Dinggo: Pagkakaiba sa mga binago

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Ang '''dinggo''', '''dingowarigal''', o '''warrigal''',Canis lupus dingo'''warigal''', o([[wikang Ingles|Ingles]]: ''dingo'''Canis, lupus dingo'''warrigal'') ay isang uri ng wangis-asong ([[Canidae]], ''Canid'') mula sa [[Australya]], na pinaniniwalaang nagmula sa mga [[Lobong Iranyano]] (''Canis lupus pallipes'').<ref>''The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Human Evolution'', Palimbagan ng Pamantasang Cambridge, 1992.</ref>
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[[DNA analysis]] has shown it to be more closely related to domestic [[dog]]s, suggesting that they were introduced from a population of domesticated dogs, possibly at a single occasion during the [[Austronesian]] expansion into Island [[Southeast Asia]].<ref name="A detailed picture of the origin of the Australian dingo, obtained from the study of mitochondrial DNA">{{cite web | title = A detailed picture of the origin of the Australian dingo, obtained from the study of mitochondrial DNA | work = | publisher = Population Biology | url =http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/101/33/12387?maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&fulltext=dingoes&searchid=1093107565874_1469&stored_search=&FIRSTINDEX=0 | accessdate = 2008-06-16}}</ref> It is commonly described as an Australian wild dog, but is not restricted to Australia, nor did it originate there. Modern dingoes are found throughout [[Southeast Asia]], mostly in small pockets of remaining natural forest, and in mainland Australia, particularly in the north. They have features in common with both wolves and modern dogs, and are regarded as more or less unchanged descendants of an early ancestor of modern dogs. The name ''dingo'' comes from the language of the [[Eora]] [[Australian Aboriginal tribes|Aboriginal people]], who were the original inhabitants of the [[Sydney]] area. The [[New Guinea Singing Dog]] is also classified as ''Canis lupus dingo''.