I remember reading somewhere that mankind has not domesticated any animals in 3000 years. If they are referring to pets, like dogs, cats and birds then, yes I can see that. I mean, how many people would want to have a pet Tasmanian Devil living in their house?
But if they were referring to animals being used as workers (like plow horses and donkeys) or as a maintained food source haven’t there been more recent domestications?
I don’t ostrich farms were common thousands of years ago.
So, what would be the most recently domesticated animal for both categories; food and pet?
Labradoodles perhaps?
I’m not sure what the answer to your question is, but I don’t think that “farm-raised” necessarily equals “domesticated.”
According to Webster’s
so an animal that is being bred for food or fiber (alpacas, rabbits) would be considered a domesticated animal. So I guess an ostrich would be considered domesticated if it is being raised as a food source.
My WAG would be some of the monkeys they’re using to help perform the domestic chores certain disabled individuals can’t perform themselves.
Wiki says they’re Capuchin monkeys.
“Some organizations, such as Helping Hands in Boston, Massachusetts, have been training capuchin monkeys to assist quadriplegics in a manner similar to mobility assistance dogs. After being socialized in a human home as infants, the monkeys undergo extensive training before being placed with a quadriplegic. Around the house, the monkeys help out by doing tasks including microwaving food, washing the quadriplegic’s face, and opening drink bottles.”
Wow! Never thought of them! I should have remembered this movie
As much as other members of the species do not want to admit it, the Labradoodle (Labrus doodus) is, in fact, a dog.
The problem with the word “domesticated” is that has a range of meanings. From wikipedia:
Lab mice are probably the closest newly domesticated animal that fits the normal description of what we mean when we say “domesticated”-- altered phenotypically (and, generally, genotypically) from the wild population they are derived from.
Capuchin “hleper” monkeys are just taimed wild animals. I wouldn’t call them domesticated in the sense of cows, sheeps or pigs.
Damn it! How come there is never a simple answer to what seems like a simple question? I was thinking someone would say, “Oh, the Madagascar Three-toed vole has been raised on farms since 1993 for its luxurious coat and nutritious milk,” followed by a bunch of dittos.
I always considered a domesticated animal one that is being used to the advantage of man (food source, fiber, work, transportation) and never would have thought of lab rats as separate from the rats people have kept as pets.
Next time I ask a question on this board, I’ll make sure it only has one answer. Like what is 2+2=? (Crap, I’m sure some smartass will come back with definitive proof that 2+2=573)
Make sure you specify which base you are doing arithmetic in.
Lad mice, especially, have been bred for specific reasons and there are many strains that differ significantly from their wild cousins. They’re not used for food or as draft animals (except maybe to power the SDMB servers), but there is nothing substantially different about the fact that they are used for scientific experiments.
It might be true that no new large vertebrates have been domesticated for farm use in the last 3,000 years. We raise buffalo on farms, but they aren’t much different from their wild cousins (except that maybe they have a higher level of hybridization with cattle).
Falcons, hawks and eagles have been used for hunting for at least 2600 years. Some North American hawks have been trained only recently.
Stop by a tropical fish store…look at all of the guppies, platies, chiclids (and dozens of other genera/species0 and you will find a vast array of fishes that have been domesticated. This isn’t even counting the farm raised salmon…
Exactly, people are confusing tame animals with domesticated ones. Still, that being said, there have been quite a few animals domesticated in the last few thousand years.
Mice, as was mentioned, Guinea Pigs, Hamsters and so on, in fact I think these have been domesticated in the last century.
Tigers are being bred now for appearance, and so seem to be on the brink of domestication.
Skunks and raccoons are now also bred for appearance for the fur trade. They are recently domesticated.
Of course fruit flies are also bred for specific purposes. They join the silkworm as the only domesticated bugs.
I hear tell of efforts to breed Moose in Russia for meat. I am not clear on how long ago reindeer were domesticated.
So anyway, lots of animals are recently domesticated.
And no thread on recently domesticated animals would be complete without mention of tame silver foxes.