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Dhole

The dhole (Cuon alpinus; /dl/) is a canid native to Central, South, East and Southeast Asia. Other English names for the species include Asian wild dog, Asiatic wild dog,[2] Indian wild dog,[3] whistling dog, red dog,[4] red wolf,[5] and mountain wolf.[6] It is genetically close to species within the genus Canis,[7]: Fig. 10  but distinct in several anatomical aspects: its skull is convex rather than concave in profile, it lacks a third lower molar[8] and the upper molars sport only a single cusp as opposed to between two and four.[9] During the Pleistocene, the dhole ranged throughout Asia, Europe and North America but became restricted to its historical range 12,000–18,000 years ago.[10]

Dhole
Temporal range: Middle Pleistocene – Recent 0.78–0 Ma
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Canidae
Subfamily: Caninae
Tribe: Canini
Genus: Cuon
Hodgson, 1838
Species:
C. alpinus
Binomial name
Cuon alpinus
(Pallas, 1811)
Subspecies
Dhole range
Synonyms

Canis alpinus

The dhole is a highly social animal, living in large clans without rigid dominance hierarchies[11] and containing multiple breeding females.[12] Such clans usually consist of about 12 individuals, but groups of over 40 are known.[4] It is a diurnal pack hunter which preferentially targets large and medium-sized ungulates.[13] In tropical forests, the dhole competes with the tiger (Panthera tigris) and the leopard (Panthera pardus), targeting somewhat different prey species, but still with substantial dietary overlap.[14]

It is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List, as populations are decreasing and estimated to comprise fewer than 2,500 mature individuals. Factors contributing to this decline include habitat loss, loss of prey, competition with other species, persecution due to livestock predation, and disease transfer from domestic dogs.[1]

Etymology and naming

The etymology of "dhole" is unclear. The possible earliest written use of the word in English occurred in 1808 by soldier Thomas Williamson, who encountered the animal in Ramghur district, India. He stated that dhole was a common local name for the species.[15] In 1827, Charles Hamilton Smith claimed that it was derived from a language spoken in 'various parts of the East'.[16]

Two years later, Smith connected this word with Turkish: deli 'mad, crazy', and erroneously compared the Turkish word with Old Saxon: dol and Dutch: dol (cfr. also English: dull; German: toll),[17] which are in fact from the Proto-Germanic *dwalaz 'foolish, stupid'.[18] Richard Lydekker wrote nearly 80 years later that the word was not used by the natives living within the species' range.[3] The Merriam-Webster Dictionary theorises that it may have come from the Kannada: tōḷa ('wolf').[19]

Taxonomy and evolution

 
Skeletal remains of a European dhole dating back to the upper Würm period from Cova Negra de Xàtiva, Valencia, Spain
 
Illustration (1859) by Leopold von Schrenck, one of the first accurate depictions of the species, based on a single skin purchased in the village of Dshare on the Amur[20]

Canis alpinus was the binomial name proposed by Peter Simon Pallas in 1811, who described its range as encompassing the upper levels of Udskoi Ostrog in Amurland, towards the eastern side and in the region of the upper Lena River, around the Yenisei River and occasionally crossing into China.[21][22] This northern Russian range reported by Pallas during the 18th and 19th centuries is "considerably north" of where this species occurs today.[22]

Canis primaevus was a name proposed by Brian Houghton Hodgson in 1833 who thought that the dhole was a primitive Canis form and the progenitor of the domestic dog.[23] Hodgson later took note of the dhole's physical distinctiveness from the genus Canis and proposed the genus Cuon.[24]

The first study on the origins of the species was conducted by paleontologist Erich Thenius, who concluded in 1955 that the dhole was a post-Pleistocene descendant of a golden jackal-like ancestor.[25] The paleontologist Bjorn Kurten wrote in his 1968 book Pleistocene Mammals of Europe that the primitive dhole Canis majori Del Campana 1913 —the remains of which have been found in Villafranchian era Valdarno, Italy and in China—was almost indistinguishable from the genus Canis. In comparison, the modern species has greatly reduced molars and the cusps have developed into sharply trenchant points. During the Early Middle Pleistocene there arose both Canis majori stehlini that was the size of a large wolf, and the early dhole Canis alpinus Pallas 1811 which first appeared at Hundsheim and Mosbach in Germany. In the Late Pleistocene era the European dhole (C. a. europaeus) was modern-looking and the transformation of the lower molar into a single cusped, slicing tooth had been completed; however, its size was comparable with that of a wolf. This subspecies became extinct in Europe at the end of the late Würm period, but the species as a whole still inhabits a large area of Asia.[26] The European dhole may have survived up until the early Holocene in the Iberian Peninsula.[27] and what is believed to be dhole remains have been found at Riparo Fredian in northern Italy dated 10,800 years old.[28][29]

The vast Pleistocene range of this species also included numerous islands in Asia that this species no longer inhabits, such as Sri Lanka, Borneo and possibly Palawan in the Philippines.[30][31][32][33][34][35] Middle Pleistocene dhole fossils have also been found in the Matsukae Cave in northern Kyushu Island in western Japan and in the Lower Kuzuu fauna in Tochigi Prefecture in Honshu Island, east Japan.[36] Dhole fossils from the Late Pleistocene dated to about 10,700 years before present are known from the Luobi Cave or Luobi-Dong cave in Hainan Island in south China where they no longer exist.[37] Additionally, fossils of canidae possibly belonging to dhole have been excavated from Dajia River in Taichung County, Taiwan.[38]

The fossil record indicates that the species also occurred in North America, with remains being found in Beringia and Mexico.[39]

Phylogenetic tree of the wolf-like canids with timing in millions of years[a]

In 2021, the analyses of the mitochondrial genomes extracted from the fossil remains of two extinct European dhole specimens from the Jáchymka cave, Czech Republic dated 35,000–45,000 years old indicate that these were genetically basal to modern dholes and possessed much greater genetic diversity.[29]

The dhole's distinctive morphology has been a source of much confusion in determining the species' systematic position among the Canidae. George Simpson placed the dhole in the subfamily Simocyoninae alongside the African wild dog and the bush dog, on account of all three species' similar dentition.[40] Subsequent authors, including Juliet Clutton-Brock, noted greater morphological similarities to canids of the genera Canis, Dusicyon and Alopex than to either Speothos or Lycaon, with any resemblance to the latter two being due to convergent evolution.[8]

Some authors consider the extinct Canis subgenus Xenocyon as ancestral to both the genus Lycaon and the genus Cuon.[41][42][43][44]: p149  Subsequent studies on the canid genome revealed that the dhole and African wild dog are closely related to members of the genus Canis.[7] This closeness to Canis may have been confirmed in a menagerie in Madras, where according to zoologist Reginald Innes Pocock there is a record of a dhole that interbred with a golden jackal.[45]

Admixture with the African wild dog

In 2018, whole genome sequencing was used to compare all members (apart from the black-backed and side-striped jackals) of the genus Canis, along with the dhole and the African wild dog (Lycaon pictus). There was strong evidence of ancient genetic admixture between the dhole and the African wild dog. Today, their ranges are remote from each other; however, during the Pleistocene era the dhole could be found as far west as Europe. The study proposes that the dhole's distribution may have once included the Middle East, from where it may have admixed with the African wild dog in North Africa. However, there is no evidence of the dhole having existed in the Middle East nor North Africa.[46]

Subspecies

Historically, up to ten subspecies of dholes have been recognised.[47] As of 2005, seven subspecies are recognised.[48][49]

However, studies on the dhole's mtDNA and microsatellite genotype showed no clear subspecific distinctions. Nevertheless, two major phylogeographic groupings were discovered in dholes of the Asian mainland, which likely diverged during a glaciation event. One population extends from South, Central and North India (south of the Ganges) into Myanmar, and the other extends from India north of the Ganges into northeastern India, Myanmar, Thailand and the Malaysian Peninsula. The origin of dholes in Sumatra and Java is, as of 2005, unclear, as they show greater relatedness to dholes in India, Myanmar and China rather than with those in nearby Malaysia. However, the Canid Specialist Group of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) states that further research is needed because all of the samples were from the southern part of this species' range and the Tien Shan subspecies has distinct morphology.[50]

In the absence of further data, the researchers involved in the study speculated that Javan and Sumatran dholes could have been introduced to the islands by humans.[51] Fossils of dhole from the early Middle Pleistocene have been found in Java.[52]

Subspecies Image Trinomial authority Description Distribution Synonyms
C. a. adjustus Burmese dhole,[45] Indian dhole   Pocock, 1941[45] Reddish coat, short hair on the paws and black whiskers[13] Northeastern India and south of the Ganges River, northern Myanmar[13] antiquus (Matthew & Granger, 1923), dukhunensis (Sykes, 1831)
C. a. alpinus Ussuri dhole[9]

(nominate subspecies)

  Pallas, 1811[21] Thick tawny red coat, greyish neck and ochre muzzle[13] East of the eastern Sayan Mountains, eastern Russia, northeastern Asia[13]
C. a. fumosus[53] Pocock, 1936[53] Luxuriant yellowish-red coat, dark back and grey neck[13] Western Sichuan, China and Mongolia. Southern Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaysia and Java, Indonesia[13] infuscus (Pocock, 1936), javanicus (Desmarest, 1820)
C. a. hesperius Tien Shan dhole[9]   Afanasjev and Zolotarev, 1935[54] Long yellow tinted coat, white underside and pale whiskers[13] Smaller than C. a. alpinus, with wider skull and lighter-coloured winter fur.[9] Eastern Russia and China[13] jason (Pocock, 1936)
C. a. laniger[53] Pocock, 1936[53] Full, yellowish-grey coat, tail not black but same colour as body[13] Southern Tibet, Himalayan Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan and Kashmir[13] grayiformis (Hodgson, 1863), primaevus (Hodgson, 1833)
C. a. lepturus[53]   Heude, 1892[55] Uniform red coat with thick underfur[13] South of the Yangtze River, China[13] clamitans (Heude, 1892), rutilans (Müller, 1839), sumatrensis (Hodgson, 1833)
Sumatran dhole and Javan dhole C. a. sumatrensis[56]   Hardwicke, 1821[57] Red coat and dark whiskers[13] Sumatra, Indonesia[13] Its range is highly fragmented with multiple protected areas in Sumatra and Java.[1]

Characteristics

 
Dhole skull and molars illustrated by St. George Mivart (1890)
 
Captive adult dhole

In appearance, the dhole has been variously described as combining the physical characteristics of the gray wolf and the red fox,[9] and as being "cat-like" on account of its long backbone and slender limbs.[25] It has a wide and massive skull with a well-developed sagittal crest,[9] and its masseter muscles are highly developed compared to other canid species, giving the face an almost hyena-like appearance.[58] The rostrum is shorter than that of domestic dogs and most other canids.[4] The species has six rather than seven lower molars.[59] The upper molars are weak, being one third to one half the size of those of wolves and have only one cusp as opposed to between two and four, as is usual in canids,[9] an adaptation thought to improve shearing ability, thus allowing it to compete more successfully with kleptoparasites.[13] Adult females can weigh from 10 to 17 kg (22 to 37 lb), while the slightly larger male may weigh from 15 to 21 kg (33 to 46 lb). The mean weight of adults from three small samples was 15.1 kg (33 lb).[13][60][61][62] Occasionally, dholes may be sympatric with the Indian wolf (Canis lupus pallipes), which is one of the smallest races of the gray wolf, but is still approximately 25% heavier on average.[63][64]

