Sadly, the answer is no. Unlike dogs, wolves have never been domesticated. If it could be possible, wolves would have to be around people for hundreds and thousands of years. Domesticating an animal isn't just rescuing it or finding it and bringing it to your house and treat them like a dog. They are pack animals, they live with the alphas (pack leaders, male and female) and other wolves and belong with their pack, but if you were to "domesticate" a wolf, he would become your alpha, instead of you becoming his. Dogs are domesticated which means that they have been living around human beings for a long time now, and their humans have become their alpha. Wolves, however, in order to be "domesticated", they must live with or around people and become tame. It's not at all the same as like "breaking a horse", where somebody also tames an animal, but they don't need thousands of years to break it. Horses are already domesticated and yes, some are wild like Mustangs but that doesn't mean they aren't domesticated. Their bloodlines come from tame horses, which mean they can become tame or broken like them. But like I said in the beginning, "Sadly, the answer is no", what I meant was that it couldn't happen while you were still alive, or anyone else you know. It could happen, yes, but 1: It would take Thousands of years, and 2: You would have to breed the tamed wolves (if some were "domesticated") with the wolves in North America in order for the tame blood to take over the 'wild' wolf blood completely. So it would mean that if there were still wild wolves (as there is with horses, wild mustangs) with domesticated blood, you could take it and "break it" as you would do to a horse. But if you think about domesticated animals, dogs, house cats, cows, sheep, they aren't wild animals. They all live with humans. So technically, every wolf would have to live with a human. As far as I've known and heard, there are no wild cows or dogs. There might be but it doesn't mean it won't be domesticated. So the answer is, no. People would still want wild wolves without tame blood, and a lot of other problems, but it is possible though. If we did do this, we wouldn't know of wild wolves in North America. So again, No.
a dog is domesticated descendant of the wolf
the first domesticated dog was a wolf and they ws domesticated when cavemen was on this earth because they went out and searched for obandant wolf cubs and brought them up as if they was their own dog.
A domesticated Wolf or Dog.
Yes, they are the same species, just a different subspecies. The dog is a domesticated wolf.
dogs were not found, they were domesticated from different breeds of wolf.
No. "The dog is a domesticated sub-species of the wolf" is a complete sentence, an independent clause. A dependent clause is one that cannot stand on its own as a sentence.
First off: A dog is a pet nowadays, a domesticated wild animal, understand me? While a wolf is a wild animal, no where near a domesticated dog. Put that and that together and you get your answer. Amaterasu is a god, that has taken upon a life form. Your answer? Amaterasu is technically a wolf.
The analogy "horse to mule" can be compared to "dog to wolf." Just as a mule is a domesticated hybrid derived from a horse and a donkey, a dog is a domesticated descendant of the wolf. Both pairs represent relationships between domesticated animals and their wild ancestors or related species.
The cavemen thousands of years ago adapted the wolf into the family from the wild and that was the start of the domesticated dog.
Yes, the domestic dog is a domesticated wolf. They are the same species.
Domestic dogs did not exactly descend from the wolf. Domestic dogs are 100% wolf but were slowly domesticated by man over the years.
No; wolf dogs are hybrids of a wolf and a domesticated dog.Unless you are very experienced in raising wolves or dogs, it is not recommended to raise one.