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African wild dog

The African wild dog (Lycaon pictus), also known as the painted dog or Cape hunting dog, is a wild canine native to sub-Saharan Africa. It is the largest wild canine in Africa, and the only extant member of the genus Lycaon, which is distinguished from Canis by dentition highly specialised for a hypercarnivorous diet and by a lack of dewclaws.

African wild dog
Temporal range: Middle Pleistocene – present (200,000–0 years BP)[1]
African wild dog in South Africa
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Canidae
Subfamily: Caninae
Tribe: Canini
Genus: Lycaon
Species:
L. pictus
Binomial name
Lycaon pictus
(Temminck, 1820)[3]
African wild dog range according to the IUCN.
  Extant (resident)
  Probably extant (resident)

It is estimated that there are around 6,600 adults (including 1,400 mature individuals) living in 39 subpopulations, all threatened by habitat fragmentation, human persecution and outbreaks of disease. As the largest subpopulation probably consists of fewer than 250 individuals, the African wild dog has been listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List since 1990.[2]

The species is a specialised diurnal hunter of terrestrial ungulates, which it captures by using its stamina and cooperative hunting to exhaust them. Its natural competitors are lions and spotted hyenas: the former will kill the dogs where possible whilst the latter are frequent kleptoparasites.[4] Like other canids, the African wild dog regurgitates food for its young but also extends this action to adults as a central part of the pack's social unit.[5][4][6] The young have the privilege of feeding first on carcasses.

The African wild dog has been revered in several hunter-gatherer societies, particularly those of the San people and Prehistoric Egypt.

Etymology and naming edit

The English language has several names for the African wild dog, including African hunting dog, Cape hunting dog,[7] painted hunting dog,[8] painted dog,[9] painted wolf,[10] and painted lycaon.[11] Though the name African wild dog is widely used,[12] ‘wild dog’ is thought by conservation groups to have negative connotations that could be detrimental to its image; one organisation promotes the name ‘painted wolf’,[13][14][15] whilst the name ‘painted dog’ has been found to be the most likely to counteract negative perceptions.[16]

Taxonomic and evolutionary history edit

Taxonomy edit

Phylogenetic tree of the wolf-like canids with timing in millions of years[a]
Caninae 3.5 Ma
3.0
2.5

African wild dog  

The earliest written reference for the species appears to be from Oppian, who wrote of the thoa, a hybrid between the wolf and leopard, which resembles the former in shape and the latter in colour. Solinus's Collea rerum memorabilium from the third century AD describes a multicoloured wolf-like animal with a mane native to Ethiopia.[11]

The African wild dog was scientifically described in 1820 by Coenraad Jacob Temminck after examining a specimen from the coast of Mozambique. He named the animal Hyaena picta, erroneously classifying it as a species of hyena. It was later recognised as a canid by Joshua Brookes in 1827 and renamed Lycaon tricolor. The root word of Lycaon is the Greek λυκαίος (lykaios), meaning ‘wolf-like’. The specific epithet pictus (Latin for ‘painted’), which derived from the original picta, was later returned to it, in conformity with the International Rules on Taxonomic Nomenclature.[17]

Paleontologist George G. Simpson placed the African wild dog, the dhole and the bush dog together in the subfamily Simocyoninae on the basis of all three species having similarly trenchant carnassials. This grouping was disputed by Juliet Clutton-Brock, who argued that other than dentition too many differences exist among the three species to warrant classifying them in a single subfamily.[18]

Evolution edit

 
Artistic reconstruction by Mauricio Antón of Xenocyon, a possible ancestral genus

