Dog body size in Siberia and the Russian Far East and its implications

Body size is correlated with many critical behavioral and developmental patterns in carnivores, including
domestic dogs. The body masses and bite forces of archaeological dog remains from Siberia and the
Russian Far East were estimated to make inferences regarding their behaviors and capacitis. The dogs
date from ~10,000e100 cal. BP and derive from archaeological sites spanning from steppe environments
in the south to tundra regions of the northern Arctic. The dogs exhibit a four-fold difference in body
mass, ranging from 7.6 to 32.5 kg, but have a mean body mass of only 16.4 kg. Bite forces are around only
half those of modern wolves, indicating that the dogs had greatly reduced abilities to grasp and masticate
prey and food items. The dogs exhibit a slight decrease in body size through time, perhaps due to human
selection or greater survival rates for smaller individuals in human-dominated food environments. Dog
body size variance within individual archaeological sites was as high as in a sample of modern wolves
from throughout the study area, suggesting little strict human control over body size. No correlation was
found between body size and site latitude, suggesting that Bergmann's rule does not hold for these
canids. Human shelters may provide a buffer against low temperatures that might favour larger body
sizes at high latitudes. About 90% of the analyzed dogs have estimated body masses less than 21.5 kg,
suggesting most were best adapted for procuring prey smaller than themselvesdthe dogs were not
capable of taking down larger prey without the assistance of humans. Estimated dog body masses cannot
eliminate the possibility that many of the animals were used for pulling sleds, and nearly all were
capable of packing modest loads on their backs. Livestock guarding dogs are not well-evidenced by the
body mass data, but herding dogs are a possibility in all of the pastoral or agricultural settings analyzed.
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