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MOUNT POPA’S ERSTWHILE MYSTERY DOG, AND AUSTRALIA’S STILL-UNEXPLAINED YOKYN – A COUPLE OF CURIOUS CANINE CRYPTIDS

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    A
    Burmese dhole – this dhole subspecies was not scientifically described till
    1941, when its existence was lastly accepted (© Yathin S. Krishnappa/Wikipedia
    CC BY-SA 3.0 licence)

    Down via the a long time, I’ve documented
    a variety of canine cryptids, however two of the least-known examples are these
    offered right here, making their ShukerNature debut. One is now a former thriller
    canid, the opposite stays an enigma.

    A wild canine of once-controversial scientific
    standing was a mysterious specimen found on Mount Popa, a dormant volcano in
    the area of Mandalay in central Burma (now Myanmar). Famend British
    zoologist Reginald I. Pocock said in 1936 that no specimens of Asia’s very
    distinctive wild crimson canine or dhole Cuon alpinus had ever been obtained
    from Burma, however shortly afterwards he learnt that acclaimed mammalogist and
    animal collector Man C. Shortridge had secured a specimen on Mount Popa.

    Naturally, Pocock was anxious to look at
    this distinctive instance, an grownup feminine, particularly as Shortridge alleged that it
    solely had 5 pairs of teats (feminine dholes have 6-8 pairs), and weighed solely
    19 lb (unusually gentle for a dhole). Nevertheless, after learning its cranium,
    uncovered on the British Museum, Pocock acknowledged that it had been nothing
    greater than an outdated, small home canine Canis
    familiaris
    , with a excessive crown and quick muzzle. However, mockingly, real
    Burmese dholes have been obtained later, and in 1941 Pocock christened their
    subspecies C. a. adustus – a taxonomic
    classification nonetheless recognised as we speak.

     

    A dingo – the identification of Australia’s
    elusive yokyn? (Katy Platt/Wikipedia – copyright-free)

    As for the yokyn – this still-unexplained canine cryptid is a wierd
    dog-like beast seemingly well-known to Australian aboriginals and farmers. Mentioned
    to be roughly half the dimensions of a full-grown dingo, with disproportionately
    lengthy claws, a stocky, muscular  construct,
    and a really variable pelage (typically brindled, typically even multi-coloured),
    a specimen has but to be formally examined, so its identification stays unsure (Destiny, Might 1977; additionally click on right here for extra particulars on-line).

    An unknown species, an odd sort of feral
    home canine, a dingo Canis dingo
    (aka C. lupus dingo aka C. familiaris dingo), a dog-dingo
    crossbreed, and even a surviving mainland race of the marsupial Tasmanian wolf Thylacinus
    cynocephalus
    are amongst these identities on provide. If anybody studying this
    ShukerNature article has additional info regarding the yokyn, I would like to
    obtain particulars.

    This ShukerNature article is excerpted and up to date from
    my e-book Extraordinary
    Animals Revisited
    .


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