The African wild dog possesses the most specialized adaptations among the canids for coat colour and diet and for pursuing its prey through its cursorial (running) ability. It has a graceful skeleton, and the loss of the first digit on its forefeet increases its stride and speed. This adaptation allows it to pursue prey across open terrain for long distances. The teeth are generally carnassial-shaped and its premolars are the largest relative to body size of any living carnivoran with the exception of the spotted hyena. On the lower carnassials (first lower molars), the talonid has evolved to become a cutting blade for flesh-slicing, with a reduction or loss of the post-carnassial molars. This adaptation also occurs in the two other hypercarnivorous canids – the dhole and the bush dog. The African wild dog exhibits one of the most varied coat colours among mammals. Individuals differ in patterns and colours, indicating a diversity of the underlying genes. The purpose of these coat patterns may be an adaptation for communication, concealment or temperature regulation. In 2019 a study indicated that the lycaon lineage diverged from Cuon and Canis 1.7 million years ago through this suite of adaptations, and these occurred at the same time as large ungulates (its prey) diversified. The findings also suggest that the African wild dog is largely isolated from gene transfer with other canid species.[19]

The oldest African wild dog fossil dates back to 200,000 years ago and was found in HaYonim Cave, Israel.[20][1] The evolution of the African wild dog is poorly understood owing to the scarcity of fossil finds. Some authors consider the extinct Canis subgenus Xenocyon as ancestral to both the genus Lycaon and the genus Cuon,[21][22][23][24]: p149  which lived throughout Eurasia and Africa from the Early Pleistocene to the early Middle Pleistocene. Others propose that Xenocyon should be reclassified as Lycaon.[1] The species Canis (Xenocyon) falconeri shared the African wild dog's absent first metacarpal (dewclaw), though its dentition was still relatively unspecialised.[1] This connection was rejected by one author because C. (X.) falconeri's lack of the first metacarpal is a poor indication of phylogenetic closeness to the African wild dog, and the dentition was too different to imply ancestry.[25]

Another ancestral candidate is the Plio-Pleistocene Lycaon sekowei of South Africa on the basis of distinct accessory cusps on its premolars and anterior accessory cuspids on its lower premolars. These adaptions are found only in Lycaon among living canids, which shows the same adaptations to a hypercarnivorous diet. L. sekowei had not yet lost the first metacarpal absent in L. pictus and was more robust than the modern species, having 10% larger teeth.[25]

Admixture with the dhole edit

 
Fossil of Lycaon sekowei, a possible ancestor of the modern African wild dog

The African wild dog has 78 chromosomes, the same number as those of species in the genus Canis.[26] In 2018 whole genome sequencing was used to compare the dhole (Cuon alpinus) with the African wild dog. There was strong evidence of ancient genetic admixture between the two species. 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 or North Africa.[27]

Subspecies edit

As of 2005, five subspecies are recognised by MSW3:[28]

Although the species is genetically diverse, these subspecific designations are not universally accepted. East African and Southern African wild dog populations were once thought to be genetically distinct, based on a small number of samples. More recent studies with a larger number of samples showed that extensive intermixing has occurred between East African and Southern African populations in the past. Some unique nuclear and mitochondrial alleles are found in Southern African and northeastern African populations, with a transition zone encompassing Botswana, Zimbabwe and southeastern Tanzania between the two. The West African wild dog population may possess a unique haplotype, thus possibly constituting a truly distinct subspecies.[34] The original Serengeti and Maasai Mara population of painted dogs is known to have possessed a unique genotype, but these genotypes may be extinct.[35]

Description edit

 
Closeup of an African wild dog in Kruger National Park
 
African wild dog skull (left) compared with that of the gray wolf (right): Note the former's shorter muzzle and fewer molars.

