand years ago, the parasite might have expanded into a new host population that favored rodents rather than primates.
The blaze ravaged thousands of acres, destroying 160 homes and taking the lives of two humans, as well as numerous animals wild and domesticated.
But logging has been banned and many domesticated elephants have ended up on the tourist trail, giving rides and putting on displays in shows.
Just as humans artificially bred bulldogs from domesticated wolves, they've also tampered with equines, selecting particular horses for their pedigrees, athletic abilities, and looks.
From about 3,500 to 5003,000 years ago, this population primarily fed on fish and other seafood, but then they switched to eating domesticated pigs.
White or black rabbits would most likely be domesticated, and are less likely to be found randomly running on the side of the highway.
The US Department of Agriculture requires shipments of domesticated animals to be certified as disease-free, but the same safeguards don't exist for wildlife.
For a long time, scientists couldn't figure out where domesticated corn originally came from — it doesn't look like anything that grows in the wild.
It also appears that there was a dramatic population turnover event in Europe, one that effectively replaced the earliest domesticated dog populations living there.
Today's study disputes those findings, however, arguing instead that a single group of dogs were probably first domesticated between 20,000 and 40,000 years ago.
" Citing the RSPB, The Times noted that "the common pigeon was domesticated centuries ago and bred over generations to produce the ornamental white dove.
He said foresters may try to get the elephant to walk to an area closer to the road by luring it with domesticated elephants.
The nineteenth century dreamed of an Arctic that was warm, accessible, and domesticated, but found a remote and frozen region indifferent to human life.
Within about five generations, the foxes, which are in the canine family, began to act more domesticated, wagging their tails and licking people's hands.
In memoriam: Terrence McNally, a four-time Tony Award-winning playwright, dramatized and domesticated gay life in a Broadway career that spanned five decades.
"The big difference when it comes to reindeer is that they are semi-domesticated and a natural part of the ecosystem," Ms. Jonsson wrote.
Others have suggested that on large-scale ibis farms, priests bred and raised domesticated birds the way people raise chickens and other fowl today.
The young Canadian painter Matthew Wong has an illustrator's vivid sense of color and an obsessiveness he seems to have domesticated into a resource.
New research suggests that wolves, like humans, have a knack for identifying these kinds of cause-and-effect relationships, but that domesticated dogs do not.
"Our study has shown that the wolf understands [cause-and-effect] connections better than our four-legged domesticated companions," said Lampe in a press release.
"I was confident soon after we started excavating Botai sites in 1993 that we had found the earliest domesticated horses," she said in a statement.
When comparing these ancient and modern genomes, the researchers were unable to link domesticated horses back to the Botai horses—except for the Przewalski's horse.
Joyce E. ChaplinProfessor, History, Harvard University and the author of Food in Time and Place, among other booksI'd point an accusing finger at domesticated livestock.
New research suggests dogs were domesticated from wolves just once—that's all it might have taken for puppers and people to form an everlasting alliance.
They practise agriculture with a species of fungus that they have domesticated to the point that it can no longer survive without the ants' care.
Feral cats make up most of the breeding population, so despite living alongside humans for some 9,000 years, house cats are still not fully domesticated.
Entomologists and bug experts say conditions are ripe for the domesticated versions of the brown-colored bugs to get active, including taking to the air.
They were not domesticated from North American wolves but instead padded their way into the Americas from Asia alongside humans at least 10,000 years ago.
One guided tour takes you step-by-step through the religious rituals in a temple, while another explores the different domesticated animals in the game.
When you visit, the domesticated wolves will be brought out with a guide and trainer (a wolf whisperer, so to speak) for guests to pet.
We took wild, dangerous pack animals from the forests where they menaced us and our families, and domesticated them over years, turning them into tireless...
But by contrast, zoonoses transmitted by domesticated animals were inextricably linked to high human population density, and not at all to levels of species richness.
But the furtive predators are not fenced in, so they commonly roam outside refuges and sometimes (less ideally) feed on domesticated cattle, goats, or pigs.
As a result, domesticated reindeer look no different to their wild cousins (like caribou), but cows and sheep look very different to their wild ancestors.
