| Canins | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Canina (represented by the golden jackal) and Cerdocyonina (represented by the crab-eating fox) | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Mammalia |
| Order: | Carnivora |
| Family: | Canidae |
| Subfamily: | Caninae |
| Tribe: | Canini Fischer de Waldheim, 1817 [2] |
| Genera [1] | |
| |
Canini is a taxon which represents the dog-like tribe of the subfamily Caninae (the canines), and is sister to the fox-like tribe Vulpini. The Canini came into existence 9 million years ago. This group was first represented by Eucyon, mostly by Eucyon davisi that was spread widely across North America [1] and is basal to the other members of the tribe. [3] Its members are informally known as true dogs.
The critical features that mark the Canini as a monophyletic group include the consistent enlargement of the frontal sinus, often accompanied by the correlated loss of the depression in the dorsal surface of the postorbital process; the posterior expansion of the paroccipital process; the enlargement of the mastoid process; and the lack of lateral flare of the orbital border of the zygoma.
Members of this tribe include:
| Subtribe | Description | Image | Genus | Species |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canina Waldheim, 1817 | The wolf-like canines. [4] | | Canis (Linnaeus, 1758) |
|
| | Cuon (Hodgson, 1838) |
| ||
| | Lupulella (Hilzheimer, 1906) |
| ||
| | Lycaon Brookes, 1827 |
| ||
| | † Cynotherium (Studiati, 1857) |
| ||
| | † Eucyon (Tedford & Qiu, 1996) |
| ||
| | † Aenocyon (Merriam, 1918) |
| ||
| Cerdocyonina (Tedford, et al., 2009) | The South American, fox-shaped canines. [4] | | Speothos (Lund, 1839) | |
| | Atelocynus (Cabrera, 1940) | |||
| | Chrysocyon (C.E.H. Smith, 1839) | |||
| | † Dusicyon (C.E.H. Smith, 1839) | |||
| | Lycalopex (Burmeister 1854) | |||
| | Cerdocyon (C.E.H. Smith, 1839) | |||
| † Protocyon (Giebel 1855) |
| |||
| † Theriodictis (Mercerat, 1891) |
|
Common names of most of the South American canines include "fox", based on resemblance, but they are more closely related to wolves than to vulpini , the Eurasian and North American foxes.
The cladogram below is based on the phylogeny of Lindblad-Toh et al. (2005), [5] modified to incorporate recent findings on Canis species, [6] Lycalopex species, [7] and Dusicyon . [8]
| Caninae |
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||