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Cuter and closer: Raccoons may be on their way to becoming America's next pet (domestication) 🩝

From, *enunciates in the king’s english*, THE BBC:


Raccoons may be inching closer to becoming America's next pet.

Affectionately referred to as trash pandas, the masked mammals known for rummaging rubbish bins for easy food, are evolving based on their proximity to humans, even starting to look cuter, a new study says.

Evaluation of nearly 20,000 photos found "a clear reduction in snout length" in urban raccoons compared to their rural cousins - a physical shift consistent with the early stages of domestication seen in cats and dogs.

Some that have been adopted as pets have become TikTok celebrities. One particularly bold dumpster-diver even sprinted across the pitch during a Major League Soccer match in Philadelphia last year.

The stripe-tailed mammals, also nicknamed "backyard bandits", are widespread across the contiguous US.

Their ability to thrive in both wild and urban settings has left them occupying an unusual space in American life - beloved pet in some neighbourhoods, persistent pest in others.

The proximity to humans could signal that the creatures are growing more comfortable around us, or, scientifically speaking, dampening their innate flight responses, according to the study

, external

published in the journal Frontiers in Zoology.

The softening of their features could be due to shifts in their fight-or-flight response on the cellular level, it says.

This urban domestication starts with trash, the study's co-author, Raffaela Lesch of the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, told Scientific American.

, external

"Trash is really the kickstarter," she said. "Wherever humans go, there's trash — and animals love our trash."

But to take advantage of this endless buffet, wildlife must strike a delicate balance: bold enough to root through bins and navigate human environments, yet not so bold as to pose a threat.

"If you have an animal that lives close to humans, you have to be well-behaved enough," Lesch said. "That selection pressure is quite intense."

The finding, the authors said, is consistent with the "domestication syndrome phenotype".

Domestication syndrome - anatomical and morphological changes such as curly tails, floppy ears, depigmentation, smaller brains and reduced facial skeletons - are commonly cited as some of the most salient traits, the study says.

Those traits are also seen among more common household pets, such as dogs that evolved from wolves.

The study's authors also hypothesised that the domestication process is wrongly believed to be initiated by humans, who have captured or selectively bred animals in the past.

The process might actually begin much earlier than previously thought, they said, notably when animals became habituated to human environments.

"Only animals with dampened flight (or fight) responses would succeed best," the authors wrote. "This makes the initial stages of the domestication process a process of pure natural selection."

Jack Link’s Dink:

Cuter and closer: Raccoons may be on their way to becoming America's next pet


For all the coon haters out there, I know there are many on here 😉
1763761077999.gif
 
From, *enunciates in the king’s english*, THE BBC:


Raccoons may be inching closer to becoming America's next pet.

Affectionately referred to as trash pandas, the masked mammals known for rummaging rubbish bins for easy food, are evolving based on their proximity to humans, even starting to look cuter, a new study says.

Evaluation of nearly 20,000 photos found "a clear reduction in snout length" in urban raccoons compared to their rural cousins - a physical shift consistent with the early stages of domestication seen in cats and dogs.

Some that have been adopted as pets have become TikTok celebrities. One particularly bold dumpster-diver even sprinted across the pitch during a Major League Soccer match in Philadelphia last year.

The stripe-tailed mammals, also nicknamed "backyard bandits", are widespread across the contiguous US.

Their ability to thrive in both wild and urban settings has left them occupying an unusual space in American life - beloved pet in some neighbourhoods, persistent pest in others.

The proximity to humans could signal that the creatures are growing more comfortable around us, or, scientifically speaking, dampening their innate flight responses, according to the study

, external

published in the journal Frontiers in Zoology.

The softening of their features could be due to shifts in their fight-or-flight response on the cellular level, it says.

This urban domestication starts with trash, the study's co-author, Raffaela Lesch of the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, told Scientific American.

, external

"Trash is really the kickstarter," she said. "Wherever humans go, there's trash — and animals love our trash."

But to take advantage of this endless buffet, wildlife must strike a delicate balance: bold enough to root through bins and navigate human environments, yet not so bold as to pose a threat.