MAZEN HAJJAR likes to say that barley was first domesticated—in the Middle East, mind you—for the purpose of brewing beer, not baking bread.
"The pigeons we have in North America, the ones we see in the cities, are the domesticated form of the rock dove," he told Gizmodo.
Some people don't see a really wild animal from one day to the next, unless it's a rat or a pigeon, which are both domesticated.
The natural protein fiber, one of the strongest found in nature, is harvested from the larval cocoons of Bombyx mori, aka the domesticated silk moth.
Dogs are unique in the way every species is unique, but as far as domesticated, social carnivores go, they're not that special, the researchers say.
Displays explain how vines and grapes were domesticated, how they occupied exalted mythological positions within ancient societies and how vines adapt to wildly different terrains.
In cities, where animals feast on human gardens or garbage and most landscape plants are domesticated cultivars, native trees are the last truly wild beings.
"Domesticated Animals," on the album, talks about wanting to be feral, while to me Ronson's productions often sound carefully retro and neat and... Buttoned-up.
Their goal was to determine if wolf puppies exhibit the same behaviors as domesticated puppies, which would help them pinpoint the origin of the behaviors.
Most of his titles were published under two imprints with telltale names: first Amok Press and later Feral House (its motto: "Refuses to Be Domesticated").
Descended from wolves, dogs were the first animals to be domesticated, an advance that appears to have occurred independently in ancient cultures around the world.
Taylor Swift says her 'Cats' persona is more of a 'feral'-type cat than a domesticated one You've gotta respect her commitment to her art.
Domesticated crops have been selected across countless generations for high yields, nutrition and other qualities, and this endless fine-tuning has lowered their genetic diversity.
To parse the difference, the team tested the samples for theobromine, a particular biochemical compound that is found in domesticated cacao but not in wild cacao.
The Wildlings: a derogatory term for the Free Folk, those that live beyond the Wall, which refers to something that is "wild; not cultivated or domesticated."
According to local NBC affiliate WTHR, the woman, realizing that her domesticated raccoon was a little more lethargic than usual, frantically tried to get some help.
Traveling with Small Pet Dogs  Most domesticated dogs weighing 33 pounds or less are allowed to travel with their owners in the cabin of the plane.
Diogo Lagroteria, a veterinarian and environmental analyst at Ibama, told the G1 news portal that a jaguar can never be considered a domesticated or docile animal.
By this time, your buzz has morphed into utter misery, and you're positive you will die alone surrounded by pizza boxes and a dozen domesticated ferrets.
Behavioral research has shown that dogs are the only domesticated animals that interact with their humans in the same way that babies interact with their parents.
"People may say it's 'unnatural', but if you think about it, any domesticated pet we have today was a wild animal at some point," Mitchell said.
And most of the field would probably agree with its conclusions: that dogs were probably domesticated just once, and within the 20,000-year window Veeramah proposes.
But in Central Asia, where horses are thought to have originally been domesticated, the job is in its last throes, too, writes the NYT's Andy Higgins.
As the Trump presidency and climate crisis threaten to kill us off, we find ourselves too domesticated to see the danger and do much of anything.
What the law says about pet tigers So why do we make it so easy for people to own animals that aren't domesticated and are dangerous?
"The cave is my main piece in the exhibition, and it is meant to be a cave a person has moved into and domesticated," she describes.
Dr. Larson and Keith Dobney of Liverpool University found that wild boars were domesticated twice, once in China and once in Anatolia, part of modern Turkey.
That means the extinct monkey was around the same size as a common hamster, in addition to having a similar body mass to these domesticated rodents.
Horses—which were first domesticated in Kazakhstan for riding, milk, and meat—facilitated great journeys along the Silk Road, dispersing the seeds all along their way.
Four thousand years passed between the first firm evidence of domesticated plants, cereals, and the beginning of truly agrarian communities that are living largely by agriculture.
The details of how most animals became domesticated lie deep in the murky past, much debated and glimpsed only in tantalizing hints from fossils and DNA.
And like the men who steered those metal machines, the 133,000 domesticated birds currently living on board have undergone training, albeit as messengers on night missions.
