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Bowen

Mixed Ancestry

No bio has been provided yet

Current Location

Seattle, Washington, USA

This dog has been viewed and been given 11 wags

Genetic Breed Result

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Embark Supermutt analysis

What’s in that Supermutt? There may be small amounts of DNA from this distant ancestor:

Formosan Mountain Dog

Formosan Mountain Dogs hail from the Formosan Mountain region in Taiwan. Recently, some of these ancient dogs were used as foundational stock to create the Taiwan Dog breed.

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American Pit Bull Terrier

The American Pit Bull Terrier originated in the British Isles and descends from the Mastiff-type dogs introduced to England in antiquity. The breed was brought over to the United States by English immigrants in the 1800s, and quickly became one of the most popular and widespread breeds there.

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Dogs Like Bowen

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Discover dogs who share a similar breed mix to Bowen. A higher score means the two dogs have more of their breed mix in common. A score of 100% means they share the exact same breed mix!

Click or tap on a pic to learn more about each dog and see an in-depth comparison of their DNA, breeds, and more.

DNA Breed Origins

Breed colors:
Formosan Mountain Dog
American Pit Bull Terrier

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Here’s what Bowen’s family tree may have looked like.
Bowen
Family Tree From Embark PARENTS GRANDPARENTS GREAT GRANDPARENTS Formosan Mountain Dog mix Formosan Mountain Dog mix Formosan Mountain Dog Formosan Mountain Dog / American Pit Bull Terrier mix Formosan Mountain Dog Formosan Mountain Dog / American Pit Bull Terrier mix Formosan Mountain Dog Formosan Mountain Dog Formosan Mountain Dog American Pit Bull Terrier Formosan Mountain Dog Formosan Mountain Dog Formosan Mountain Dog American Pit Bull Terrier
While there may be other possible configurations of his family’s relationships, this is the most likely family tree to explain Bowen’s breed mix.
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Through Bowen’s mitochondrial DNA we can trace his mother’s ancestry back to where dogs and people first became friends. This map helps you visualize the routes that his ancestors took to your home. Their story is described below the map.

Haplogroup

A1a

Haplotype

A261

Map

A1a

Bowen’s Haplogroup

A1a is the most common maternal lineage among Western dogs. This lineage traveled from the site of dog domestication in Central Asia to Europe along with an early dog expansion perhaps 10,000 years ago. It hung around in European village dogs for many millennia. Then, about 300 years ago, some of the prized females in the line were chosen as the founding dogs for several dog breeds. That set in motion a huge expansion of this lineage. It's now the maternal lineage of the overwhelming majority of Mastiffs, Labrador Retrievers and Gordon Setters. About half of Boxers and less than half of Shar-Pei dogs descend from the A1a line. It is also common across the world among village dogs, a legacy of European colonialism.

A261

Bowen’s Haplotype

Part of the large A1a haplogroup, this haplotype occurs in village dogs in Peru. Among breeds, it is most common in Golden Retrievers, Gordon Setters, and Labrador Retrievers.

Shar Pei dogs think A1a is the coolest!

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Through Bowen’s Y-chromosome we can trace his father’s ancestry back to where dogs and people first became friends. This map helps you visualize the routes that his ancestors took to your home. Their story is described below the map.

Haplogroup

C

Haplotype

H5a.2

Map

C

Bowen’s Haplogroup

C is a relatively rare paternal lineage. The dog populations which bear C are a disparate bunch. The Akita and Shiba Inu are Japanese breeds, the former of which seems to have roots in the Jomon population of hunter-gatherers which were present in the islands of Japan before the ancestors of the modern Japanese arrived. The New Guinea Singing Dog, Samoyed, and Alaska Malamute are all disparate breeds that also represent the C lineage. One village dog from Peru also bore this lineage. This wide distribution and diversity suggest C is not a recently expanded lineage. It likely represents a canid lineage which diversified sometime around the Last Glacial Maximum, when the dogs of Siberia and Oceania split off and went their separate ways.

H5a.2

Bowen’s Haplotype

Part of the C haplogroup, we see this haplotype most frequently in East Asian village dogs.

The Shiba Inu descends from this relativey rare haplogroup.

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