"If you have an animal that lives close to humans, you have to be well-behaved enough," Lesch said. "That selection pressure is quite intense."

The finding, the authors said, is consistent with the "domestication syndrome phenotype".

Domestication syndrome - anatomical and morphological changes such as curly tails, floppy ears, depigmentation, smaller brains and reduced facial skeletons - are commonly cited as some of the most salient traits, the study says.

Those traits are also seen among more common household pets, such as dogs that evolved from wolves.

The study's authors also hypothesised that the domestication process is wrongly believed to be initiated by humans, who have captured or selectively bred animals in the past.

The process might actually begin much earlier than previously thought, they said, notably when animals became habituated to human environments.

"Only animals with dampened flight (or fight) responses would succeed best," the authors wrote. "This makes the initial stages of the domestication process a process of pure natural selection."

Jack Link’s Dink:

Cuter and closer: Raccoons may be on their way to becoming America's next pet


For all the coon haters out there, I know there are many on here 😉
View attachment 935553
would you let a Coon into your place of abode, even as a pet?
 
This was the most popular theory about how we first started domesticating wolves. A subsect of the species slowly realizes that picking up our scraps after us is way easier than competing with us. And over a long period of time they become more attuned or the way we move, talk, and where and when we're throwing out garbage, and their body follows. They follow and conform until we go, "Huhh. Why did we hate these guys again? Kind of useful and cute. I'm bringing one into my domicile."

A lot of other animals are going through this too. Coyotes namely. Rats are already better at instinctually reading human body language just as good as your dogger it's niggering kibble from. There's a lot of other species that are just irrevocably changed by us existing too close to them. Manmade horrors beyond their comprehension.
 
I like racoons, I want to have a taxidermy racoon in my house one day. I don't think they should be pets. Let's leave wild animals to their own accord

Alto of people say that but the problem is if we followed that principles of leaving wild an animal alone than dogs or cats or cows or horses or pigs etc wouldn’t exist because of course they all evolved from wild species.
 
This was the most popular theory about how we first started domesticating wolves. A subsect of the species slowly realizes that picking up our scraps after us is way easier than competing with us. And over a long period of time they become more attuned or the way we move, talk, and where and when we're throwing out garbage, and their body follows. They follow and conform until we go, "Huhh. Why did we hate these guys again? Kind of useful and cute. I'm bringing one into my domicile."

A lot of other animals are going through this too. Coyotes namely. Rats are already better at instinctually reading human body language just as good as your dogger it's niggering kibble from. There's a lot of other species that are just irrevocably changed by us existing too close to them. Manmade horrors beyond their comprehension.
Yes indeed, that is what’s really valuable about find like this is that if we see this with raccoons in real time than we can learn more about what happened with the wolf to dog transition with these observations. There is a lot of mystery about that apparently so any new information is good I think
 
Alto of people say that but the problem is if we followed that principles of leaving wild an animal alone than dogs or cats or cows or horses or pigs etc wouldn’t exist because of course they all evolved from wild species.
My point being what reason do we have to domesticate raccoons besides novelty? Modern domesticated animals have purpose for being domesticated. They provide something that other animals can't and that's why we've bred them to fit the roles we put them in. Chickens for example, have been mutated to deformity for the sake of a higher meat yield. What service will raccoons have to offer us? I imagine them like cats, only more destructive and rough around the edges.
 
My point being what reason do we have to domesticate raccoons besides novelty? Modern domesticated animals have purpose for being domesticated. They provide something that other animals can't and that's why we've bred them to fit the roles we put them in. Chickens for example, have been mutated to deformity for the sake of a higher meat yield. What service will raccoons have to offer us? I imagine them like cats, only more destructive and rough around the edges.
I see your point. I don’t think we need to domesticate raccoons but I think this article is showing that we are trying to domesticate them, they seem to be going through that process just by being around humans, not even being deliberately manipulated. That’s what’s going on here, we aren’t gonna make raccoons the next dog. I think the headline on this article is misleading and over the top but it was the headline of the article
 
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