Domesticated and farmed animals such as horses and camels may carry no more than one rider and no more than 20 percent of their body weight.
She found dozens of cases of domesticated cats (and dogs) who had nibbled on their deceased owners—most of the incidents were recorded in police reports.
Dr. Schaffner cautioned anyone traveling to China to avoid visiting live animal markets and to keep a distance from all live animals, including domesticated farm animals.
THE DECADE IN CULTURE In the 2010s, celebrity culture was domesticated by a free photo sharing app, and the paparazzi were left stranded on the pavement.
"We don't have enough data to know how many times it was domesticated in this particular area, or if it was just once," Dr. Rumold said.
Since those dogs lived thousands of years after domestication, the findings suggest the first domesticated dogs were no better equipped to digest starch than wolves were.
Farmers here grow dark-yellow, white and burgundy corn on small plots, much as they have since the plant was domesticated in Mexico thousands of years ago.
Understandably, scientists assumed this was the place and time where domesticated equines first emerged, but new research published today in Science is overturning this long held assumption.
If it turns out to be domesticated, Joanna says she might adopt it or help it find a safe home through Lockwood Animal Rescue Center in Ventura.
But as Popular Science explains, when it comes to keeping foxes as pets, it's important to know these animals may be tamed, but they are not domesticated.
Dr. Germonpré said she thinks dogs were domesticated some time before this animal died, and she leans toward the idea that humans intentionally bred them from wolves.
More recently discovered strains of yeast from places like North Carolina and Tibet have the closest relatives to the domesticated S. eubayanus half of the lager hybrid.
They are seen as a threat to farming animals, while cross breeding with domesticated dog breeds has diluted the dingo gene pool, according to the Australian Museum.
The plant has never been domesticated, and Lippman referred to the wild version as a "monstrosity": tall, unkempt, and stingy, bestowing a single measly fruit per shoot.
New research suggests this isn't the case, and that wolves are far better at cooperation than their domesticated cousins, at least when they're cooperating with one another.
We hear Taji meet the skunk enthusiasts and their domesticated pets, and one attendee who claims to own the world's only service skunk that helps with seizures.
RCA hyped Toscanini, and the media responded gratefully, some would say shamelessly: Toscanini was widely profiled and photographed, lionized and domesticated by Life and countless other publications.
But as the new research shows, there's about a 703,000-year archaeological gap between the presence of humans in the Americas and the presence of domesticated dogs.
The Russian women are of the sexy variety, embodying a woodland nymph type of look as they pose sensually with what appears to be a domesticated bear.
Birds do attack pets — great horned owls in particular have a reputation for attacking domesticated cats — but there are a number of ways to avoid these confrontations.
Dogs, which were domesticated at least 15,0003 years ago, came over to North America with humans from Siberia, but perhaps not with the first wave of migration.
Researchers may find plants they can hybridize with domesticated sweet potatoes and other crops, endowing them with genes for resistance to diseases, or for withstanding climate change.
It's surprising because scientists have pinpointed such interactions with humans as a learned behavior picked up when we first domesticated dogs from gray wolves 15,000 years ago.
Mr. Putin, by many accounts, came to enjoy the company of corporate chieftains who, like Russia's domesticated tycoons, learned not to risk their prospects over policy criticism.
Crossing wild relatives with their domesticated counterparts may help breeders develop new, resilient crop varieties that are better able to adapt to temperature extremes and climate unpredictability.
Behavioral experiments led by Radboud University's Michelle Lampe demonstrated that wolves, unlike their domesticated cousins, have an ingrained knack for making causal inferences about where food was hidden.
Modern domesticated horses, it now appears, are not descended from the Botai horses, and the identity of their true ancestral population is now a mystery to be solved.
As archaeologists have generally understood it, chocolate goes back to the Aztec and Mayan people, who first domesticated cacao in what's now Central America about 3,13 years ago.
The contest received over 3,500 submissions, which were required to have been taken by the photographer, not of a pet or domesticated animal, and without being digitally manipulated.
The study indicates cacao was domesticated roughly 1,500 years earlier than previously known, and that it occurred in South America rather than in Central America, as previously thought.