 
Subadult

The general tone of the fur is reddish, with the brightest hues occurring in winter. In the winter coat, the back is clothed in a saturated rusty-red to reddish colour with brownish highlights along the top of the head, neck and shoulders. The throat, chest, flanks, and belly and the upper parts of the limbs are less brightly coloured, and are more yellowish in tone. The lower parts of the limbs are whitish, with dark brownish bands on the anterior sides of the forelimbs. The muzzle and forehead are greyish-reddish. The tail is very luxuriant and fluffy, and is mainly of a reddish-ocherous colour, with a dark brown tip. The summer coat is shorter, coarser and darker.[9] The dorsal and lateral guard hairs in adults measure 20–30 mm (0.79–1.18 in) in length. Dholes in the Moscow Zoo moult once a year from March to May.[4] A melanistic individual was recorded in the northern Coimbatore Forest Division in Tamil Nadu.[65]

Distribution and habitat

 
Dhole feeding on sambar deer carcass, Khao Yai National Park
 
Lone dhole strolling through the jungle in Mudumalai National Park

The dhole can be found in Tibet and possibly also in North Korea and Pakistan. It once inhabited the alpine steppes extending into Kashmir to the Ladakh area.[1] In Central Asia, the dhole primarily inhabits mountainous areas; in the western part of its range, it lives mostly in alpine meadows and high-montane steppes, while in the east, it mainly ranges in montane taigas, and is sometimes sighted along coastlines. In India, Myanmar, Indochina, Indonesia and China, it prefers forested areas in alpine zones and is occasionally sighted in plains regions.[9]

In the Pamir Mountains of southern Kyrgyzstan, the presence of the dhole was confirmed in 2019.[66]

The dhole might still be present in the Tunkinsky National Park in extreme southern Siberia near Lake Baikal.[67] It possibly still lives in the Primorsky Krai province in far eastern Russia, where it was considered a rare and endangered species in 2004, with unconfirmed reports in the Pikthsa-Tigrovy Dom protected forest area; no sighting was reported in other areas since the late 1970s.[68] Currently, no other recent reports are confirmed of dhole being present in Russia.[69] However, the dhole might be present in the eastern Sayan Mountains and in the TransBaikal region; it has been sighted in Tofalaria in the Irkutsk Oblast, the Republic of Buryatia and Zabaykalsky Krai.[70]

One pack was sighted in the Qilian Mountains in 2006.[71] In 2011 to 2013, local government officials and herders reported the presence of several dhole packs at elevations of 2,000 to 3,500 m (6,600 to 11,500 ft) near Taxkorgan Nature Reserve in the Xinjiang Autonomous Region. Several packs and a female adult with pups were also recorded by camera traps at elevations of around 2,500 to 4,000 m (8,200 to 13,100 ft) in Yanchiwan National Nature Reserve in the northern Gansu Province in 2013–2014.[72] Dholes have been also reported in the Altyn-Tagh Mountains.[73]

In China's Yunnan Province, dholes were recorded in Baima Xueshan Nature Reserve in 2010–2011.[74] Dhole samples were obtained in Jiangxi Province in 2013.[75] Confirmed records by camera-trapping since 2008 have occurred in southern and western Gansu province, southern Shaanxi province, southern Qinghai province, southern and western Yunnan province, western Sichuan province, the southern Xinjiang Autonomous Region and in the Southeastern Tibet Autonomoous Region.[76] There are also historical records of dhole dating to 1521–1935 in Hainan Island, but the species is no longer present and is estimated to have become extinct around 1942.[37]

The dhole occurs in most of India south of the Ganges, particularly in the Central Indian Highlands and the Western and Eastern Ghats. It is also present in Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya and West Bengal and in the Indo-Gangetic Plain's Terai region. Dhole populations in the Himalayas and northwest India are fragmented.[1]

In 2011, dhole packs were recorded by camera traps in the Chitwan National Park.[77] Its presence was confirmed in the Kanchenjunga Conservation Area in 2011 by camera traps.[78] In February 2020, dholes were sighted in the Vansda National Park, with camera traps confirming the presence of two individuals in May of the same year. This was the first confirmed sighting of dholes in Gujarat since 1970.[79]

In Bhutan, the dhole is present in Jigme Dorji National Park.[80][81]

In Bangladesh, it inhabits forest reserves in the Sylhet area, as well the Chittagong Hill Tracts in the southeast. Recent camera trap photos in the Chittagong in 2016 showed the continued presence of the dhole.[82] These regions probably do not harbour a viable population, as mostly small groups or solitary individuals were sighted.[1]

In Myanmar, the dhole is present in several protected areas.[1] In 2015, dholes and tigers were recorded by camera-traps for the first time in the hill forests of Karen State.[83]

Its range is highly fragmented in the Malaysian Peninsula, Sumatra, Java, Vietnam and Thailand.[1] In 2014, camera trap videos in the montane tropical forests at 2,000 m (6,600 ft) in the Kerinci Seblat National Park in Sumatra revealed its continued presence.[84] A camera trapping survey in the Khao Ang Rue Nai Wildlife Sanctuary in Thailand from January 2008 to February 2010 documented one healthy dhole pack.[85] In northern Laos, dholes were studied in Nam Et-Phou Louey National Protected Area.[86] Camera trap surveys from 2012 to 2017 recorded dholes in the same Nam Et-Phou Louey National Protected Area.[87]

In Vietnam, dholes were sighted only in Pu Mat National Park in 1999, in Yok Don National Park in 2003 and 2004; and in Ninh Thuan Province in 2014.[88]

In 2019, scat samples collected in the Bek-Tosot Conservancy in Kyrgyzstan confirmed the continued presence of dholes in the area. This was the first record of dholes from the country in almost three decades.[89]

A disjunct dhole population was reported in the area of Trabzon and Rize in northeastern Turkey near the border with Georgia in the 1990s.[90] This report was not considered to be reliable.[1] One single individual was claimed to have been shot in 2013 in the nearby Kabardino-Balkaria Republic in the central Caucasus; its remains were analysed in May 2015 by a biologist from the Kabardino-Balkarian State University, who concluded that the skull was indeed that of a dhole.[91] In August 2015, researchers from the National Museum of Natural History and the Karadeniz Technical University started an expedition to track and document this possible Turkish population of dhole.[92] In October 2015, they concluded that no real evidence exists of a living dhole population in Turkey or in the Kabardino-Balkaria Republic, pending DNA analysis of samples from the original 1994 skins.[93]

Ecology and behaviour

Dholes produce whistles resembling the calls of red foxes, sometimes rendered as coo-coo. How this sound is produced is unknown, though it is thought to help in coordinating the pack when travelling through thick brush. When attacking prey, they emit screaming KaKaKaKAA sounds.[94] Other sounds include whines (food soliciting), growls (warning), screams, chatterings (both of which are alarm calls) and yapping cries.[95] In contrast to wolves, dholes do not howl or bark.[9]

Dholes have a complex body language. Friendly or submissive greetings are accompanied by horizontal lip retraction and the lowering of the tail, as well as licking. Playful dholes open their mouths with their lips retracted and their tails held in a vertical position whilst assuming a play bow. Aggressive or threatening dholes pucker their lips forward in a snarl and raise the hairs on their backs, as well as keep their tails horizontal or vertical. When afraid, they pull their lips back horizontally with their tails tucked and their ears flat against the skull.[96]

Social and territorial behaviour

 
Dholes playing, Pench Tiger Reserve

Dholes are more social than gray wolves,[9] and have less of a dominance hierarchy, as seasonal scarcity of food is not a serious concern for them. In this manner, they closely resemble African wild dogs in social structure.[11] They live in clans rather than packs, as the latter term refers to a group of animals that always hunt together. In contrast, dhole clans frequently break into small packs of three to five animals, particularly during the spring season, as this is the optimal number for catching fawns.[97] Dominant dholes are hard to identify, as they do not engage in dominance displays as wolves do, though other clan members will show submissive behaviour toward them.[12] Intragroup fighting is rarely observed.[98]

Dholes are far less territorial than wolves, with pups from one clan often joining another without trouble once they mature sexually.[99] Clans typically number 5 to 12 individuals in India, though clans of 40 have been reported. In Thailand, clans rarely exceed three individuals.[4] Unlike other canids, there is no evidence of dholes using urine to mark their territories or travel routes. When urinating, dholes, especially males, may raise one hind leg or both to result in a handstand. Handstand urination is also seen in bush dogs (Speothos venaticus).[100] They may defecate in conspicuous places, though a territorial function is unlikely, as faeces are mostly deposited within the clan's territory rather than the periphery. Faeces are often deposited in what appear to be communal latrines. They do not scrape the earth with their feet, as other canids do, to mark their territories.[96]

Denning

Four kinds of den have been described; simple earth dens with one entrance (usually remodeled striped hyena or porcupine dens); complex cavernous earth dens with more than one entrance; simple cavernous dens excavated under or between rocks; and complex cavernous dens with several other dens in the vicinity, some of which are interconnected. Dens are typically located under dense scrub or on the banks of dry rivers or creeks. The entrance to a dhole den can be almost vertical, with a sharp turn three to four feet down. The tunnel opens into an antechamber, from which extends more than one passage. Some dens may have up to six entrances leading up to thirty metres (100 ft) of interconnecting tunnels. These "cities" may be developed over many generations of dholes, and are shared by the clan females when raising young together.[101] Like African wild dogs and dingoes, dholes will avoid killing prey close to their dens.[102]

Reproduction and development

In India, the mating season occurs between mid-October and January, while captive dholes in the Moscow Zoo breed mostly in February.[4] Unlike wolf packs, dhole clans may contain more than one breeding female.[12] More than one female dhole may den and rear their litters together in the same den.[98] During mating, the female assumes a crouched, cat-like position. There is no copulatory tie characteristic of other canids when the male dismounts. Instead, the pair lie on their sides facing each other in a semicircular formation.[103] The gestation period lasts 60–63 days, with litter sizes averaging four to six pups.[4] Their growth rate is much faster than that of wolves, being similar in rate to that of coyotes.

The hormone metabolites of five males and three females kept in Thai zoos was studied. The breeding males showed an increased level of testosterone from October to January. The oestrogen level of captive females increases for about two weeks in January, followed by an increase of progesterone. They displayed sexual behaviours during the oestrogen peak of the females.[104]

Pups are suckled at least 58 days. During this time, the pack feeds the mother at the den site. Dholes do not use rendezvous sites to meet their pups as wolves do, though one or more adults will stay with the pups at the den while the rest of the pack hunts. Once weaning begins, the adults of the clan will regurgitate food for the pups until they are old enough to join in hunting. They remain at the den site for 70–80 days. By the age of six months, pups accompany the adults on hunts and will assist in killing large prey such as sambar by the age of eight months.[102] Maximum longevity in captivity is 15–16 years.[98]

Hunting behaviour

 
Dholes attacking a sambar, Bandipur National Park

Before embarking on a hunt, clans go through elaborate prehunt social rituals involving nuzzling, body rubbing and mounting.[105] Dholes are primarily diurnal hunters, hunting in the early hours of the morning. They rarely hunt nocturnally, except on moonlit nights, indicating they greatly rely on sight when hunting.[106] Although not as fast as jackals and foxes, they can chase their prey for many hours.[9] During a pursuit, one or more dholes may take over chasing their prey, while the rest of the pack keeps up at a steadier pace behind, taking over once the other group tires. Most chases are short, lasting only 500 m (1,600 ft).[107] When chasing fleet-footed prey, they run at a pace of 50 km/h (30 mph).[9] Dholes frequently drive their prey into water bodies, where the targeted animal's movements are hindered.[108]

Once large prey is caught, one dhole will grab the prey's nose, while the rest of the pack pulls the animal down by the flanks and hindquarters. They do not use a killing bite to the throat.[109] They occasionally blind their prey by attacking the eyes.[110] Serows are among the only ungulate species capable of effectively defending themselves against dhole attacks, due to their thick, protective coats and short, sharp horns capable of easily impaling dholes.[3] They will tear open their prey's flanks and disembowel it, eating the heart, liver, lungs and some sections of the intestines. The stomach and rumen are usually left untouched.[111] Prey weighing less than 50 kg (110 lb) is usually killed within two minutes, while large stags may take 15 minutes to die. Once prey is secured, dholes will tear off pieces of the carcass and eat in seclusion.[112] Unlike wolf packs, in which the breeding pair monopolises food, dholes give access to the pups at a kill.[12] They are generally tolerant of scavengers at their kills.[113] Both mother and young are provided with regurgitated food by other pack members.[98]

Feeding ecology

 
Dholes feeding on a chital, Bandipur National Park

Prey animals in India include chital, sambar deer, muntjac, mouse deer, barasingha, wild boar, gaur, water buffaloes, banteng, cattle, nilgai, goats, Indian hares, Himalayan field rats and langurs.[4][45][114] There is one record of a pack bringing down an Indian elephant calf in Assam, despite desperate defense of the mother, resulting in numerous losses to the pack.[6] In Kashmir, they prey on markhor,[45] and thamin in Myanmar,[4] Malayan tapir, Sumatran serow in Sumatra and the Malay Peninsula and Javan rusa in Java.[13] In the Tian Shan and Tarbagatai Mountains, dholes prey on Siberian ibexes, arkhar, roe deer, Caspian red deer and wild boar. In the Altai and Sayan Mountains, they prey on musk deer and reindeer. In eastern Siberia, they prey on roe deer, Manchurian wapiti, wild pig, musk deer and reindeer, while in Primorye they feed on sika deer and goral. In Mongolia, they prey on argali and rarely Siberian ibex.[9]

Like African wild dogs, but unlike wolves, dholes are not known to attack people.[9][45] They are known to eat insects and lizards.[115] Dholes eat fruit and vegetable matter more readily than other canids. In captivity, they eat various kinds of grasses, herbs and leaves, seemingly for pleasure rather than just when ill.[116] In summertime in the Tian Shan Mountains, dholes eat large quantities of mountain rhubarb.[9] Although opportunistic, dholes have a seeming aversion to hunting cattle and their calves.[117] Livestock predation by dholes has been a problem in Bhutan since the late 1990s, as domestic animals are often left outside to graze in the forest, sometimes for weeks at a time. Livestock stall-fed at night and grazed near homes are never attacked. Oxen are killed more often than cows, probably because they are given less protection.[118]

Enemies and competitors

 
Dhole killed and cached in a tree by a leopard, India

In some areas, dholes are sympatric to tigers and leopards. Competition between these species is mostly avoided through differences in prey selection, although there is still substantial dietary overlap. Along with leopards, dholes typically target animals in the 30–175 kg (66–386 lb) range (mean weights of 35.3 kg [78 lb] for dhole and 23.4 kg [52 lb] for leopard), while tigers selected for prey animals heavier than 176 kg (388 lb) (but their mean prey weight was 65.5 kg [144 lb]). Also, other characteristics of the prey, such as sex, arboreality and aggressiveness, may play a role in prey selection. For example, dholes preferentially select male chital, whereas leopards kill both sexes more evenly (and tigers prefer larger prey altogether), dholes and tigers kill langurs rarely compared to leopards due to the leopards' greater arboreality, while leopards kill wild boar infrequently due to the inability of this relatively light predator to tackle aggressive prey of comparable weight.[14]

Tigers are dangerous opponents for dholes, as they have sufficient strength to kill a dhole with a single paw strike.[6] Dhole packs are smaller in areas with higher tiger densities due to tigers directly killing dholes and stealing kills they made. The kleptoparasitism causes dholes to prefer hunting smaller animals because they can eat more of a smaller carcass before a tiger arrives to steal it. Direct predation can lead to lower reproductive and recruitment rates, lower hunting success rates and less food for the pups when a helper is killed, and potentially pack destabilization if one member of the breeding pair is killed.[119]

Dhole packs may steal leopard kills, while leopards may kill dholes if they encounter them singly or in pairs.[45] There are numerous records of leopards being treed by dholes.[98] Dholes were once thought to be a major factor in reducing Asiatic cheetah populations, though this is doubtful, as cheetahs live in open areas as opposed to forested areas favoured by dholes.[120] Since leopards are smaller than tigers and are more likely to hunt dholes, dhole packs tend to react more aggressively toward them than they do towards tigers.[121]

Dhole packs occasionally attack Asiatic black bears, snow leopards and sloth bears. When attacking bears, dholes will attempt to prevent them from seeking refuge in caves and lacerate their hindquarters.[45] Although usually antagonistic toward wolves,[9] they may hunt and feed alongside one another.[122] There is at least one record of a lone wolf associating with a pair of dholes in Debrigarh Wildlife Sanctuary,[123] and two observations in Satpura Tiger Reserve.[124] They infrequently associate in mixed groups with golden jackals. Domestic dogs may kill dholes, though they will feed alongside them on occasion.[125]

Diseases and parasites

Dholes are vulnerable to a number of different diseases, particularly in areas where they are sympatric with other canid species. Infectious pathogens such as Toxocara canis are present in their faeces. They may suffer from rabies, canine distemper, mange, trypanosomiasis, canine parvovirus and endoparasites such as cestodes and roundworms.[13]

Threats

The dhole only rarely takes domestic livestock. Some ethnic groups like the Kuruba and Mon Khmer-speaking tribes will appropriate dhole kills; some Indian villagers welcome the dhole because of this appropriation of dhole kills.[98] Dholes were persecuted throughout India for bounties until they were given protection by the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972. Methods used for dhole hunting included poisoning, snaring, shooting and clubbing at den sites. Native Indian people killed dholes primarily to protect livestock, while British sporthunters during the British Raj did so under the conviction that dholes were responsible for drops in game populations. Persecution of dholes still occurs with varying degrees of intensity according to the region.[13] Bounties paid for dholes used to be 25 rupees, though this was reduced to 20 in 1926 after the number of presented dhole carcasses became too numerous to maintain the established reward.[126] In Indochina, dholes suffer heavily from nonselective hunting techniques such as snaring.[13]

The fur trade does not pose a significant threat to dholes.[13] The people of India do not eat dhole flesh and their fur is not considered overly valuable.[116] Due to their rarity, dholes were never harvested for their skins in large numbers in the Soviet Union and were sometimes accepted as dog or wolf pelts (being labeled as "half wolf" for the latter). The winter fur was prized by the Chinese, who bought dhole pelts in Ussuriysk during the late 1860s for a few silver rubles. In the early 20th century, dhole pelts reached eight rubles in Manchuria. In Semirechye, fur coats made from dhole skin were considered the warmest, but were very costly.[9]

Conservation

In India, the dhole is protected under Schedule 2 of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. The creation of reserves under Project Tiger provided some protection for dhole populations sympatric with tigers. In 2014, the Indian government sanctioned its first dhole conservation breeding centre at the Indira Gandhi Zoological Park (IGZP) in Visakhapatnam.[127] The dhole has been protected in Russia since 1974, though it is vulnerable to poison left out for wolves. In China, the animal is listed as a category II protected species under the Chinese wildlife protection act of 1988. In Cambodia, the dhole is protected from all hunting, while conservation laws in Vietnam limit extraction and utilisation.[1]

In 2016, the Korean company Sooam Biotech was reported to be attempting to clone the dhole using dogs as surrogate mothers to help conserve the species.[128]

In culture and literature

 
Drawing of a dhole from the Imperial Chinese Encyclopedia

Three dhole-like animals are featured on the coping stone of the Bharhut stupa dating from 100 BC. They are shown waiting by a tree, with a woman or spirit trapped up it, a scene reminiscent of dholes treeing tigers.[129] The animal's fearsome reputation in India is reflected by the number of pejorative names it possesses in Hindi, which variously translate as "red devil", "devil dog", "jungle devil", or "hound of Kali".[6]

Leopold von Schrenck had trouble obtaining dhole specimens during his exploration of Amurland, as the local Gilyaks greatly feared the species. This fear and superstition was not, however, shared by neighbouring Tungusic peoples. It was speculated that this differing attitude towards the dhole was due to the Tungusic people's more nomadic, hunter-gatherer lifestyle.[20]

Dholes appear in Rudyard Kipling's Red Dog, where they are portrayed as aggressive and bloodthirsty animals which descend from the Deccan Plateau into the Seeonee Hills inhabited by Mowgli and his adopted wolf pack to cause carnage among the jungle's denizens. They are described as living in packs numbering hundreds of individuals, and that even Shere Khan and Hathi make way for them when they descend into the jungle. The dholes are despised by the wolves because of their destructiveness, their habit of not living in dens and the hair between their toes. With Mowgli and Kaa's help, the Seeonee wolf pack manages to wipe out the dholes by leading them through bee hives and torrential waters before finishing off the rest in battle.

Japanese author Uchida Roan wrote 犬物語 (Inu monogatari; A dog's tale) in 1901 as a nationalistic critique of the declining popularity of indigenous dog breeds, which he asserted were descended from the dhole.[130]

A fictional version of the dhole, imbued with supernatural abilities, appears in the season 6 episode of TV series The X-Files, titled "Alpha".

In China, the dhole were widely known throughout history and mythology. One notable legendary creature is the Yazi (睚眦), which was believed to be a creature that was part-dhole part-dragon. In modern times, however, the Chinese word for dhole (; Chái) is often confused with 'jackal' or 'wolf', resulting in many confusions and mistranslations of dholes as jackals or wolves.[citation needed]

Dholes also appear as enemies in the video game Far Cry 4, alongside other predators such as the Bengal tiger, honey badger, snow leopard, clouded leopard, Tibetan wolf and Asian black bear. They can be found hunting the player and other NPCs across the map, but are easily killed, being one of the weakest enemies in the game. They once again appear in the video game Far Cry Primal, where they play similar roles as their counterparts in the previous game, but can now also be tamed and used in combat by Takkar, the main protagonist of the game.

Tameability

Brian Houghton Hodgson kept captured dholes in captivity, and found, with the exception of one animal, they remained shy and vicious even after 10 months.[116][131] According to Richard Lydekker, adult dholes are nearly impossible to tame, though pups are docile and can even be allowed to play with domestic dog pups until they reach early adulthood.[3] A dhole may have been presented as a gift to Ibbi-Sin as tribute.[132]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For a full set of supporting references refer to the note (a) in the phylotree at Evolution of the wolf#Wolf-like canids

References

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  92. ^ "NMNHS expedition went on the trail of an unknown population of the rare dhole in Turkey". National Museum of Natural History, Sofia (NMNHS). 2015.
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Bibliography

  • Fox, M.W. (1984). The Whistling Hunters: Field Studies of the Asiatic Wild Dog (Cuon alpinus). Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-9524390-6-6.
  • Karanth, U.K. (2006). A View From the Machan. Karnataka: Permanent Black. ISBN 978-8-1782413-7-1.

