The Identity of the Dingo I. Morphological Discriminants of Dingo and Dog Skulls.

Abstract
Previously no differences were found in 30 blood enzymes in dingoes and domestic dogs. Canonical analysis on skull characters of 50 dingoes and 43 domestic dogs about the same size as dingoes achieved clear separation on as few as 6 characters. The variability in sample of domestic dogs was considerable, and so 100 measurements were taken on adult skull only. A series of analyses were used to reduce the number of characters to 70, 30 and 15, and ultimately to a convenient subset of 6 sufficient to discriminate between taxa and sexes together. These measurements were alveolar distance along lower premolars, maxillary width, bulla volume, crown width of upper carnassial tooth, basal length of upper canine and width of nasal bones. Original measurements were better discriminates than ratios (measurements divided by skull length). The basic differences were that dingoes had longer muzzles, larger bullae and main teeth, longer and more slender canine teeth and flatter crania with larger nuchal crests. All these charcters have functions related to predation. Sexual dimorphism was marked in dingoes but not in the domestic dogs. Comparisons with other similar studies of a greater array of canids indicate the closeness of dingoes to our selection of domestic dogs and the great variability in the latter, and that the choice of skull characters probably influences whether dingoes are placed nearer coyotes or wolves taxonomically. The selection of domestic dogs may influence the estimated taxonomic position.

This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit: