Publication | Closed Access
Gender-Related Differences in Pelvic Morphometrics of the Retriever Dog Breed
25
Citations
27
References
2016
Year
FertilityBiometricsStepwise Discriminant AnalysisGynecologyAnatomyReproductive BiologyDog Pelvic BoneOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryGross AnatomySex DifferencesBiostatisticsPublic HealthDiscrimination FunctionStatisticsSex DifferenceUrologyTheriogenologyVeterinary ScienceRetriever Dog BreedMedicine
This study presents the results from a morphometric analysis of 52 dry Retriever dog pelvic bones (30 male, 22 female). A total of 20 parameters were measured using an osteometric board and digital vernier caliper. Six parameters were found to be significantly higher (P < 0.05) in males than in females, while one parameter was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in females than in males. However, none of the measured parameters demonstrated clear cut-off values with no intersect between males and females. Therefore, we generated a stepwise discriminant analysis from all 20 parameters in order to develop a possible working equation to discriminate gender from a dog pelvic bone. Stepwise discriminant analysis was used to create a discrimination function: Y = [82.1*PS/AII] - [50.72*LIS/LI] - [23.09*OTD/SP] + [7.69*SP/IE] + [6.52*IC/OW] + [7.67*ISA/OW] + [20.77*AII/PS] + [504.71*OW/ISA] - [90.84*PS/ISA] - [148.95], which showed an accuracy rate of 86.27%. This is the first study presenting an equation/function for use in discriminating gender from a dog's pelvic measurements. The results can be used in veterinary forensic anthropology and also show that a dog's pelvis presents sexual dimorphisms, as in humans.
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