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		I heard about this last year. Some Russian scientists bred docile foxes over the course of several decades but then ran out of funding. The most fascinating thing was the way that they began looking more dog-like as they became domesticated. I think they sold a bunch to a Swedish or Norwegian fur farm and sold a few individuals in Russia as exotic pets. Interesting to see that somebody is importing them to America.
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		Three Stages:
1.) Squee! WANT!
2.) Despair! The PRICE.
3.) Resignation. My landlord doesn't allow pets anyway, and the first rabies outbreak... who will they blame?
''We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat
them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.''
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			Stephen Mann 
			
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		Shepherd Wrote:The most fascinating thing was the way that they began looking more dog-like as they became domesticated.
I remember that from last year too. The pictures in the original story were very interesting. They compared foxes to some kind of dog (I don't remember the species), but breeding the foxes based on meekness drastically changed the foxes over very few generations.
Quoting from 
http://www.buzzle.com/art...-into-a-new-species.htmlQuote:Belyaev and his colleagues thus selected the foxes that exhibited the 
least fear/shyness of people for their breeding program; their aim was 
to selectively breed for the tame trait. With successive generations of 
selective breeding the foxes became tamer and tamer such that by the 
eighteenth generation they had bred a fox that exhibited all the 
characteristics of a domestic dog. The foxes would actually approach 
people, clamber over them, roll over to get their bellies tickled and 
even answered to their names.
Perhaps the most surprising aspect of the selective breeding program was
 that the foxes no longer resembled foxes but looked and acted like 
dogs. The coats of the foxes were no longer the characteristic silver 
fur much sought after by the fur industry but were black and white 
piebald instead. What is more, the foxes' tails were curly and upward 
turned, their ears were floppy and to crown it all the animals even 
barked like dogs! Dmitri Belyaev had not sought nor bred for these 
characteristics but all the same they still manifested!
A subsequent investigation into the unexpected side effects revealed 
that breeding for tameness set off an entire cascade of hormonal changes
 in the animals. It was observed that the "domesticated" foxes had 
considerably lower levels of adrenaline which explained their tameness 
(reduction in flight-or-fight reflex) but didn't explain the other 
observed changes. However it didn't take long before Belyaev and his 
colleagues made the connection; the hormone adrenaline shares a 
biochemical pathway with melanin, a hormone that plays a significant 
role in an animal's coat color.
Simply put, selective breeding for the tameness trait set off and 
stimulated an entire slew of genetic changes within the animals in a 
surprisingly short period. It is now widely believed that the wolf 
underwent a similar transition to eventually evolve into the domestic 
dog.