lundyjb said:
I understand and completely accept the evidence for the former but i was just reading the greatest show on Earth and richard was saying how our domestic dogs are directly evolved from wolves, not foxes or anything else. If that's the case, wouldn't the lame argument "if we evolved from chimps, why are there still chimps around" apply to wolves? Or did humans directly influence the evolution of dogs leaving the majority of the wolves alone? If so, how is it possible to have evolution take place in such a small time period?(domestication) thanks
Domesticated dogs are not directly descended from currently living wolves. That would be impossible. Your analogy is not precise.
Your analogy is "Dogs are descended from chimps" the way "humans are descended from chimps".
However, the usual about humans is "humans are descended from apes". The species called "chimpanzee" evolved within the last 5 MY. The word "ape" refers to any tailless primate.
Animals closely resembling extant chimpanzees only evolved within the last 5 MY. The common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees (Ardi something or other) lived 16 MYA. The common ancestor did not look precisely like either a human or a chimpanzee. In fact, Ardi had feet that resembled human feet more than chimpanzee feet. The chimpanzee foot is a "recent" specialization.
"Wolf" is not a species name. It is a general word for "large wild dog". The word "wolf" is being used in the most general sense of a big wild canine. The ancestor of the dog was a wild animal that may have superficially resembled an extant wolf. However, it would have been different from living wolves in some ways.
There are several species of extinct "wolves". For instance, the "dire wolf". The dog could have been descended from a dire wolf. There are many different species of wolves now. A coyote is considered a type of wolf, though it isn't nearly as big as its European and Asian brothers. Wolf is not a species name. Wolf is a general word, the way ape is a general word.
Domestic dogs are descended from wild dogs. The paleontological evidence is that Domesticate dogs are descended from larger dogs with larger brains. There are many varieties of dogs. Some of these varieties may have been descended from different species of "wolves". It is possible that "domestic dogs" are a multiphyletic group on the species level.
I don't know the evolution of dogs all that well. It is possible that there were animals so closely related to wolves that there would be no way to tell them apart, side to side. In that case, one could say "humans are descended from wolves". However, they still aren't descended from extant wolves.
The generality of a particular "common name" is always a matter of context. The word "ape" can mean all primates. The word "ape" can mean any tail less primate, which would include Barbary monkeys. "Ape" can mean quadrapeds only (humans, chimpanzees, orangutang, gorillas). "Ape" can mean all quadrapeds excluding human. The word "ape" does not include "dog".
However, it can mean any wild dog. On the other hand, some use it to mean European wolf. "Wolf" does not mean "ape". The word wolf does not include fox, because of differences in chromosomes.
However, your comparison between statements is still incorrect.