Since those resistance traits typically involve a suite of genes, Peres says, they would be extremely difficult to introduce into domesticated tomatoes, via Crispr or any other technology.
The sun bear, already well-known online for its silly faces, is the first non-primate, non-domesticated animal found to mimic the facial expressions of its playmates.
United allows domesticated cats, dogs, rabbits and household birds (excluding cockatoos) to travel accompanied in the aircraft cabin on most flights within the U.S. for $125 service charge.
Why it happened: As modern humans began farming, two agricultural staples – cereals made from grains and dairy from domesticated animals – became primary sources of food, the researchers said.
These aren't the oldest fossils of domesticated dogs; one jawbone dating to 220,403 years ago was found in Germany, and older fossils seem dog-like, but lack confirmation.
Actually, they have such BDE that unlike many other domesticated animals, they don't need humans to survive, they simply settle because it's easier and more convenient for them.
The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation estimates that the world's domesticated ruminants annually release 25m tonnes of methane—a greenhouse gas 27 times more powerful than carbon dioxide.
I was disappointed not to see any llamas or alpacas on our trip, but we did see several herds of guanacos, the wild cousins of the domesticated llama.
Rubber dandelion must be domesticated before it can be cultivated as a field crop because it is slow to establish and grow and is easily swamped by weeds.
Although they have not been approved by regulators, marijuana-based treatments are being used not only for cats and dogs, but for pigs, horses and domesticated wild animals.
This is a crucial status for a gay artist to maintain at a time when "gay" is being domesticated and normalized, its potential for political resistance smoothed away.
Researchers at Duke University, among other places, have compared the brains of domesticated animals to those of their wild relatives and found a 10 to 15 percent reduction.
For example, given humanity's unflagging omnivorousness (between 87 and 96.3 percent of Americans eat meat, depending on the survey), are ethically-sourced wild animals preferable to domesticated animals?
The account that led me to these images belongs to Svetlana and Yuri Panteleenko, a Russian couple living in Moscow with their 24-year-old domesticated bear, Stepan.
It is perhaps a surprising finding for a domesticated species, but the behavior seems to be innate, Dr. Beatty said, and points to goldfish having complex cognitive abilities.
The calming effect of some domesticated animals has become so widely accepted that many schools bring in trained therapy dogs to play with stressed students during exam periods.
If the ibis mummies had been domesticated, those genomes would probably have a lot in common with each other, like "chickens from the same farm," Dr. Wasef said.
The predatory lineup includes the jaguar, the mountain lion, the ocelot, the Canada lynx and the margay, as well as domesticated cats like the Siamese and the Sphynx.
As carbon emissions rise and the planet warms, domesticated crops like rice and wheat are losing nutritional value, and climate disasters are putting harvests and farmland at risk.
And in the following scenes, the production seemed to find its sharp edge, as the Forester's relationship with the domesticated Vixen flickers between abuse and mutual, animalistic attraction.
"How we think of it is that first we domesticated cows and now we're domesticating their cells," IndieBio program director Ryan Bethencourt said in an interview with CNBC.
Basically, biologists took some goats and presented them with some "unsolvable problem," which is apparently a common paradigm in exploring domesticated animal behavior, and then observed the results.
And because other living free-roaming horses, such as the mustang of North America and the brumby of Australia, also come from domesticated stock, they're not truly "wild" either.
In that study, published last year in Science, researchers put forth a "dual origin" idea that dogs were domesticated from wolves on two separate occasions, in Europe and Asia.
The discovery means that ancient hunter-gatherers were using the wild ancestors of domesticated cereals, such as wild einkorn and club-rush tubers, to make flatbread-like food products.
Luis and Dorita Elizondo have made a personal bet on Mexican fields, on the fertility of its land, and on the people who first domesticated maize 25.3,220 years ago.
In total, they analyzed over 185,000 genetic markers from 549 village dogs, and concluded that dogs were most likely first domesticated in Central Asia, likely near Nepal or India.
Their association with garbage cans and fecal matter-encrusted wings and ledges in cityscapes likely contributed to them losing the popularity contest to the domesticated chicken and other poultry.
Domesticated as it may be, the species maintains the capacity for a proactive, cold-blooded kind of aggression that may have been instrumental in making societies more socially cohesive.
