A Labrador retriever saves a drowning boy.
A bloodhound finds a missing Alzheimer's patient.
A German shepherd guides a blind person through city streets.
A Boykin spaniel tracks threatened box turtles for researchers.
How did a single species develop such wide-ranging talents and become our partners in life? The answer lies not only in the plasticity of dogs — their amazing range of size, shape and skills — but also in human ingenuity.
Dogs are designer animals, cut from the fabric of our needs and fashioned to suit almost any purpose short of neurosurgery or space flight — no, wait, they've done space flight.
The fossil record tells us that human association with dogs began approximately 16,000 to 20,000 years ago, but molecular dating — a measure of evolutionary change over time based on the rate of change in specific DNA sequences — suggests that domestication may have begun as long ago as 32,000 years.
Those proto-dogs probably first performed offsite security and waste management jobs, living on the outskirts of human settlements. As humans became used to the presence of dogs, they began selecting dogs with a prime watchdog characteristic: a loud and insistent bark, the better to alert them to the presence of predators or strangers.