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Salish Wool Dog

The Salish Wool Dog, also known as the Comox dog or Clallam Indian Dog, is an extinct breed of white, long-haired, Spitz-type dog that was developed and bred by the Coast Salish peoples of what is now Washington state and British Columbia for textile production.

History
The remains of dogs that are a morphological match for the Salish wool dog have been found in archeological sites in Coastal Salish territory dating to ~5,000 years ago. The small, long-haired wool dog and the coyote-like village dogs were deliberately maintained as separate populations. Salish peoples, renowned for their weaving and knitting, The dog hair was frequently mixed with mountain goat wool, feathers, and plant fibers to change the yarn quality and to extend the supply of fiber. A 1806 letter from Meriwether Lewis to Simon Fraser reveals early explorers began buying Salish wool dogs from Coast Salish communities to eat, eventually growing "extremely fond" of their meat, a fact which remained remembered by the descendants of native peoples encountered by the men. Ethnographer George Gibbs received a pelt during the Northwest Boundary Survey in 1859. Genomic samples of the specimen's DNA revealed that Salish wool dogs diverged from other breeds as much as 5,000 years ago. Decline During the 1800s, the use of dog wool declined and the breed became extinct by the late 1800s or early 1900s. Some sources report the primary cause had been economic, since Hudson's Bay Company blankets were cheaply available in exchange for otter pelts. Traditional Coast Salish weaving—and, by extension, the wool dogs—were heavily discouraged by colonial authorities. One Stó꞉lō elder described how her great-grandmother "had to get rid of the dogs" after authorities forbade Salish cultural practices. Stable isotope analyses (δ13C and δ15N) conducted on bone collagen and hair keratin revealed low isotopic levels in Mutton’s tissues compared with other ancient dogs from the Pacific Northwest coast. This suggests a diet largely devoid of marine foods and primarily based on terrestrial resources, such as grains and animals (pigs, cows, etc). These findings align with the inland journeys that Mutton undertook with Gibbs across the elevated mountainous terrain of the Cascade Mountains and the Columbia Plateau. Comparison of Mutton's mitochondrial genome with that of ancient and modern dogs has shown that the closest neighboring A2b haplotype to Mutton's corresponds to an ancient dog (~1,500 BP) from indigenous societies of the Pacific Northwest, similarly a set of ancient and modern dogs (~620 BP) from Alaska form a clade with Mutton's group, evidencing the deep roots of their ancestry in the region and their relationship to a common mitochondrial ancestor (~4,776 -1,853 years BP). Statistical analyses of genomic data (D-, outgroup-f3 and f4-ratio statistics) revealed that Mutton shared substantially greater genetic drift with precolonial dogs. Specifically, f4-ratio tests estimated that 84% of its ancestry was predominantly precolonial, whereas 16% corresponded to introduced European dogs. Similarly, the sequencing of its nuclear genome (3.4x coverage) demonstrated low global heterozygosity compared with other modern and ancient breeds. Furthermore, analyses of runs of homozygosity (ROH) revealed that a significant percentage of Mutton's genome (15.7%) contained long ROH (≥2.5 Mbp). This reduced genetic variability reflects the strict management of selective breeding practices for the Salish wool dog over time, aimed at preventing hybridization with introduced dogs and preserving its unique coat characteristics. Additionally, a dN/dS analysis of the coding regions in Mutton's genome compared with other dogs identified 125 genes as candidates for positive selection in Salish wool dogs. These genes exhibited high nonsynonymous mutation rates in Mutton (dN/dSGenome ≥ 1.5) but lacked nonsynonymous mutations (dN = 0) in three other dogs, including a precolonial dog. Within this group of genes specific to the Salish wool dog lineage are those associated with the formation of extracellular matrix components (PRDM5, HAPLN1); hair follicle development (KANK2, KRT77, PCOLCE2); and skin development (CERS3, GPNMB). In all cases, Mutton displayed conservation of an ancestral allele, revealing that the unique phenotype of the Salish wool dog originated independently from other breeds. Together, these genomic analyses, coupled with historical records and traditional knowledge, provide evidence of the efforts of ancestral Coast Salish societies to preserve the unique genetic makeup and phenotype of the Salish wool dog against the gene flow of dogs introduced by settlers. They also revealed that this race was present in Coast Salish society approximately 5,000 years before European colonization. == Osteometry ==
Osteometry
Skull total length: • Condylobasal skull length: • Femur GL: • Tibia GL: • Humerus GL: • Radius GL: • Ulna GL: • Shoulder height of standing dog: ==Cultural significance of textiles to Coast Salish peoples==
Cultural significance of textiles to Coast Salish peoples
Beyond their practical uses, woolen blankets, such as those that were made from fur of the Coast Salish Dog while it was alive, are of significant social, cultural, economic, and spiritual significance to the Salish peoples. Traditionally, women were in charge of making the blankets. Young girls were trained by their grandmothers as early as ten years of age, with more intense training at puberty. Weaving blankets required serious commitment and could take long periods of time to complete. Additionally, they were often associated with spiritual tasks or rituals such as abstinence. According to the Salish origin story, women were taught how to weave by the dogs themselves. ==Gallery==
Gallery
File:95 woolly dog 02.jpg|"Studies of Wool Dogs and Interior Furnishing" ca. April-June 1847 by Paul Kane (Royal Ontario Museum) File:Clallam Indian woman basket making.webp|"Clallam Indian woman basket making" by Paul Kane, ca. 1847 File:Salish Wool Dog (cropped).jpg|Close-up of the dog in Paul Kane's painting. "A Woman Weaving a Blanket" ca. 1849-1856 by Paul Kane (Royal Ontario Museum) File:Salish dog 01 - girls-with-dog-jpg.jpg|Two Coast Salish women with a dog suspected to be a mixed woolly dog. (Chilliwack Museum and Archives), before 1900 File:Salish dog 02 - 1922.jpg|Ruth siastenu Sehome Shelton working in the Tulalip cemetery with her dog, possibly a woolly dog mix, 1922 ==References==
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