External links

  • Dhole Home Page ()
  • ARKive –
  • Saving the dhole: The forgotten 'badass' Asian dog more endangered than tigers, The Guardian (25 June 2015)

dhole, this, article, about, genus, wild, lovecraft, fictional, monster, cthulhu, mythos, mountain, wolf, redirects, here, other, uses, mountain, wolf, disambiguation, confused, with, wolf, northern, rocky, mountain, wolf, african, wild, dhole, cuon, alpinus, . This article is about the genus of wild dog For H P Lovecraft s fictional monster see Dhole Cthulhu Mythos Mountain wolf redirects here For other uses see Mountain wolf disambiguation Not to be confused with Red wolf Northern Rocky Mountain wolf or African wild dog The dhole Cuon alpinus d oʊ l is a canid native to Central South East and Southeast Asia Other English names for the species include Asian wild dog Asiatic wild dog 2 Indian wild dog 3 whistling dog red dog 4 red wolf 5 and mountain wolf 6 It is genetically close to species within the genus Canis 7 Fig 10 but distinct in several anatomical aspects its skull is convex rather than concave in profile it lacks a third lower molar 8 and the upper molars sport only a single cusp as opposed to between two and four 9 During the Pleistocene the dhole ranged throughout Asia Europe and North America but became restricted to its historical range 12 000 18 000 years ago 10 DholeTemporal range Middle Pleistocene Recent 0 78 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Conservation statusEndangered IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix II CITES 1 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraFamily CanidaeSubfamily CaninaeTribe CaniniGenus CuonHodgson 1838Species C alpinusBinomial nameCuon alpinus Pallas 1811 SubspeciesC a adjustus C a alpinus C a fumosus C a hesperius C a laniger C a lepturus C a sumatrensis C a antiquus C a caucasicus C a europaeusDhole rangeSynonymsCanis alpinusThe dhole is a highly social animal living in large clans without rigid dominance hierarchies 11 and containing multiple breeding females 12 Such clans usually consist of about 12 individuals but groups of over 40 are known 4 It is a diurnal pack hunter which preferentially targets large and medium sized ungulates 13 In tropical forests the dhole competes with the tiger Panthera tigris and the leopard Panthera pardus targeting somewhat different prey species but still with substantial dietary overlap 14 It is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List as populations are decreasing and estimated to comprise fewer than 2 500 mature individuals Factors contributing to this decline include habitat loss loss of prey competition with other species persecution due to livestock predation and disease transfer from domestic dogs 1 Contents 1 Etymology and naming 2 Taxonomy and evolution 2 1 Admixture with the African wild dog 2 2 Subspecies 3 Characteristics 4 Distribution and habitat 5 Ecology and behaviour 5 1 Social and territorial behaviour 5 2 Denning 5 3 Reproduction and development 5 4 Hunting behaviour 5 5 Feeding ecology 5 6 Enemies and competitors 5 7 Diseases and parasites 6 Threats 7 Conservation 8 In culture and literature 8 1 Tameability 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 External linksEtymology and naming EditThe etymology of dhole is unclear The possible earliest written use of the word in English occurred in 1808 by soldier Thomas Williamson who encountered the animal in Ramghur district India He stated that dhole was a common local name for the species 15 In 1827 Charles Hamilton Smith claimed that it was derived from a language spoken in various parts of the East 16 Two years later Smith connected this word with Turkish deli mad crazy and erroneously compared the Turkish word with Old Saxon dol and Dutch dol cfr also English dull German toll 17 which are in fact from the Proto Germanic dwalaz foolish stupid 18 Richard Lydekker wrote nearly 80 years later that the word was not used by the natives living within the species range 3 The Merriam Webster Dictionary theorises that it may have come from the Kannada tōḷa wolf 19 Taxonomy and evolution Edit Skeletal remains of a European dhole dating back to the upper Wurm period from Cova Negra de Xativa Valencia Spain Illustration 1859 by Leopold von Schrenck one of the first accurate depictions of the species based on a single skin purchased in the village of Dshare on the Amur 20 Canis alpinus was the binomial name proposed by Peter Simon Pallas in 1811 who described its range as encompassing the upper levels of Udskoi Ostrog in Amurland towards the eastern side and in the region of the upper Lena River around the Yenisei River and occasionally crossing into China 21 22 This northern Russian range reported by Pallas during the 18th and 19th centuries is considerably north of where this species occurs today 22 Canis primaevus was a name proposed by Brian Houghton Hodgson in 1833 who thought that the dhole was a primitive Canis form and the progenitor of the domestic dog 23 Hodgson later took note of the dhole s physical distinctiveness from the genus Canis and proposed the genus Cuon 24 The first study on the origins of the species was conducted by paleontologist Erich Thenius who concluded in 1955 that the dhole was a post Pleistocene descendant of a golden jackal like ancestor 25 The paleontologist Bjorn Kurten wrote in his 1968 book Pleistocene Mammals of Europe that the primitive dhole Canis majori Del Campana 1913 the remains of which have been found in Villafranchian era Valdarno Italy and in China was almost indistinguishable from the genus Canis In comparison the modern species has greatly reduced molars and the cusps have developed into sharply trenchant points During the Early Middle Pleistocene there arose both Canis majori stehlini that was the size of a large wolf and the early dhole Canis alpinus Pallas 1811 which first appeared at Hundsheim and Mosbach in Germany In the Late Pleistocene era the European dhole C a europaeus was modern looking and the transformation of the lower molar into a single cusped slicing tooth had been completed however its size was comparable with that of a wolf This subspecies became extinct in Europe at the end of the late Wurm period but the species as a whole still inhabits a large area of Asia 26 The European dhole may have survived up until the early Holocene in the Iberian Peninsula 27 and what is believed to be dhole remains have been found at Riparo Fredian in northern Italy dated 10 800 years old 28 29 The vast Pleistocene range of this species also included numerous islands in Asia that this species no longer inhabits such as Sri Lanka Borneo and possibly Palawan in the Philippines 30 31 32 33 34 35 Middle Pleistocene dhole fossils have also been found in the Matsukae Cave in northern Kyushu Island in western Japan and in the Lower Kuzuu fauna in Tochigi Prefecture in Honshu Island east Japan 36 Dhole fossils from the Late Pleistocene dated to about 10 700 years before present are known from the Luobi Cave or Luobi Dong cave in Hainan Island in south China where they no longer exist 37 Additionally fossils of canidae possibly belonging to dhole have been excavated from Dajia River in Taichung County Taiwan 38 The fossil record indicates that the species also occurred in North America with remains being found in Beringia and Mexico 39 Phylogenetic tree of the wolf like canids with timing in millions of years a Caninae 3 5 Ma 3 0 2 5 2 0 0 96 0 6 0 38 Domestic dog Gray wolf Coyote African wolf Golden jackal Ethiopian wolf Dhole African wild dog 2 6 Side striped jackal Black backed jackal In 2021 the analyses of the mitochondrial genomes extracted from the fossil remains of two extinct European dhole specimens from the Jachymka cave Czech Republic dated 35 000 45 000 years old indicate that these were genetically basal to modern dholes and possessed much greater genetic diversity 29 The dhole s distinctive morphology has been a source of much confusion in determining the species systematic position among the Canidae George Simpson placed the dhole in the subfamily Simocyoninae alongside the African wild dog and the bush dog on account of all three species similar dentition 40 Subsequent authors including Juliet Clutton Brock noted greater morphological similarities to canids of the genera Canis Dusicyon and Alopex than to either Speothos or Lycaon with any resemblance to the latter two being due to convergent evolution 8 Some authors consider the extinct Canis subgenus Xenocyon as ancestral to both the genus Lycaon and the genus Cuon 41 42 43 44 p149 Subsequent studies on the canid genome revealed that the dhole and African wild dog are closely related to members of the genus Canis 7 This closeness to Canis may have been confirmed in a menagerie in Madras where according to zoologist Reginald Innes Pocock there is a record of a dhole that interbred with a golden jackal 45 Admixture with the African wild dog Edit In 2018 whole genome sequencing was used to compare all members apart from the black backed and side striped jackals of the genus Canis along with the dhole and the African wild dog Lycaon pictus There was strong evidence of ancient genetic admixture between the dhole and the African wild dog Today their ranges are remote from each other however during the Pleistocene era the dhole could be found as far west as Europe The study proposes that the dhole s distribution may have once included the Middle East from where it may have admixed with the African wild dog in North Africa However there is no evidence of the dhole having existed in the Middle East nor North Africa 46 Subspecies Edit Historically up to ten subspecies of dholes have been recognised 47 As of 2005 update seven subspecies are recognised 48 49 However studies on the dhole s mtDNA and microsatellite genotype showed no clear subspecific distinctions Nevertheless two major phylogeographic groupings were discovered in dholes of the Asian mainland which likely diverged during a glaciation event One population extends from South Central and North India south of the Ganges into Myanmar and the other extends from India north of the Ganges into northeastern India Myanmar Thailand and the Malaysian Peninsula The origin of dholes in Sumatra and Java is as of 2005 update unclear as they show greater relatedness to dholes in India Myanmar and China rather than with those in nearby Malaysia However the Canid Specialist Group of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature IUCN states that further research is needed because all of the samples were from the southern part of this species range and the Tien Shan subspecies has distinct morphology 50 In the absence of further data the researchers involved in the study speculated that Javan and Sumatran dholes could have been introduced to the islands by humans 51 Fossils of dhole from the early Middle Pleistocene have been found in Java 52 Subspecies Image Trinomial authority Description Distribution SynonymsC a adjustus Burmese dhole 45 Indian dhole Pocock 1941 45 Reddish coat short hair on the paws and black whiskers 13 Northeastern India and south of the Ganges River northern Myanmar 13 antiquus Matthew amp Granger 1923 dukhunensis Sykes 1831 C a alpinus Ussuri dhole 9 nominate subspecies Pallas 1811 21 Thick tawny red coat greyish neck and ochre muzzle 13 East of the eastern Sayan Mountains eastern Russia northeastern Asia 13 C a fumosus 53 Pocock 1936 53 Luxuriant yellowish red coat dark back and grey neck 13 Western Sichuan China and Mongolia Southern Myanmar Thailand Laos Cambodia Vietnam Malaysia and Java Indonesia 13 infuscus Pocock 1936 javanicus Desmarest 1820 C a hesperius Tien Shan dhole 9 Afanasjev and Zolotarev 1935 54 Long yellow tinted coat white underside and pale whiskers 13 Smaller than C a alpinus with wider skull and lighter coloured winter fur 9 Eastern Russia and China 13 jason Pocock 1936 C a laniger 53 Pocock 1936 53 Full yellowish grey coat tail not black