Linkkejä

Rotumääritelmä: https://www.kennelliitto.fi/files/cane-corso 

Luonnetetsi, ihanneprofiili: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1QyXexuTPAKnjG22hhL71ObWlTIrRgjaXJi34aZFxKZ0/edit#gid=1113616328

Rotujärjestö: https://www.mastiffit.com/ 

Cane corso Finland: http://www.canecorsoclub.fi/canecorso/ 

Jalostuksen tavoiteohjelma: https://jalostus.kennelliitto.fi/RotuPDF.ashx?R=343&T=2

Cane corso pedigree: http://www.canecorsopedigree.com/modules/animal/

Geenitestejä: 

https://embarkvet.com/

https://mydogdna.com/

Youtube:

Jason Corey & Bruce Wayne: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCs-mQPtkpDQoGrJ-zYprrVA

Documentary TV: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWT2ER5gJWA

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History of the cane corso: https://canecorsokennelclub.co.uk/cane-corso-history.html

Studies of modern Italian dog populations reveal multiple patterns for domestic breed evolution (link):

NOTE: chapter 3.5, 3.6:
We examined a set of three breeds for which we collected samples in both the United States and Italy. The Cane Corsos did not group as a breed, rather they are paraphyletic to the Neapolitan Mastiffs.

Haplotype sharing analysis was then applied to detect the presence of variable genetic histories between the US and Italian collections, revealing new subtleties. We found that the American population of the Cane Corso shows significant haplotype sharing with the Rottweiler, reproducing previous results.

Based on our haplotype analysis, the American Cane Corsos diverged from the Neapolitan Mastiff between 65 and 69 years ago, while the Italian population split 80–85 years ago. American and Italian populations of Cane Corsos suggest a divergence of approximately 93 years ago and that this breed also underwent a restructuring after World War II. This divergence may reflect the presence of Cane Corsos in America prior to the breed resurrection or the effect of a migration bottleneck with distinct lineages contributing differentially to the two breed populations.

Analysis of the Cirneco dell'Etna and Pharaoh Hound indicate haplotype sharing divergence of 65 years ago (1950), corresponding with the recognition of the breeds by the FCI. These results support the hypothesis that most breed formation occurred recently, within the last 200 years. But it also shows, importantly, that the genetic foundations of these breeds were laid in the more distant past.