Jump to content

Oriental Dog With Black & Tan Colouration


 Share

Recommended Posts

Does anyone know of a dog breed that originated in Eastern Asia (preferably in ancient times i.e. 1000+ years ) that has both yellow/red and black & tan colour varieties?

I know the basenji is one however their black & tan is really a tri-colour with alot of white (according to the standards).

I thought some rare breed enthusiasts might know of a breed that fits!

It's for a research project which is part of my PhD :laugh:

Thanks,

Kylie

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Shiba's are on my list! I believe they are a fairly new breed though (read few hundred years instead of 1000+).

I'm looking for a breed that is an ancient 'pariah-type' dog for comparison. Think Basenji, Carolina Dog, New Guinea Singing Dog... it's possible that the breed doesn't exist :thumbsup:

Thanks for the suggestions so far!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Shiba's are on my list! I believe they are a fairly new breed though (read few hundred years instead of 1000+).

I'm looking for a breed that is an ancient 'pariah-type' dog for comparison. Think Basenji, Carolina Dog, New Guinea Singing Dog... it's possible that the breed doesn't exist :thumbsup:

Thanks for the suggestions so far!

Nope, very very old.. thousands of year BC. And they have the usual "pariah" shape.

Edited by poodlefan
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wouldn't say the Shiba as they must have the Urajiro which is nearly white and there should be a fair amount of this.

Red, black and tan, sesame, black sesame, red sesame..

Definition of the colour sesame:

Sesame Equal mixture of white and black hairs.

Black sesame More black than white hairs.

Red sesame Ground colour of hair red, with mixture of black hairs.

All the above mentioned colours must have "Urajiro".

"Urajiro" = whitish coat on the sides of the muzzle and on the cheeks, on the underside of the jaw and neck, on the chest and stomach, on the underside of the tail, and on the inside of the legs.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My first thought was Shiba Inu too :thanks: Very definitely a spitz breed that has been around for a long time... it is considered one of the oldest dog breeds (according to Wiki, which we all know is a very reliable source :thumbsup: , Shiba's or something similar have been around since 3rd century BC! They are one of the original dog breeds from Japan!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Glad to be corrected - a recent paper in Nature on the origins of Domesticated Dogs mentioned a few very old breeds but didn't mention Shiba Inu's (now that I look back at it they must not have been included).

I'm basically interested in the black and tan phenotype/genotype (Agouti gene).

Black and Tan Shiba's look very very close to what I was looking for - even with Urajiro which shouldn't affect the genotype at the Agouti gene. I guess the same is true for Basenji's, I was just checking around to see what exists.

Thanks for the suggestions everyone :thumbsup:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Really? I thought Shibas were included as an ancient dog breed in that paper. Maybe I just assumed they were. I have a vague notion that they may have been bundled in with the Akita. I reckon have a closer look at the tables.

AFAIK there aren't any other obscure pariah dogs that have black and tan. Most of them are yellow or black and white. Interesting that Dingos and NGSD don't have black and white.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My first thought was the Tang Dog, supposedly behind the chow and shar pei breeds. Here is an article which my help you: http://kennellonfumun.kotisivukone.com/9

eta. click on: plate 3.1 samples of tang dogs

eta: http://dogbreeds.bulldoginformation.com/ch...dog-breeds.html never heard of the first breed, but they are amazing.

Edited by badboyz
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes I do mean Black with tan points.

NGSD don't have a black and tan colour (that I know of). I would count them as Asian origin... but they are believed to be close relations to Dingos which are also of Asian origin (4000+ years ago).

I do think it's interesting that most 'ancient' pariah type dogs only come in yellow or black/white varieties - no tan points. That's why I'm looking at this colour morph.

The paper was published in 2010 - First Author Bridgett M. vonHoldt entitled Genome-wide SNP and haplotype analyses reveal a rich history underlying dog domestication, from Nature.

Tang dog is an interesting contender!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The point was brought up on another board once that when dogs breed randomly for several generations you tend to get "yella dogs" as they called them - square, medium-sized, short (but double) coated, yellow dogs, often with prick ears and a slightly curled tail. It's a fascinating observation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...