but same colour as body 13 Southern Tibet Himalayan Nepal Sikkim Bhutan and Kashmir 13 grayiformis Hodgson 1863 primaevus Hodgson 1833 C a lepturus 53 Heude 1892 55 Uniform red coat with thick underfur 13 South of the Yangtze River China 13 clamitans Heude 1892 rutilans Muller 1839 sumatrensis Hodgson 1833 Sumatran dhole and Javan dhole C a sumatrensis 56 Hardwicke 1821 57 Red coat and dark whiskers 13 Sumatra Indonesia 13 Its range is highly fragmented with multiple protected areas in Sumatra and Java 1 Characteristics Edit Dhole skull and molars illustrated by St George Mivart 1890 Captive adult dhole In appearance the dhole has been variously described as combining the physical characteristics of the gray wolf and the red fox 9 and as being cat like on account of its long backbone and slender limbs 25 It has a wide and massive skull with a well developed sagittal crest 9 and its masseter muscles are highly developed compared to other canid species giving the face an almost hyena like appearance 58 The rostrum is shorter than that of domestic dogs and most other canids 4 The species has six rather than seven lower molars 59 The upper molars are weak being one third to one half the size of those of wolves and have only one cusp as opposed to between two and four as is usual in canids 9 an adaptation thought to improve shearing ability thus allowing it to compete more successfully with kleptoparasites 13 Adult females can weigh from 10 to 17 kg 22 to 37 lb while the slightly larger male may weigh from 15 to 21 kg 33 to 46 lb The mean weight of adults from three small samples was 15 1 kg 33 lb 13 60 61 62 Occasionally dholes may be sympatric with the Indian wolf Canis lupus pallipes which is one of the smallest races of the gray wolf but is still approximately 25 heavier on average 63 64 Subadult The general tone of the fur is reddish with the brightest hues occurring in winter In the winter coat the back is clothed in a saturated rusty red to reddish colour with brownish highlights along the top of the head neck and shoulders The throat chest flanks and belly and the upper parts of the limbs are less brightly coloured and are more yellowish in tone The lower parts of the limbs are whitish with dark brownish bands on the anterior sides of the forelimbs The muzzle and forehead are greyish reddish The tail is very luxuriant and fluffy and is mainly of a reddish ocherous colour with a dark brown tip The summer coat is shorter coarser and darker 9 The dorsal and lateral guard hairs in adults measure 20 30 mm 0 79 1 18 in in length Dholes in the Moscow Zoo moult once a year from March to May 4 A melanistic individual was recorded in the northern Coimbatore Forest Division in Tamil Nadu 65 Distribution and habitat Edit Dhole feeding on sambar deer carcass Khao Yai National Park Lone dhole strolling through the jungle in Mudumalai National Park The dhole can be found in Tibet and possibly also in North Korea and Pakistan It once inhabited the alpine steppes extending into Kashmir to the Ladakh area 1 In Central Asia the dhole primarily inhabits mountainous areas in the western part of its range it lives mostly in alpine meadows and high montane steppes while in the east it mainly ranges in montane taigas and is sometimes sighted along coastlines In India Myanmar Indochina Indonesia and China it prefers forested areas in alpine zones and is occasionally sighted in plains regions 9 In the Pamir Mountains of southern Kyrgyzstan the presence of the dhole was confirmed in 2019 66 The dhole might still be present in the Tunkinsky National Park in extreme southern Siberia near Lake Baikal 67 It possibly still lives in the Primorsky Krai province in far eastern Russia where it was considered a rare and endangered species in 2004 with unconfirmed reports in the Pikthsa Tigrovy Dom protected forest area no sighting was reported in other areas since the late 1970s 68 Currently no other recent reports are confirmed of dhole being present in Russia 69 However the dhole might be present in the eastern Sayan Mountains and in the TransBaikal region it has been sighted in Tofalaria in the Irkutsk Oblast the Republic of Buryatia and Zabaykalsky Krai 70 One pack was sighted in the Qilian Mountains in 2006 71 In 2011 to 2013 local government officials and herders reported the presence of several dhole packs at elevations of 2 000 to 3 500 m 6 600 to 11 500 ft near Taxkorgan Nature Reserve in the Xinjiang Autonomous Region Several packs and a female adult with pups were also recorded by camera traps at elevations of around 2 500 to 4 000 m 8 200 to 13 100 ft in Yanchiwan National Nature Reserve in the northern Gansu Province in 2013 2014 72 Dholes have been also reported in the Altyn Tagh Mountains 73 In China s Yunnan Province dholes were recorded in Baima Xueshan Nature Reserve in 2010 2011 74 Dhole samples were obtained in Jiangxi Province in 2013 75 Confirmed records by camera trapping since 2008 have occurred in southern and western Gansu province southern Shaanxi province southern Qinghai province southern and western Yunnan province western Sichuan province the southern Xinjiang Autonomous Region and in the Southeastern Tibet Autonomoous Region 76 There are also historical records of dhole dating to 1521 1935 in Hainan Island but the species is no longer present and is estimated to have become extinct around 1942 37 The dhole occurs in most of India south of the Ganges particularly in the Central Indian Highlands and the Western and Eastern Ghats It is also present in Arunachal Pradesh Assam Meghalaya and West Bengal and in the Indo Gangetic Plain s Terai region Dhole populations in the Himalayas and northwest India are fragmented 1 In 2011 dhole packs were recorded by camera traps in the Chitwan National Park 77 Its presence was confirmed in the Kanchenjunga Conservation Area in 2011 by camera traps 78 In February 2020 dholes were sighted in the Vansda National Park with camera traps confirming the presence of two individuals in May of the same year This was the first confirmed sighting of dholes in Gujarat since 1970 79 In Bhutan the dhole is present in Jigme Dorji National Park 80 81 In Bangladesh it inhabits forest reserves in the Sylhet area as well the Chittagong Hill Tracts in the southeast Recent camera trap photos in the Chittagong in 2016 showed the continued presence of the dhole 82 These regions probably do not harbour a viable population as mostly small groups or solitary individuals were sighted 1 In Myanmar the dhole is present in several protected areas 1 In 2015 dholes and tigers were recorded by camera traps for the first time in the hill forests of Karen State 83 Its range is highly fragmented in the Malaysian Peninsula Sumatra Java Vietnam and Thailand 1 In 2014 camera trap videos in the montane tropical forests at 2 000 m 6 600 ft in the Kerinci Seblat National Park in Sumatra revealed its continued presence 84 A camera trapping survey in the Khao Ang Rue Nai Wildlife Sanctuary in Thailand from January 2008 to February 2010 documented one healthy dhole pack 85 In northern Laos dholes were studied in Nam Et Phou Louey National Protected Area 86 Camera trap surveys from 2012 to 2017 recorded dholes in the same Nam Et Phou Louey National Protected Area 87 In Vietnam dholes were sighted only in Pu Mat National Park in 1999 in Yok Don National Park in 2003 and 2004 and in Ninh Thuan Province in 2014 88 In 2019 scat samples collected in the Bek Tosot Conservancy in Kyrgyzstan confirmed the continued presence of dholes in the area This was the first record of dholes from the country in almost three decades 89 A disjunct dhole population was reported in the area of Trabzon and Rize in northeastern Turkey near the border with Georgia in the 1990s 90 This report was not considered to be reliable 1 One single individual was claimed to have been shot in 2013 in the nearby Kabardino Balkaria Republic in the central Caucasus its remains were analysed in May 2015 by a biologist from the Kabardino Balkarian State University who concluded that the skull was indeed that of a dhole 91 In August 2015 researchers from the National Museum of Natural History and the Karadeniz Technical University started an expedition to track and document this possible Turkish population of dhole 92 In October 2015 they concluded that no real evidence exists of a living dhole population in Turkey or in the Kabardino Balkaria Republic pending DNA analysis of samples from the original 1994 skins 93 Ecology and behaviour EditDholes produce whistles resembling the calls of red foxes sometimes rendered as coo coo How this sound is produced is unknown though it is thought to help in coordinating the pack when travelling through thick brush When attacking prey they emit screaming KaKaKaKAA sounds 94 Other sounds include whines food soliciting growls warning screams chatterings both of which are alarm calls and yapping cries 95 In contrast to wolves dholes do not howl or bark 9 Dholes have a complex body language Friendly or submissive greetings are accompanied by horizontal lip retraction and the lowering of the tail as well as licking Playful dholes open their mouths with their lips retracted and their tails held in a vertical position whilst assuming a play bow Aggressive or threatening dholes pucker their lips forward in a snarl and raise the hairs on their backs as well as keep their tails horizontal or vertical When afraid they pull their lips back horizontally with their tails tucked and their ears flat against the skull 96 Social and territorial behaviour Edit Dholes playing Pench Tiger Reserve Dholes are more social than gray wolves 9 and have less of a dominance hierarchy as seasonal scarcity of food is not a serious concern for them In this manner they closely resemble African wild dogs in social structure 11 They live in clans rather than packs as the latter term refers to a group of animals that always hunt together In contrast dhole clans frequently break into small packs of three to five animals particularly during the spring season as this is the optimal number for catching fawns 97 Dominant dholes are hard to identify as they do not engage in dominance displays as wolves do though other clan members will show submissive behaviour toward them 12 Intragroup fighting is rarely observed 98 Dholes are far less territorial than wolves with pups from one clan often joining another without trouble once they mature sexually 99 Clans typically number 5 to 12 individuals in India though clans of 40 have been reported In Thailand clans rarely exceed three individuals 4 Unlike other canids there is no evidence of dholes using urine to mark their territories or travel routes When urinating dholes especially males may raise one hind leg or both to result in a handstand Handstand urination is also seen in bush dogs Speothos venaticus 100 They may defecate in conspicuous places though a territorial function is unlikely as faeces are mostly deposited within the clan s territory rather than the periphery Faeces are often deposited in what appear to be communal latrines They do not scrape the earth with their feet as other canids do to mark their territories 96 Denning Edit Four kinds of den have been described simple earth dens with one entrance usually remodeled striped hyena or porcupine dens complex cavernous earth dens with more than one entrance simple cavernous dens excavated under or between rocks and complex cavernous dens with several other dens in the vicinity some of which are interconnected Dens are typically located under dense scrub or on the banks of dry rivers or creeks The entrance to a dhole den can be almost vertical with a sharp turn three to four feet down The tunnel opens into an antechamber from which extends more than one passage Some dens may have up to six entrances leading up to thirty metres 100 ft of interconnecting tunnels These cities may be developed over many generations of dholes and are shared by the clan females when