Monsters we met, monsters we made: On the parallel emergence of phenotypic similarity under domestication

Creatures living under the rule of domestication form a communicative union based on shared morphological, behavioural, cognitive, and immunological resemblances. Domestic animals live under particular conditions that substantially differ from the original (natural) settings of their wild relatives....

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Main Authors: Karel Kleisner, Marco Stella
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Tartu Press 2009-12-01
Series:Sign Systems Studies
Online Access:https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/sss/article/view/15554
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author Karel Kleisner
Marco Stella
author_facet Karel Kleisner
Marco Stella
author_sort Karel Kleisner
collection DOAJ
description Creatures living under the rule of domestication form a communicative union based on shared morphological, behavioural, cognitive, and immunological resemblances. Domestic animals live under particular conditions that substantially differ from the original (natural) settings of their wild relatives. Here we focus on the fact that many parallel characters have appeared in various domestic forms that had been selected for different purposes. These characters are often unique for domestic animals and do not exist in wild forms. We argue that parallel similarities appear in different groups in response to their interaction with the umwelt of a particular host. In zoosemiotic sense, the process of domestication represents a kind of interaction in which both sides are affected and eventually transformed in such a way that one is more integrated with the other than in the time of initial encounter.
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spelling doaj.art-e1cb75ce106840eb8f34850562e7d1bc2022-12-21T20:28:24ZengUniversity of Tartu PressSign Systems Studies1406-42431736-74092009-12-01373/410.12697/SSS.2009.37.3-4.04Monsters we met, monsters we made: On the parallel emergence of phenotypic similarity under domesticationKarel KleisnerMarco StellaCreatures living under the rule of domestication form a communicative union based on shared morphological, behavioural, cognitive, and immunological resemblances. Domestic animals live under particular conditions that substantially differ from the original (natural) settings of their wild relatives. Here we focus on the fact that many parallel characters have appeared in various domestic forms that had been selected for different purposes. These characters are often unique for domestic animals and do not exist in wild forms. We argue that parallel similarities appear in different groups in response to their interaction with the umwelt of a particular host. In zoosemiotic sense, the process of domestication represents a kind of interaction in which both sides are affected and eventually transformed in such a way that one is more integrated with the other than in the time of initial encounter.https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/sss/article/view/15554
spellingShingle Karel Kleisner
Marco Stella
Monsters we met, monsters we made: On the parallel emergence of phenotypic similarity under domestication
Sign Systems Studies
title Monsters we met, monsters we made: On the parallel emergence of phenotypic similarity under domestication
title_full Monsters we met, monsters we made: On the parallel emergence of phenotypic similarity under domestication
title_fullStr Monsters we met, monsters we made: On the parallel emergence of phenotypic similarity under domestication
title_full_unstemmed Monsters we met, monsters we made: On the parallel emergence of phenotypic similarity under domestication
title_short Monsters we met, monsters we made: On the parallel emergence of phenotypic similarity under domestication
title_sort monsters we met monsters we made on the parallel emergence of phenotypic similarity under domestication
url https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/sss/article/view/15554
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