Andean Wolf
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iAndean Wolf | ||||||||||||||
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Dasycyon hagenbecki (Krumbiegel, 1947) |
The Andean Wolf (Dasycyon hagenbecki) is a mysterious canid from the Andes. In 1927 Lorenz Hagenbeck obtained a pelt from a dealer in Buenos Aires, and was told that it came from the Andes. Dr. Ingo Krumbiegel researched this skin in Germany in 1940, and said that it belonged to a new and still indescribable species from the high peaks of the Andes.
Upon learning in 1947 that when Hagenbeck had bought the pelt there had been three others just like it, Krumbeigel connected it with a skull he had discovered about ten years earlier that was 31 centimeters long and had belonged to an omnivorous canid. The size precluded it from belonging to a Maned wolf, since Maned wolf skulls are smaller (about 24 cm). He published a description of the animal and gave it its scientific name.
In 1960, scientists discovered that the fur had belonged to a domestic dog (possibly that of a shepherd), not to a wild dog from the Andes. DNA research confirmed this in 1995.[citation needed] The skull had allegedly been lost in 1945, during World War II, and could not be proven a hoax.
[edit] References
- Heuvelmans, Bernard. "On the Track of Unknown Animals." Farrar Straus & Giroux, January 1965. ISBN 0809074516.