raising young together 101 Like African wild dogs and dingoes dholes will avoid killing prey close to their dens 102 Reproduction and development Edit Dhole pup Kolmarden Wildlife Park In India the mating season occurs between mid October and January while captive dholes in the Moscow Zoo breed mostly in February 4 Unlike wolf packs dhole clans may contain more than one breeding female 12 More than one female dhole may den and rear their litters together in the same den 98 During mating the female assumes a crouched cat like position There is no copulatory tie characteristic of other canids when the male dismounts Instead the pair lie on their sides facing each other in a semicircular formation 103 The gestation period lasts 60 63 days with litter sizes averaging four to six pups 4 Their growth rate is much faster than that of wolves being similar in rate to that of coyotes The hormone metabolites of five males and three females kept in Thai zoos was studied The breeding males showed an increased level of testosterone from October to January The oestrogen level of captive females increases for about two weeks in January followed by an increase of progesterone They displayed sexual behaviours during the oestrogen peak of the females 104 Pups are suckled at least 58 days During this time the pack feeds the mother at the den site Dholes do not use rendezvous sites to meet their pups as wolves do though one or more adults will stay with the pups at the den while the rest of the pack hunts Once weaning begins the adults of the clan will regurgitate food for the pups until they are old enough to join in hunting They remain at the den site for 70 80 days By the age of six months pups accompany the adults on hunts and will assist in killing large prey such as sambar by the age of eight months 102 Maximum longevity in captivity is 15 16 years 98 Hunting behaviour Edit Dholes attacking a sambar Bandipur National Park Before embarking on a hunt clans go through elaborate prehunt social rituals involving nuzzling body rubbing and mounting 105 Dholes are primarily diurnal hunters hunting in the early hours of the morning They rarely hunt nocturnally except on moonlit nights indicating they greatly rely on sight when hunting 106 Although not as fast as jackals and foxes they can chase their prey for many hours 9 During a pursuit one or more dholes may take over chasing their prey while the rest of the pack keeps up at a steadier pace behind taking over once the other group tires Most chases are short lasting only 500 m 1 600 ft 107 When chasing fleet footed prey they run at a pace of 50 km h 30 mph 9 Dholes frequently drive their prey into water bodies where the targeted animal s movements are hindered 108 Once large prey is caught one dhole will grab the prey s nose while the rest of the pack pulls the animal down by the flanks and hindquarters They do not use a killing bite to the throat 109 They occasionally blind their prey by attacking the eyes 110 Serows are among the only ungulate species capable of effectively defending themselves against dhole attacks due to their thick protective coats and short sharp horns capable of easily impaling dholes 3 They will tear open their prey s flanks and disembowel it eating the heart liver lungs and some sections of the intestines The stomach and rumen are usually left untouched 111 Prey weighing less than 50 kg 110 lb is usually killed within two minutes while large stags may take 15 minutes to die Once prey is secured dholes will tear off pieces of the carcass and eat in seclusion 112 Unlike wolf packs in which the breeding pair monopolises food dholes give access to the pups at a kill 12 They are generally tolerant of scavengers at their kills 113 Both mother and young are provided with regurgitated food by other pack members 98 Feeding ecology Edit Dholes feeding on a chital Bandipur National Park Prey animals in India include chital sambar deer muntjac mouse deer barasingha wild boar gaur water buffaloes banteng cattle nilgai goats Indian hares Himalayan field rats and langurs 4 45 114 There is one record of a pack bringing down an Indian elephant calf in Assam despite desperate defense of the mother resulting in numerous losses to the pack 6 In Kashmir they prey on markhor 45 and thamin in Myanmar 4 Malayan tapir Sumatran serow in Sumatra and the Malay Peninsula and Javan rusa in Java 13 In the Tian Shan and Tarbagatai Mountains dholes prey on Siberian ibexes arkhar roe deer Caspian red deer and wild boar In the Altai and Sayan Mountains they prey on musk deer and reindeer In eastern Siberia they prey on roe deer Manchurian wapiti wild pig musk deer and reindeer while in Primorye they feed on sika deer and goral In Mongolia they prey on argali and rarely Siberian ibex 9 Like African wild dogs but unlike wolves dholes are not known to attack people 9 45 They are known to eat insects and lizards 115 Dholes eat fruit and vegetable matter more readily than other canids In captivity they eat various kinds of grasses herbs and leaves seemingly for pleasure rather than just when ill 116 In summertime in the Tian Shan Mountains dholes eat large quantities of mountain rhubarb 9 Although opportunistic dholes have a seeming aversion to hunting cattle and their calves 117 Livestock predation by dholes has been a problem in Bhutan since the late 1990s as domestic animals are often left outside to graze in the forest sometimes for weeks at a time Livestock stall fed at night and grazed near homes are never attacked Oxen are killed more often than cows probably because they are given less protection 118 Enemies and competitors Edit Dhole killed and cached in a tree by a leopard India In some areas dholes are sympatric to tigers and leopards Competition between these species is mostly avoided through differences in prey selection although there is still substantial dietary overlap Along with leopards dholes typically target animals in the 30 175 kg 66 386 lb range mean weights of 35 3 kg 78 lb for dhole and 23 4 kg 52 lb for leopard while tigers selected for prey animals heavier than 176 kg 388 lb but their mean prey weight was 65 5 kg 144 lb Also other characteristics of the prey such as sex arboreality and aggressiveness may play a role in prey selection For example dholes preferentially select male chital whereas leopards kill both sexes more evenly and tigers prefer larger prey altogether dholes and tigers kill langurs rarely compared to leopards due to the leopards greater arboreality while leopards kill wild boar infrequently due to the inability of this relatively light predator to tackle aggressive prey of comparable weight 14 Tigers are dangerous opponents for dholes as they have sufficient strength to kill a dhole with a single paw strike 6 Dhole packs are smaller in areas with higher tiger densities due to tigers directly killing dholes and stealing kills they made The kleptoparasitism causes dholes to prefer hunting smaller animals because they can eat more of a smaller carcass before a tiger arrives to steal it Direct predation can lead to lower reproductive and recruitment rates lower hunting success rates and less food for the pups when a helper is killed and potentially pack destabilization if one member of the breeding pair is killed 119 Dhole packs may steal leopard kills while leopards may kill dholes if they encounter them singly or in pairs 45 There are numerous records of leopards being treed by dholes 98 Dholes were once thought to be a major factor in reducing Asiatic cheetah populations though this is doubtful as cheetahs live in open areas as opposed to forested areas favoured by dholes 120 Since leopards are smaller than tigers and are more likely to hunt dholes dhole packs tend to react more aggressively toward them than they do towards tigers 121 Dhole packs occasionally attack Asiatic black bears snow leopards and sloth bears When attacking bears dholes will attempt to prevent them from seeking refuge in caves and lacerate their hindquarters 45 Although usually antagonistic toward wolves 9 they may hunt and feed alongside one another 122 There is at least one record of a lone wolf associating with a pair of dholes in Debrigarh Wildlife Sanctuary 123 and two observations in Satpura Tiger Reserve 124 They infrequently associate in mixed groups with golden jackals Domestic dogs may kill dholes though they will feed alongside them on occasion 125 Diseases and parasites Edit Dholes are vulnerable to a number of different diseases particularly in areas where they are sympatric with other canid species Infectious pathogens such as Toxocara canis are present in their faeces They may suffer from rabies canine distemper mange trypanosomiasis canine parvovirus and endoparasites such as cestodes and roundworms 13 Threats EditThe dhole only rarely takes domestic livestock Some ethnic groups like the Kuruba and Mon Khmer speaking tribes will appropriate dhole kills some Indian villagers welcome the dhole because of this appropriation of dhole kills 98 Dholes were persecuted throughout India for bounties until they were given protection by the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972 Methods used for dhole hunting included poisoning snaring shooting and clubbing at den sites Native Indian people killed dholes primarily to protect livestock while British sporthunters during the British Raj did so under the conviction that dholes were responsible for drops in game populations Persecution of dholes still occurs with varying degrees of intensity according to the region 13 Bounties paid for dholes used to be 25 rupees though this was reduced to 20 in 1926 after the number of presented dhole carcasses became too numerous to maintain the established reward 126 In Indochina dholes suffer heavily from nonselective hunting techniques such as snaring 13 The fur trade does not pose a significant threat to dholes 13 The people of India do not eat dhole flesh and their fur is not considered overly valuable 116 Due to their rarity dholes were never harvested for their skins in large numbers in the Soviet Union and were sometimes accepted as dog or wolf pelts being labeled as half wolf for the latter The winter fur was prized by the Chinese who bought dhole pelts in Ussuriysk during the late 1860s for a few silver rubles In the early 20th century dhole pelts reached eight rubles in Manchuria In Semirechye fur coats made from dhole skin were considered the warmest but were very costly 9 Conservation EditIn India the dhole is protected under Schedule 2 of the Wildlife Protection Act 1972 The creation of reserves under Project Tiger provided some protection for dhole populations sympatric with tigers In 2014 the Indian government sanctioned its first dhole conservation breeding centre at the Indira Gandhi Zoological Park IGZP in Visakhapatnam 127 The dhole has been protected in Russia since 1974 though it is vulnerable to poison left out for wolves In China the animal is listed as a category II protected species under the Chinese wildlife protection act of 1988 In Cambodia the dhole is protected from all hunting while conservation laws in Vietnam limit extraction and utilisation 1 In 2016 the Korean company Sooam Biotech was reported to be attempting to clone the dhole using dogs as surrogate mothers to help conserve the species 128 In culture and literature Edit Russian ruble Kazakhstani tenge Drawing of a dhole from the Imperial Chinese Encyclopedia Three dhole like animals are featured on the coping stone of the Bharhut stupa dating from 100 BC They are shown waiting by a tree with a woman or spirit trapped up it a scene reminiscent of dholes treeing tigers 129 The animal s fearsome reputation in India is reflected by the number of pejorative names it possesses in Hindi which variously translate as red devil devil dog jungle devil or hound of Kali 6 Leopold von Schrenck had trouble obtaining dhole specimens during his exploration of Amurland as the local Gilyaks greatly feared