2020
DOI: 10.1007/s00334-020-00805-y
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Multi-proxy analysis of waterlogged preserved Late Neolithic canine excrements

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The presence of fish tapeworm eggs in 1 of the 19 coprolites suggests that the dog that deposited this piece of feces had previously eaten raw or undercooked freshwater fish and contracted fish tapeworm. This adds to our growing knowledge of parasites in Neolithic dogs (Tolar and Galik, 2019 ; Tolar et al ., 2020 ; Maicher et al ., 2021 ). While modern infection would lead to a high number of eggs in the feces, in ancient coprolites recovered from middens it is not uncommon for egg counts to be low, likely due to destruction of the eggs by fungi and insects over the centuries (see Ledger et al ., 2019 a for similar egg counts at a comparable Neolithic site).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The presence of fish tapeworm eggs in 1 of the 19 coprolites suggests that the dog that deposited this piece of feces had previously eaten raw or undercooked freshwater fish and contracted fish tapeworm. This adds to our growing knowledge of parasites in Neolithic dogs (Tolar and Galik, 2019 ; Tolar et al ., 2020 ; Maicher et al ., 2021 ). While modern infection would lead to a high number of eggs in the feces, in ancient coprolites recovered from middens it is not uncommon for egg counts to be low, likely due to destruction of the eggs by fungi and insects over the centuries (see Ledger et al ., 2019 a for similar egg counts at a comparable Neolithic site).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further evidence is provided by traces of burning, presumably caused by the bones being thrown into an open fire after removal of the soft tissues, and the presence of humeri with missing epiphyses and with traces of biting/gnawing. Further analysis is needed to clarify whether the humeri were damaged by humans or by dogs, considering that remains of bird bones were found in canine coprolites from local prehistoric pile dwelling settlements (Tolar et al, 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…How to cite this article: Janžekovic ˇ, F., Klenovšek, T., Mlíkovský, J., Toškan, B., & Velušc ˇek, A. (2021).…”
Section: Conflict Of Interestmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Trampuž-Orel Čufar, K., Merela, M., Krže, L., & Velušček, A.: Dendrochronology and absolute dating of pile-dwellings in Ljubljansko Barje & Heath, 2008). Raziskovanje pasjega koprolita je omogočilo tudi vpogled v vlogo človekovega prvega živalskega spremljevalca v skupnosti (Tolar et al, 2021;Velušček et al, 2020).…”
Section: Zaključki Conclusionunclassified