Scientists are crooning over new pictures that confirm the survival of the New Guinea highland wild dog, which until now was feared to be extinct in its natural habitat on the South Pacific island.

Thought to be among the rarest species of canine, the highland wild dogs are either the same as or close relatives of the famous singing dogs of New Guinea, which exist only in captivity.

More than a hundred camera-trap pictures taken in 2016 show at least 15 wild individuals, including males, females, and pups. Though they are most commonly a golden color, some of the dogs are cream, ginger, roan, or black, with different markings and patternings.

DNA evidence suggests that the New Guinea highland wild dog is among the most primitive canines alive today, and it may be a key ancestor of domesticated dogs. (Read “New Clues on How and When Wolves Became Dogs.”)

"The discovery and confirmation of the [highland wild dog] for the first time in over half a century is not only exciting but an incredible opportunity for science," the New Guinea Highland Wild Dog Foundation (NGHWDF) says on its website.

Living the High Life

Previous reports in 2005 and 2012 suggested the dogs were still living in their highland homes, but neither was considered to be solid, conclusive evidence.

Luck came in 2016, when zoologist James K. McIntyre led a group of NGHWDF researchers on an expedition to the Papua Province. There, they came across researchers from the University of Papua, who were also eager to discover signs of the dog’s existence.

The trip delivered some promising initial evidence: a muddy pawprint.

Together, the university team and the NGHWDF deployed camera traps throughout the forests of the New Guinea highlands, roughly between 11,000 and 14,000 feet above sea level.

The trail cameras that they set up recorded more than 140 images of the dogs in just two days on the mountain summit of Puncak Jaya.