the species This fear and superstition was not however shared by neighbouring Tungusic peoples It was speculated that this differing attitude towards the dhole was due to the Tungusic people s more nomadic hunter gatherer lifestyle 20 Dholes appear in Rudyard Kipling s Red Dog where they are portrayed as aggressive and bloodthirsty animals which descend from the Deccan Plateau into the Seeonee Hills inhabited by Mowgli and his adopted wolf pack to cause carnage among the jungle s denizens They are described as living in packs numbering hundreds of individuals and that even Shere Khan and Hathi make way for them when they descend into the jungle The dholes are despised by the wolves because of their destructiveness their habit of not living in dens and the hair between their toes With Mowgli and Kaa s help the Seeonee wolf pack manages to wipe out the dholes by leading them through bee hives and torrential waters before finishing off the rest in battle Japanese author Uchida Roan wrote 犬物語 Inu monogatari A dog s tale in 1901 as a nationalistic critique of the declining popularity of indigenous dog breeds which he asserted were descended from the dhole 130 A fictional version of the dhole imbued with supernatural abilities appears in the season 6 episode of TV series The X Files titled Alpha In China the dhole were widely known throughout history and mythology One notable legendary creature is the Yazi 睚眦 which was believed to be a creature that was part dhole part dragon In modern times however the Chinese word for dhole 豺 Chai is often confused with jackal or wolf resulting in many confusions and mistranslations of dholes as jackals or wolves citation needed Dholes also appear as enemies in the video game Far Cry 4 alongside other predators such as the Bengal tiger honey badger snow leopard clouded leopard Tibetan wolf and Asian black bear They can be found hunting the player and other NPCs across the map but are easily killed being one of the weakest enemies in the game They once again appear in the video game Far Cry Primal where they play similar roles as their counterparts in the previous game but can now also be tamed and used in combat by Takkar the main protagonist of the game Tameability Edit Brian Houghton Hodgson kept captured dholes in captivity and found with the exception of one animal they remained shy and vicious even after 10 months 116 131 According to Richard Lydekker adult dholes are nearly impossible to tame though pups are docile and can even be allowed to play with domestic dog pups until they reach early adulthood 3 A dhole may have been presented as a gift to Ibbi Sin as tribute 132 See also EditWild Dog DiariesNotes Edit For a full set of supporting references refer to the note a in the phylotree at Evolution of the wolf Wolf like canidsReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k Kamler J F Songsasen N Jenks K Srivathsa A Sheng L Kunkel K 2015 Cuon alpinus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2015 e T5953A72477893 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2015 4 RLTS T5953A72477893 en Retrieved 24 January 2022 Fox 1984 a b c d Lydekker R 1907 The game animals of India Burma Malaya and Tibet London UK R Ward Limited a b c d e f g h i Cohen James A 1978 Cuon alpinus Mammalian Species 100 1 3 doi 10 2307 3503800 JSTOR 3503800 Heptner V G Naumov N P eds 1998 Red Wolf Cuon alpinus Pallas 1811 Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol II Washington DC Smithsonian Institution and National Science Foundation Part 1A Sirenia and Carnivora Sea Cows Wolves and Bears pp 568 571 a b c d Perry R 1964 The World of the Tiger London Cassell a b Lindblad Toh K Wade C M Mikkelsen T S Karlsson E K Jaffe D B Kamal M Clamp M Chang J L Kulbokas E J Zody M C Mauceli E Xie X Breen M Wayne R K Ostrander E A Ponting C P Galibert F Smith D R Dejong P J Kirkness E Alvarez P Biagi T Brockman W Butler J Chin C W Cook A Cuff J Daly M J Decaprio D et al 2005 Genome sequence comparative analysis and haplotype structure of the domestic dog Nature 438 7069 803 819 Bibcode 2005Natur 438 803L doi 10 1038 nature04338 PMID 16341006 a b Clutton Brock J Corbet G G amp Hills M 1976 A review of the family Canidae with a classification by numerical methods Bulletin of the British Museum of Natural History 29 179 180 Archived from the original on 17 December 2013 Retrieved 8 December 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Heptner V G Naumov N P eds 1998 Genus Cuon Hodgson 1838 Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol II Washington DC Smithsonian Institution and National science Foundation Part 1A Sirenia and Carnivora Sea Cows Wolves and Bears pp 566 586 ISBN 1 886106 81 9 Zhang H Chen L 2010 The complete mitochondrial genome of dhole Cuon alpinus Phylogenetic analysis and dating evolutionary divergence within canidae Molecular Biology Reports 38 3 1651 1660 doi 10 1007 s11033 010 0276 y PMID 20859694 S2CID 7476436 a b Fox 1984 p 85 a b c d Fox 1984 pp 86 87 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Durbin D L Venkataraman A Hedges S amp Duckworth W 2004 8 1 Dhole PDF In Sillero Zubiri C Hoffmann M amp Macdonald D W eds Canids Foxes Wolves Jackals and Dogs Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan IUCN The World Conservation Union p 211 ISBN 978 2831707860 Archived PDF from the original on 13 October 2006 Retrieved 31 January 2020 a b Karanth K U amp Sunquist M E 1995 Prey selection by tiger leopard and dhole in tropical forests Journal of Animal Ecology 64 4 439 450 doi 10 2307 5647 JSTOR 5647 Williamson T 1808 Oriental field sports being a complete detailed and accurate description of the wild sports of the East Vol II London Orme Smith C H 1827 The class Mammalia London Geo B Whittaker Smith C H Jardine W 1839 The natural history of dogs Canidae or genus canis of authors including also the genera hyaena and proteles Vol I Edinburgh UK W H Lizars Orel V 2003 A Handbook of Germanic Etymology Leiden DE Boston MA Brill p 81 ISBN 978 90 04 12875 0 dhole Merriam Webster Dictionary a b Schrenk L v 1859 Canis alpinus Reisen und Forschungen im Amur lande in den jahren 1854 1856 in German St Petersburg Kaiserliche Akademie der Wissenschaften pp 48 50 a b Pallas P S 1811 Canis alpinus Zoographia Rosso Asiatica Sistens omnium animalium in extenso Imperio Rossico et adjacentibus maribus observatorum recensionem domicilia mores et descriptiones anatomen atque icones plurimorum in Latin Petropoli In officina Caes Acadamiae Scientiarum Impress pp 34 35 a b Heptner V G Naumov N P eds 1998 Red Wolf Cuon alpinus Pallas 1811 Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol II Washington DC Smithsonian Institution and National Science Foundation Part 1A Sirenia and Carnivora Sea Cows Wolves and Bears pp 571 586 Hodgson B H 1833 Description and Characters of the Wild Dog of the Himalaya Canis primaevus Asiatic Researches XVIII 2 221 237 235 Hodgson B H 1842 European notices of Indian canines with further illustrations of the new genus Cuon vel Chrysaeus Calcutta Journal of Natural History II 205 209 a b Thenius E 1955 Zur Abstammung der Rotwolfe Gattung Cuon Hodgson On the origins of the dholes Genus Cuon Hodgson PDF Osterreichische Zoologische Zeitschrift in German 5 377 388 Archived PDF from the original on 10 November 2014 Kurten B 1968 Pleistocene mammals of Europe Weidenfeld and Nicolson pp 111 114 ISBN 9781412845144 Ripoll M P R Morales Perez J V Sanchis Serra A et al 2010 Presence of the genus Cuon in upper Pleistocene and initial Holocene sites of the Iberian Peninsula New remains identified in archaeological contexts of the Mediterranean region Journal of Archaeological Science 37 3 437 450 doi 10 1016 j jas 2009 10 008 Petrucci M Romiti S amp Sardella R 2012 The Middle Late Pleistocene Cuon Hodgson 1838 Carnivora Canidae from Italy PDF Bollettino della Societa Paleontologica Italiana 51 2 146 Archived PDF from the original on 2 January 2015 a b Taron U H Paijmans J L A Barlow A et al 2021 Ancient DNA from the Asiatic Wild Dog Cuon alpinus from Europe Genes 12 2 144 doi 10 3390 genes12020144 PMC 7911384 PMID 33499169 Nowak R M 2005 Cuon Walker s Carnivores of the World Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press pp 110 111 ISBN 9780801880322 Cranbrook E 1988 The contribution of archaeology to the zoogeography of Borneo with the first record of a wild canid of Early Holocene Age a contribution in celebration of the distinguished scholarship of Robert F Inger on the occasion of his sixty fifth birthday Fieldiana Zoology 42 6 24 Ochoa J Paz V Lewis H et al 2004 The archaeology and palaeobiological record of Pasimbahan Magsanib Site northern Palawan Philippines Philippine Science Letters 7 1 22 36 Dennell R Parr M 2014 Southern Asia Australia and the Search for Human Origins New York Cambridge University Press p 139 ISBN 9781107729131 Tarling N 1992 The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia Vol Volume One From Early Times to ca 1800 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 84 ISBN 978 0 5213 5505 6 Piper P J Ochoa J B Robles E C et al 2011 Palaeozoology of Palawan Island Philippines Quaternary International 233 2 142 158 Bibcode 2011QuInt 233 142P doi 10 1016 j quaint 2010 07 009 Ogino S Otsuka H Harunari H December 2009 The Middle Pleistocene Matsugae Fauna Northern Kyushu West Japan Paleontological Research 13 4 367 384 doi 10 2517 1342 8144 13 4 367 S2CID 53691225 a b Turvey S T Walsh C Hansford J P et al 2019 Complementarity completeness and quality of long term faunal archives in an Asian biodiversity hotspot Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 374 1788 20190217 doi 10 1098 rstb 2019 0217 PMC 6863502 PMID 31679488 疑豺 狼化石 大甲溪床現蹤 Taiwan Geoscience Portal in Chinese October 2009 Kurten B 1980 Pleistocene mammals of North America Columbia University Press p 172 ISBN 0231516967 Simpson G G 1945 The principles of classification and a classification of mammals Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 85 1 350 hdl 2246 1104 Moulle P E Echassoux A Lacombat F 2006 Taxonomie du grand canide de la grotte du Vallonnet Roquebrune Cap Martin Alpes Maritimes France L Anthropologie 110 5 832 836 doi 10 1016 j anthro 2006 10 001 in French Baryshnikov G F 2012 Pleistocene Canidae Mammalia Carnivora from the Paleolithic Kudaro caves in the Caucasus Russian Journal of Theriology 11 2 77 120 doi 10 15298 rusjtheriol 11 2 01 Cherin M Berte D F Rook L Sardella R 2013 Re Defining Canis etruscus Canidae Mammalia A New Look into the evolutionary history of Early Pleistocene dogs resulting from the outstanding fossil record from Pantalla Italy Journal of Mammalian Evolution 21 95 110 doi 10 1007 s10914 013 9227 4 S2CID 17083040 Wang X Tedford R H 2008 Dogs Their Fossil Relatives and Evolutionary History New York Columbia University Press a b c d e f g h Pocock R I 1941 Genus Cuon Hodgs Fauna of British India Mammals Vol 2 Taylor amp Francis pp 146 163 Gopalakrishnan S Sinding M H S Ramos Madrigal J et al 2018 Interspecific gene flow shaped the evolution of the Genus Canis Current Biology 28 21 3441 3449 e5 doi 10 1016 j cub 2018 08 041 PMC 6224481 PMID 30344120 Ellerman J R Morrison Scott T C S 1966 Checklist of Palaearctic and Indian mammals London UK British Museum Natural History Wozencraft C W 2005 Order Carnivora In Wilson D E Reader D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference Vol 1 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 578 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 Orrell T 2020 Nicolson D Roskov Y Abucay L Orrell T Nicolson D Bailly N Kirk PM Bourgoin T DeWalt RE Decock W De Wever A van Nieukerken E Zarucchi J Penev L eds Cuon alpinus Pallas 1811 accepted name Catalogue of Life 2019 Annual Checklist Catalogue of Life Retrieved 5 February 2020 Dhole Canids canids org Iyengar A Babu V N Hedges S et al 2005 Phylogeography genetic structure and diversity in the dhole Cuon alpinus PDF Molecular Ecology 14 8 2281 2297 doi 10 1111 j 