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  • Here's a strange thing

  • wolves and coyotes have these big upright ears.

  • All the better to hear you with.

  • But my dog Zeke here has floppy ears.

  • Why the difference?

  • Doesn't he need to hear too?

  • Charles Darwin himself actually thought a lot about this question.

  • 150 years ago, he published a book that said, "Lookit's not just pet dogs!”

  • Pigs have floppier ears than wild boars.

  • Farmed goats have floppier ears than wild goats.

  • There are floppy-eared rabbits, cows and sheep.

  • And that's not the only weird thing!

  • Tame animals tend to have shorter snouts, and their fur tends to be paler

  • or have patches with color missing.

  • All these mysterious traits put together have been called "domestication syndrome."

  • So, what's going on here?

  • The story starts thousands and thousands of years ago

  • when humans were surrounded by animals.

  • Some animals were scary,

  • and some were a bit more approachable

  • even potentially useful.

  • Our ancestors wanted them to be tamer, so sometimes

  • they tried breeding the friendliest ones.

  • At some point, strange side effects started to show up

  • Thousands of years later, good old Darwin noticed the domestication syndrome pattern,

  • but all he'd learned about change in the animal kingdom

  • couldn't explain this connection between behavior and appearance.

  • Scientists who came after him couldn't figure it out either.

  • But for the past few years, scientists have been throwing around a fascinating hypothesis.

  • They think the answer to this whole puzzle lies in a special group of cells.

  • They're called neural crest cells, and coincidentally,

  • they were discovered by Wilhelm His the exact same year Darwin published his book.

  • Neural crest cells show up very early in the development of all vertebrate embryos.

  • As the embryo grows into a goat or a pig or a wolf,

  • these special cells travel to every corner of the body

  • and take on all sorts of different jobs.

  • Now, here's the thing: Some of these cells end up right here above the kidneys.

  • They become cells that secrete adrenaline

  • that famous fight-or-flight hormone.

  • Wild animals are always fighting or fleeing to survive,

  • and that makes it hard for humans to get close.

  • But what if an animal was born with fewer of these neural crest cells,

  • or those cells didn't work so well?

  • That animal would have less adrenaline.

  • It would probably be less freaked out by humans

  • and it would pass that behavior on to its offspring.

  • The idea is that this is what's going on in domesticated animals.

  • Their neural crest cells have been dialed back.

  • And this would explain all the appearance stuff, too

  • because neural crest derived cells do a lot more than just make adrenaline.

  • Some of the cells end up forming parts of the face.

  • Some of them become cells that control the color of skin and hair.

  • And some make their way into the earsand help make cartilage.

  • It's likely this is how dogs first got floppy ears.

  • And then centuries of intentional human breeding helped accentuate or reverse that change.

  • But the neural crest cell hypothesis doesn't quite explain every bit of domestication syndrome.

  • Likewhat's going on with other tame species that do have upright ears?

  • This be might be the excuse scientists need to spend more time with their pets.

  • This is Skunk BearNPR's science show

  • Please subscribe and check out some papers about the neural crest cell hypothesis

  • down in the description.

Here's a strange thing

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