This new work from researchers in the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Malaysia demonstrates evidence of a kind of social communication only seen previously in primates and domesticated animals.
"It sort of suggests that whatever humans did at the time, wolves were sort of primed to become domesticated, and it was sort of an easy process," says Boyko.
Juniper: The Happiest Fox is scheduled for release by Chronicle Books in April 2018, and PEOPLE has the pleasure of exclusively introducing this beloved domesticated fox's next big project.
"One of the main reasons so few animals can be domesticated is that only rare social species let humans sit in the role of dominant pack animal," they write.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Before computers were domesticated into sleek little iPhones, they were unwieldy beasts of machines that weighed up to two-and-a-half tons.
A 7,500-year trot into the future and humans domesticated horses, a biological technology that helped us move ourselves and our things faster along crooked paths and natural trails.
The Midwest used to provide weeds, wildflowers and alfalfa for native and domesticated bees alike, but in the last couple of decades much of this food source has disappeared.
It would suggest that the wild ancestors of sweet potatoes spread across the Pacific and were then domesticated many times over — yet wound up looking the same every time.
During the Pleistocene Era, the continent was dominated by two kinds of horses, he said, adding that he believes today's domesticated horses are linked to one of those breeds.
Simply knowing that fragment of history, and knowing that domesticated turkey chicks freeze when hawks fly overhead, make them more complicated creatures than farmyard poultry or oven-ready carcasses.
Wildlife handlers warn that lemurs are not suitable as domesticated animals and that those bred as pets can be highly unpredictable, posing a danger to themselves and their owners.
In the myth, the sun dies, the world is plunged into darkness and household objects and domesticated animals revolt: Mortars and grinding stones eat people, and llamas drive humans.
Mainly like, as I said in sub-Saharan Africa, but it's also found an Eaton in Brazil where it was domesticated and Southeast Asia eats a lot of cassava.
Alternative explanations remain on the table, because the new study didn't provide enough evidence for exactly where sweet potatoes were first domesticated and when they arrived in the Pacific.
"Congress finds that unlike cows, pigs, and other domesticated species, horses and other members of the equidae family are not raised for the purpose of human consumption," the bill states.
"The animals, which are described as being the same size of a medium- to small-sized dog, are potentially dangerous if approached as they are not domesticated," the statement read.
Domesticated fish may not live as long as your average human — or dog, or hamster, or house fly — but they really have it made during their short time on Earth.
According to the shoot's press release, the models play the roles of "super friendly, domesticated humanoid pets," as apparently, only "the friendliest" would survive a "superior alien humanoid species" invasion.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Scholars believe that the dromedary was likely domesticated on the southern Arabian Peninsula, where they helped humans travel across unforgiving desert landscapes for millennia.
Alice Roberts, an anatomist and palaeopathologist, uses the story of how apples, cattle, dogs, horses and rice came to be domesticated to tell a wider story about humans' long history.
Guinea pigs were domesticated at least 5,000 years ago, Valdez told Gizmodo, representing "an important element of Andean culture, next to coca leaves and chicha," the latter being fermented beverages.
Many of the 85 domesticated tree species the international team of ecologists surveyed, like cacao, acai, and brazil nut, are still of vital importance for the livelihoods of Amazonian peoples.
Though many people will also serve apple pie — the American food of cliché — apples were in fact domesticated in the Middle East, and were introduced to the US by settlers.
This trifecta of shows, when you say their titles in that order—togetherness, catastrophe, divorce—appears to tell a common story about what can happen to love when it's domesticated.
Since horses have been domesticated throughout the known world and used for various things throughout the series, they play a big role in both on-screen and off-screen drama.
Special Forces, by nature of their deployments, "must be able to walk or run undetected through rural and urban areas without alerting adversarial domesticated and feral canines," says the tender.
More than a million people have visited the replicas to see domesticated animals like llamas, ponies and rabbits, and to hear, as Mr. Huibers intended, a message of God's love.
The notion of a dual origin of dogs is something new for geneticists, but Dr. Larson said archaeologists have long considered the possibility that dogs were domesticated more than once.