1365 294X 2005 02582 x PMID 15969714 S2CID 8280811 Archived PDF from the original on 7 March 2020 Volmer R van der Geer A A E Cabrera P A et al September 2019 When did Cuon reach Java Reinvestigation of canid fossils from Homo erectus faunas Geobios 55 89 102 Bibcode 2019Geobi 55 89V doi 10 1016 j geobios 2019 06 004 a b c d e Pocock R I 1936 The Asiatic Wild Dog or Dhole Cuon javanicus Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 106 33 55 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1936 tb02278 x Afanasev A V Zolotarev N T 1935 Novye dannye po sistematike i rasprostraneniyu krasnogo volka Contribution to the systematics and distribution of red wolf Izvestiya Akademii nauk SSSR VII Otdelenie matematicheskih i estestvennyh nauk in Russian 3 425 429 Heude Mem Hist Nat Empire Chinois II pt2 p 102 footnote 1892 Castello J R 2018 Ch 2 Wolf like Canids Canids of the World Wolves Wild Dogs Foxes Jackals Coyotes and Their Relatives Princeton University Press p 155 ISBN 978 0 691 18372 5 Hardwicke T 1821 Descriptions of the Wild Dog of Sumatra a new Species of Viverra and a new Species of Pheasant Transactions of the Linnean Society of London 3 235 238 Fox 1984 pp 61 2 Fox 1984 pp 41 Kamler J F Johnson A Vongkhamheng C amp Bousa A 2012 The diet prey selection and activity of dholes Cuon alpinus in northern Laos Journal of Mammalogy 93 3 627 633 doi 10 1644 11 mamm a 241 1 Gittleman J L 2013 Carnivore behavior ecology and evolution Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9781475747164 Atanasov A T 2005 Allometric relationship between length of pregnancy and body mass of mammals Bulgarian Journal of Veterinary Medicine 8 1 20 Mukherjee S Zelcer M amp Kotler B P 2009 Patch use in time and space for a meso predator in a risky world Oecologia 159 3 661 668 Bibcode 2009Oecol 159 661M doi 10 1007 s00442 008 1243 3 PMID 19082629 S2CID 24051254 Afik D Pinshow B 1993 Temperature regulation and water economy in desert wolves Journal of Arid Environments 24 2 197 209 Bibcode 1993JArEn 24 197A doi 10 1006 jare 1993 1017 Mahabal A Sharma R M Patil R N amp Jadhav S 2019 Colour aberration in Indian mammals a review from 1886 to 2017 Journal of Threatened Taxa 11 6 13690 13719 doi 10 11609 jott 3843 11 6 13690 13719 Cancellare I A Kachel S M Kubanychbekov Z Kulenbekov R Pilgrim K L McCarthy K P amp Weckworth B V 2022 New distribution record of dhole from southern Kyrgyzstan using non invasive genetic sampling PDF Canid Biology amp Conservation 24 1 1 3 Williams M amp Troitskaya N 2007 Then and Now Updates from Russia s Imperiled Zapovedniks PDF Russian Conservation News 42 14 Archived PDF from the original on 28 January 2012 Newell J 2004 The Russian Far East A Reference Guide for Conservation and Development Second ed McKinleyville Daniel amp Daniel Makenov M 2018 Extinct or extant A review of dhole Cuon alpinus Pallas 1811 distribution in the former USSR and modern Russia Mammal Research 63 1 1 9 doi 10 1007 s13364 017 0339 8 S2CID 20037994 Makenov M 2018 Extinct or extant A review of dhole Cuon alpinus Pallas 1811 distribution in the former USSR and modern Russia Mammal Research 63 1 1 9 doi 10 1007 s13364 017 0339 8 S2CID 20037994 Harris R B 2006 Attempted predation on blue sheep Pseudois nayaur by dholes Cuon alpinus Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 103 95 97 Riordan P 2015 New evidence of dhole Cuon alpinus populations in northwest China Oryx 49 2 203 204 doi 10 1017 s0030605315000046 Yadong X Diqiang L Wenfa X Yuguang Z Bin F Heng J 2015 Records of the dhole Cuon alpinus in an arid region of the Altun Mountains in western China European Journal of Wildlife Research 61 6 903 907 doi 10 1007 s10344 015 0947 z S2CID 16752357 Li X Buzzard P Chen Y amp Jiang X 2013 Patterns of livestock predation by carnivores human wildlife conflict in northwest Yunnan China Environ Manage 52 6 1334 1340 Bibcode 2013EnMan 52 1334L doi 10 1007 s00267 013 0192 8 PMID 24202281 S2CID 5273403 Canid and Hyaenid Taxon Advisory Group 2017 Best Practice Guideline Dhole C alpinus PDF Amsterdam European Association of Zoos and Aquaria Archived PDF from the original on 6 February 2020 Kao J N Songsasen K Ferraz and K Traylor Holzer Eds 2020 Range wide Population and Habitat Viability Assessment for the Dhole Cuon alpinus IUCN SSC Conservation Planning Specialist Group Apple Valley MN USA p8 https www canids org resources Dhole PHVA Report 2020 pdf Thapa K Kelly M J Karki J B amp Subedi N 2013 First camera trap record of pack hunting dholes in Chitwan National Park Nepal PDF Canid Biology amp Conservation 16 2 4 7 Archived PDF from the original on 21 December 2014 Khatiwada A P Awasthi K D Gautam N P Jnawali S R Subedi N amp Aryal A 2011 The Pack Hunter Dhole Received Little Scientific Attention The Initiation 4 8 13 doi 10 3126 init v4i0 5531 Parmar Vijaysinh 23 May 2020 Rare whistling dogs spotted in Gujarat after 50 years The Times of India Retrieved 1 June 2020 Wangchuk T 2004 Predator prey dynamics the role of predators in the control of problem species PDF Journal of Bhutan Studies 10 68 89 Archived PDF from the original on 24 February 2015 Thinley P Kamler J F Wang S W Lham K Stenkewitz U 2011 Seasonal diet of dholes Cuon alpinus in northwestern Bhutan Mammalian Biology 76 4 518 520 doi 10 1016 j mambio 2011 02 003 Tiger country Scientists uncover wild surprises in tribal Bangladesh TheGuardian com March 2016 Saw Sha Bwe Moo Froese G Z L Gray T N E 2017 First structured camera trap surveys in Karen State Myanmar reveal high diversity of globally threatened mammals Oryx 52 3 1 7 doi 10 1017 S0030605316001113 Sumatran secrets start to be revealed by high altitude camera trapping Flora and Fauna International Archived from the original on 1 May 2017 Retrieved 5 September 2015 Jenks K E Songsasen N amp P Leimgruber 2012 Camera trap records of dholes in Khao Ang Rue Nai Wildlife Sanctuary Thailand PDF Canid News 1 5 Archived PDF from the original on 21 December 2014 Kamler J F Johnson A Chanthavy V Bousa A 2012 The diet prey selection and activity of dholes Cuon alpinus in northern Laos Journal of Mammalogy 93 3 627 633 doi 10 1644 11 mamm a 241 1 Rasphone Akchousanh Kery Marc Kamler Jan F Macdonald David W October 2019 Documenting the demise of tiger and leopard and the status of other carnivores and prey in Lao PDR s most prized protected area Nam Et Phou Louey Global Ecology and Conservation 20 e00766 doi 10 1016 j gecco 2019 e00766 S2CID 202920288 Hoffmann Michael Abramov Alexei Duc Hoang Minh Trai Le Trong Long Barney Nguyen An Son Nguyen Truong Rawson Ben Timmins Robert Bang Tran Van Willcox Daniel 26 June 2019 The status of wild canids Canidae Carnivora in Vietnam Journal of Threatened Taxa 11 8 13951 13959 doi 10 11609 jott 4846 11 8 13951 13959 S2CID 198272874 Cancellare I A Kachel S M Kubanychbekov Z Kulenbekov R Pilgrim K L McCarthy K P Weckworth B V 2022 New distribution record of dhole from southern Kyrgyzstan using non invasive genetic sampling PDF Canid Biology amp Conservation 24 1 1 3 Serez M amp Erodlu M 1994 A new threatened wolf species Cuon alpinus hesperius Afanasiev and Zolatarev 1935 in Turkey Council of Europe Environmental Encounters Series 17 103 106 Khatukhov A M 2015 Krasnyj volk Cuon alpinus Pallas 1811 na Centralnom Kavkaze The Dhole Cuon alpinus Pallas 1811 in the Central Caucasus PDF Sovremennye problemy nauki i obrazovaniya 3 574 581 Archived PDF from the original on 8 December 2015 NMNHS expedition went on the trail of an unknown population of the rare dhole in Turkey National Museum of Natural History Sofia NMNHS 2015 Coel C 2015 UPDATE Strongly endangered and undescribed subspecies of dhole discovered Dhole NOT less endangered than previously thought according to NMNHS Bulgaria Consortium of European Taxonomic Facilities Fox 1984 p 93 Fox 1984 p 95 a b Fox 1984 p 97 Fox 1984 pp 81 2 a b c d e f Walker E P Nowak R M amp Warnick F 1983 Walker s Mammals of the World Fourth ed Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press Fox 1984 p 92 Keller R 1973 Einige beobachtungen zum verhalten des Dekkan Rothundes Cuon alpinus dukhunensis Sykes im Kanha National Park Some observations on the behavior of the Deccan Red Dog Cuon alpinus dukhunensis Sykes in Kanha National Park PDF Vierteljahresschrift Naturf Ges Zurich in German 118 129 135 Archived PDF from the original on 12 August 2019 Fox 1984 pp 43 49 a b Fox 1984 p 80 Fox 1984 p 79 Khonmee J Rojanasthien S Thitaram C Sumretprasong J Aunsusin A Chaisongkram C amp Songsasen N 2017 Non invasive endocrine monitoring indicates seasonal variations in gonadal hormone metabolites in dholes Cuon alpinus Conservation Physiology 5 1 cox001 doi 10 1093 conphys cox001 PMC 5570072 PMID 28852505 Fox 1984 pp 100 101 Fox 1984 p 50 Fox 1984 p 73 Fox 1984 p 67 Fox 1984 p 61 Grassman L I Jr M E Tewes N J Silvy amp K Kreetiyutanont 2005 Spatial ecology and diet of the dhole Cuon alpinus Canidae Carnivora in north central Thailand Mammalia 69 1 11 20 doi 10 1515 mamm 2005 002 S2CID 85198149 Archived from the original on 23 November 2006 Fox 1984 p 63 Fox 1984 p 70 Fox 1984 p 51 Fox 1984 pp 58 60 Chacon Raquel Cuon alpinus dhole Animal Diversity Web Retrieved 4 April 2023 a b c Mivart G 1890 Genus Cyon Hodgson 1838 Dogs Jackals Wolves and Foxes A Monograph of the Canidae London R H Porter pp 177 188 Fox 1984 p 71 Johnsingh A J T Yonten D Wangchuck S 2007 Livestock Dhole Conflict in Western Bhutan Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 104 2 201 202 Habib B Nigam P Ghaskadbi P amp Bhandari A 2021 Dhole pack size variation Assessing the effect of prey availability and apex predator Ecology and Evolution 11 9 4774 4785 doi 10 1002 ece3 7380 PMC 8093734 PMID 33976847 Finn F 1929 Sterndale s Mammalia of India London Thacker Spink amp Co Venkataraman A 1995 Do dholes Cuon alpinus live in packs in response to competition with or predation by large cats PDF Current Science 69 11 934 936 Archived PDF from the original on 13 July 2019 Shrestha T J 1997 Mammals of Nepal with reference to those of India Bangladesh Bhutan and Pakistan Kathmandu Bimala Shrestha ISBN 978 0 9524390 6 6 Nair M V amp Panda S K 2013 Just Friends Sanctuary Asia XXXIII 3 Ghaskadbi P Das J Mahadev V amp Habib B 2021 First record of mixed species association between dholes and a wolf from Satpura Tiger Reserve India PDF Canid Biology amp Conservation 23 4 15 17 Archived PDF from the original on 17 October 2021 Humphrey S R amp Bain J R 1990 Endangered Animals of Thailand Gainesville Sandhill Crane Press ISBN 978 1 877743 07 8 Fox 1984 p 109 Zoo to have conservation breeding centre for dhole The Hindu 18 August 2014 Zastrow M 8 February 2016 Inside the cloning factory that creates 500 new animals a day New Scientist Retrieved 23 February 2016 van der Geer A A E 2008 Animals in stone Indian mammals sculptured through time BRILL p 188 ISBN 90 04 16819 2 Skabelund A H 2011 Empire of Dogs Canines Japan and the Making of the Modern Imperial World Cornell University Press p 85 ISBN 0801463246 Hodgson B H 1833 Description of the Wild Dog of the Himalaya Asiatic Researches XVIII 226 McIntosh J 2008 The ancient Indus Valley new perspectives p 130 ABC CLIO ISBN 1 57607 907 4 Bibliography Edit Fox M W 1984 The Whistling Hunters Field Studies of the Asiatic Wild Dog Cuon alpinus Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 9524390 6 6 Karanth U K 2006 A View From the Machan Karnataka Permanent Black ISBN 978 8 1782413 7 1 External links Edit Wikispecies has information related to Cuon alpinus Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cuon alpinus Look up dhole in Wiktionary the free dictionary Dhole Home Page Archive ARKive images and movies of the dhole Saving the dhole The forgotten badass Asian dog more endangered than tigers The Guardian 25 June 2015 Photos of dhole in Bandipur Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dhole amp oldid 1150438344, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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