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<blockquote data-quote="Taurus" data-source="post: 1011405" data-attributes="member: 18288"><p>Yup you are in denial. Dogs are genetically different from the wolves, despite of the dogs and the grey wolves shared same ancestor. Also sabertooth tiger are not TRUE feline at all, in fact they are not even related to the felines at all. The point is that you cannot denied the solid fact that a hybrid was killed in Texas has 50% wolf DNA in him and the DNA test revealed that the hybrid's sire was 100% purebred grey wolf. Why is that hard for you to accepted the fact that it has already happened? Just for your record, there is no purebred grey wolf in Texas.....yet judging from the Mexican grey wolf populations has increasing in New Mexico and Arizona.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Taurus, post: 1011405, member: 18288"] Yup you are in denial. Dogs are genetically different from the wolves, despite of the dogs and the grey wolves shared same ancestor. Also sabertooth tiger are not TRUE feline at all, in fact they are not even related to the felines at all. The point is that you cannot denied the solid fact that a hybrid was killed in Texas has 50% wolf DNA in him and the DNA test revealed that the hybrid's sire was 100% purebred grey wolf. Why is that hard for you to accepted the fact that it has already happened? Just for your record, there is no purebred grey wolf in Texas.....yet judging from the Mexican grey wolf populations has increasing in New Mexico and Arizona. [/QUOTE]
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