Plus, dogs were domesticated by eating our own table scraps for thousands of years, so it's not too much of a leap to think you could eat their food, too.
As with Thoreau, both present the player with the same ethical dilemmas: survey the land and prepare it to be developed, or collect specimens and prepare it to be domesticated.
By the time his nastiest observations fight their way to the surface, however, much of their sting has been absorbed by flesh, leaving a sometimes revivifying but thoroughly domesticated skepticism.
A dog's ability to play fetch and other activities with humans is a learned behavior that likely occurred over time after humans domesticated dogs from gray wolves 15,000 years ago.
But for an actress who has prized her characters' contradictions, Ms. Bening has seen her public image be reduced to the role of the lion tamer who domesticated Mr. Beatty.
We can take strange comfort in the knowledge that zebra finches experience REM sleep, that dolphins recognize themselves in mirrors, that our early ancestors may have been domesticated by wolves.
"The fact that different kinds of domesticated animals have somewhat different sets of the affected traits is perfectly consistent with the idea of a 'syndrome'," he wrote in an email.
"Our results show that animals domesticated primarily for production show audience-dependent human-directed behaviour in a similar manner to companion animals such as dogs and horses," the paper notes.
Domesticated animals are great as companions and healers but part-wild or wild animals do not have to allow you in their pack, and when they choose you – that is magic.
Humans began domesticating dogs 15,000 years ago, and researchers say these studies into the DNA of dog lovers could help our understanding of why dogs were domesticated in the first place.
As they settled new lands, these pioneering farmers brought their domesticated animals with them, such as sheep, goats, pigs, and cattle, along with cultivated plants like wheat barley, peas, and lentils.
And so for decades now, plant geographers have suggested an alternative theory: that cacao was domesticated in the upper Amazon, because that's where the greatest variety of wild cacao trees are.
There are about 3,700 elephants left in the wild in Thailand and up to 4,000 domesticated ones, according to EleAid, a British organization working for the conservation of the Asian elephant.
"This study moves forward what we understand about dog cognition," Dr. Kaminski said in a news release, though she noted the behavior could be a result of the dogs being domesticated.
After cradling a koala bear (which, yes, we are very jealous of), she hung out with a dingo, a semi-domesticated feral dog that is somewhat of a mascot in Australia.
Navigating your 20s and 30s can spurn growing disillusionment; for some, it marks a weird middle ground between the innocence of childhood and what can seem like a domesticated, neutered adulthood.
Bowie will be remembered by history as a series of artistic exhibitionisms, but by the 1990s his lust for glory had already ebbed in favor of a highly domesticated love-nest.
We took wild, dangerous pack animals from the forests where they menaced us and our families, and domesticated them over years, turning them into tireless shepherds, keen hunters, and faithful companions.
Combined with other data, the University of Oxford group suggested that dogs were independently domesticated twice from gray wolves during the Old Stone Age, once in Asia and once in Europe.
Europe also plays a part in the history of domesticated dogs because most of the breeds we know and love today came about due to selective breeding during England's Victorian period.
Image: Del Baston/Center for American ArchaeologyThe skeletal remains of three ancient dogs found buried in Illinois now represent the earliest evidence for the presence of domesticated dogs in the Americas.
Elsewhere, Vinnie whisks Abby away from the filth and stress of the neighborhood and gives her a tour of his past in Coney Island and a vision of their domesticated future.
When creating a new species, she considers its habitat, how it survives, the extremes of its environment, if its prey or predator, if it can be domesticated and how it sounds.
Where once winter here meant broad, moody skies over expanses of bare potato fields, the terrain on Long Island's moneyed East End suddenly looks as domesticated as tea at the Ritz.
In spring, the pink flowers blanket the hills, at altitudes too high for domesticated honeybees to fly, so to harvest honey that contains grayanotoxin, locals have one option: to scale the cliffs.
It's a climate change cautionary tale in the form of a zombie story, narrated by a domesticated pet crow who's learned to speak English and who you'll wish were your best friend.
In the most incisive essay in "After Piketty", Suresh Naidu describes a "domesticated Piketty" who communicates in the language of economics and whose argument hinges on things like the elasticity of substitution.
