@freemo Consider all of our "domesticated" animals -- cows, for example, whose udders are udderly ridiculous in size, producing way too much milk for its own young.
Chickens too, not able to fly, but bearing a lot of meat -- for us humans to eat.
Similar deal with bananas, etc.
"Domestication" is just another word for Mendelian genetic engineering. :D
@lordalveric Yes no doubt breeding causes variation. The question at hand here is how much of that variation in phenotypic in nature and to what extent is it genotypic.
@freemo Good question. It would not take much, considering we share something like 97% of our genome in common with chimps.
It would be interesting to know not only how far divergent dogs are from wolves, but how much the different breeds differ from each other.
Great Danes vs. Poodles. May not differ as much as you think.
@lordalveric I have no doubt there are, but its a little out of my domain so I just dont know about them.