An initial analysis conducted with a team of colleagues revealed that all of the seeds came from grapes harvested from vines that had been domesticated rather than those collected from the wild.
Previous research has suggested that honeybees — domesticated cousins of the bumbles — might be able to detect electric fields with their antennae, although some scientists think more research is needed on that front.
Murray hopes that with some love and persistence, she can get the kitties, whom she has named Cute Face, Funny Face and Pretty Face, domesticated enough to be put up for adoption.
We found no evidence of a replacement, and instead we found that the current data still support a scenario that dogs were domesticated just once, sometime between 20,000 to 40,000 years ago.
Highly pathogenic bird flu is often fatal for domesticated poultry and led to the deaths of about 50 million birds, mostly egg-laying hens, in the United States in 2014 and 2015.
Horses have always been close to us, a crucial part of our development into modern people, our metonym for speed, yet alien, not truly domesticated because they live for themselves, not us.
One is that I think the standard narrative is that once we had domesticated plants, then we immediately shifted to an agricultural society so that we could stay in the same place.
London Theater Reviews It's long been argued in Britain's theatrical circles that Chekhov has been domesticated as an English playwright, given how deeply his work has been absorbed into the country's culture.
" A visit by McClatchy investigative reporters "found animals in deplorable conditions… merchants openly sold bone wine, despite a 1993 ban by China on bone products sourced from both domesticated and wild tigers.
Releasing them into the forest, where about 3,000 wild elephants live, is not an option because it is illegal under Thai law; in the forest, domesticated elephants would compete with wild counterparts.
"It's the earliest solid evidence of domesticated turkey in southern Mexico that we have to date," said Gary Feinman, an archaeologist from the Field Museum in Chicago, in an interview last year.
Though born in Mexico, the home country of domesticated turkeys, I did not know what a turkey was when I left it for the United States in 1943, just under age three.
Orangutans like Hope, Leuser, Chrismon or Fahzren, who have been severely injured or domesticated, will live out their lives here or at the Haven, the SOCP's soon-to-open protected sanctuary nearby.
Taylor said that ice patches played an important role for wild and domesticated animals in high mountain areas around the world, and his research showed a tangible impact of the climate crisis.
According to an international non-profit called the Crop Trust, many seed vaults lack seeds from the wild cousins of domesticated crops, including some species of wild rice, lentils, potatoes, and carrots.
Now, researchers have found evidence that indigenous people may have domesticated and cultivated Amazonian plants and trees thousands of years ago, further supporting the idea that ancient humans helped shape the forest.
Emotionally strategic and materially demanding, she leads a life of domesticated excess, indulging in all the "gold dinnerwear, sporting-goods trees, nectarines, garbage disposals, [and] bumpless noses" that daddy's money can buy.
According to a new paper published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, domesticated cacao — the raw ingredient for chocolate — can in fact be traced farther south, to the upper Amazon in South America.
"I think it should come as no surprise that humans have had a long, intimate history with cannabis, as they have had with all of the plants that eventually became domesticated," Spengler added.
We know that a domesticated yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) combined with a recently discovered yeast (Saccharomyces eubayanus) at some point to create an interspecies hybrid—but we've never understood how the two halves met.
Sarah was also special because she was one of the big cats at the Cincinnati Zoo raised with a puppy, which zoos sometimes do because the domesticated dogs help keep the cheetahs calm.
Anyone who makes you feel guilty for not being traditionally domesticated is speaking nonsense, and if they enjoy it so much, ask them how much they charge to come do it for you.
But even knowing all this, let's be honest: the two most important types of dogs most of us encounter in the summer are of the domesticated animal variety and the delicious, edible sort.
"Some paleontologists have even claimed that if humans had never domesticated horses, the horse would be extinct by now, simply because it was on the verge of extinction" 5,500 years ago, Orlando said.
The revelation that ancient domesticated tree species still vital to many Amazonian peoples' livelihoods are widespread throughout the rainforest highlights another layer of irresponsibility and shortsightedness in the wanton destruction of the Amazon.
A more recent drawing-painting of outlined cats against an abstract ground punctuated by a few hits of red, yellow, and blue, is a friendly, domesticated transformation of Jackson Pollock's all-over abstractions.
In a study of 41 crops grown worldwide, researchers found that increasing wild pollinators' visits to a crop improved fruit production by twice as much as an equivalent increase in domesticated honeybee visits.
The most common, the fennec fox, is an adorably petite pack animal that is pretty docile — though it is still important to note that even these tiny furry friends are not fully domesticated.
Go deeper: Analysis of the surface patterns of the phytoliths found that the rice samples from the sites in China were more closely related to modern domesticated rice species than wild rice species.
In general, it's a problem when people advertise benefits of interaction with species that are not domesticated, because there are risks to those interactions, and then people get upset when bad things happen.
A. The International Center for Tropical Agriculture preserves the seeds of nearly 40,000 bean varieties, many of which were first domesticated from wild types thousands of years ago in the tropical New World.
A 2017 study published in Science found that plants domesticated by Indigenous populations—such as the brazil nut, maripa palm, and cacao tree—are about five times more plentiful near these bygone settlements.
As a precaution, the Hong Kong government said it would quarantine all cats, dogs and other domesticated animals in a holding facility if their owners test positive and were quarantined for COVID-19.
Experts fear a similar regulatory failure may have enabled the coronavirus outbreak: the longstanding inability to clean up so-called wet markets, which are stuffed with livestock living and dead, domesticated and wild.
He also asserted that some were already suffering from canine distemper — a disease that is typically found in domesticated dogs but that can spread to tigers — when they arrived at the two facilities.
According to the Crop Trust, domesticated crops — which are often the result of genetic tweaking — lack the genetic make-up necessary to stand up to severe conditions like heatwaves, temperature extremes, and wildfires.
He also asserted that some were already suffering from canine distemper — a disease that is typically found in domesticated dogs but that can spread to tigers — when they arrived at the two facilities.
Modern European dogs still share heritage with Stone Age canines on the continent, hinting that all the pups came from a common source rather than separately domesticated Asian dogs replacing their European counterparts.
But experiments conducted on domesticated Asian elephants (easier to deal with than African ones) show that they can use novel objects as tools to obtain out-of-reach food without trial and error beforehand.
What this could means is that domesticated dogs are not less intelligent than wolves, it's just that they don't take the extra effort, or they lack the required level of curiosity, to solve problems.
It also suggests that only later did a sub-population of rabbits as we know them actually become domesticated, but their genes don't provide any clear-cut evidence on when that might have happened.
"China invented Lassie," ran a headline in Global Times, a party-controlled newspaper, about dogs being domesticated in China 21950,21405 years ago (another group of scientists reckon China first did this 153,215 years ago).
In one case, he said researchers had spent nearly a year preparing a monkey for reintroduction into the wild only for it to be domesticated by one of the forest's residents, undermining conservation work.
Pax, the eponymous fox of Sara Pennypacker's new novel, is built on the model of Hughes's cub, half wild and half domesticated, a galvanic presence fit to join the ranks of fiction's great foxes.
Sure, we know how it's made and how to drink more than our doctors recommend, but researchers have always been unclear about where exactly the domesticated hybrid yeast used to make lager came from.
DNA analysis of the materials showed the sources of the meat and fat to be ibex and red deer, and that the plant fragments came mainly from einkorn, an early form of domesticated wheat.
Beekeeping is one of those ancient professions that likely pre-date recorded history and it's still difficult to find statistics on the percentage of domesticated bees versus the number of bees in the wild.
Examples would include, but are not limited to: the great apes, particularly the two species of chimpanzees and the orangutan; cetaceans such as dolphins and orca; elephants; and possibly even the common domesticated dog.
The term refers to the activities and objects that provide mental stimulation and encourage a captive or domesticated animal to tap into the natural behaviors they (or their ancestors) would practice in the wild.
Rather than a plot to corrupt children, Drag Queen Story Hour, which started in San Francisco and has spread to cities across the country, is another sign that the cultural left has been domesticated.
As reported in a study published Thursday in Scientific Reports, scientists have observed for the first time highly precise facial mimicry in a species that is not domesticated or a primate: the sun bear.

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