The African wild dog is the bulkiest and most solidly built of African canids.[36] The species stands 60 to 75 cm (24 to 30 in) at the shoulders, measures 71 to 112 cm (28 to 44 in) in head-and-body length and has a tail length of 29 to 41 cm (11 to 16 in). Adults have a weight range of 18 to 36 kg (40 to 79 lb). On average, dogs from East Africa weigh around 20–25 kg (44–55 lb). By body mass, they are only outsized amongst other extant canids by the gray wolf species complex.[29][37][38] Females are usually 3–7% smaller than males. Compared to members of the genus Canis, the African wild dog is comparatively lean and tall, with outsized ears and lacking dewclaws. The middle two toepads are usually fused. Its dentition differs from that of Canis by the degeneration of the last lower molar, the narrowness of the canines and proportionately large premolars, which are the largest relative to body size of any carnivore other than hyenas.[39] The heel of the lower carnassial M1 is crested with a single, blade-like cusp, which enhances the shearing capacity of the teeth, thus the speed at which prey can be consumed. This feature, termed "trenchant heel", is shared with two other canids: the Asian dhole and the South American bush dog.[7] The skull is relatively shorter and broader than those of other canids.[36]

The fur of the African wild dog differs significantly from that of other canids, consisting entirely of stiff bristle-hairs with no underfur.[36] Adults gradually lose their fur as it ages, with older individuals being almost naked.[40] Colour variation is extreme, and may serve in visual identification, as African wild dogs can recognise each other at distances of 50–100 m (160–330 ft).[39] Some geographic variation is seen in coat colour, with northeastern African specimens tending to be predominantly black with small white and yellow patches, while southern African ones are more brightly coloured, sporting a mix of brown, black and white coats.[7] Much of the species' coat patterning occurs on the trunk and legs. Little variation in facial markings occurs, with the muzzle being black, gradually shading into brown on the cheeks and forehead. A black line extends up the forehead, turning blackish-brown on the back of the ears. A few specimens sport a brown teardrop-shaped mark below the eyes. The back of the head and neck are either brown or yellow. A white patch occasionally occurs behind the fore legs, with some specimens having completely white fore legs, chests and throats. The tail is usually white at the tip, black in the middle and brown at the base. Some specimens lack the white tip entirely, or may have black fur below the white tip. These coat patterns can be asymmetrical, with the left side of the body often having different markings from the right.[39]

Distribution and habitat edit

African wild dogs once ranged across much of sub-Saharan Africa, being absent only in the driest deserts and lowland forests. The species has been largely exterminated in North and West Africa, and its population has greatly reduced in Central Africa and northeast Africa. The majority of the species' population now occurs in Southern Africa and southern East Africa; more specifically in countries such as Botswana, Namibia, and Zimbabwe. However, it is hard to track where they are and how many there are because of the loss of habitat.[2] A stable population comprising more than 370 individuals is present in South Africa, particularly the Kruger National Park.[41]

The African wild dog inhabits mostly savannas and arid zones, generally avoiding forested areas.[29] This preference is likely linked to the animal's hunting habits, which require open areas that do not obstruct vision or impede pursuit.[36] Nevertheless it will travel through scrub, woodland and montane areas in pursuit of prey. Forest-dwelling populations have been identified, including one in the Harenna Forest, a wet montane forest up to 2,400 m (7,900 ft) in altitude in the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia.[42] At least one record exists of a pack being sighted on the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro.[29] In Zimbabwe the species has been recorded at altitudes of 1,800 m (5,900 ft).[12] In Ethiopia they have been found at high altitudes; several live wild dog packs have been sighted at altitudes of 1,900 to 2,800 m (6,200 to 9,200 ft), and a dead individual was found in June 1995 at 4,050 m (13,290 ft) on the Sanetti Plateau.[43]

The species is very rare in North Africa, and the remaining populations may be of high conservation value since they are likely to be genetically distinct from other African wild dog populations. The African wild dog is mostly absent in West Africa, with the only potentially viable population occurring in Senegal's Niokolo-Koba National Park. African wild dogs are occasionally sighted in other parts of Senegal, Guinea and Mali. In Central Africa the species is extinct in Gabon, the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Republic of Congo. The only viable populations occur in the Central African Republic, Chad and especially Cameroon. The African wild dog is distributed patchily in East Africa, having been eradicated in Uganda and much of Kenya.[44]

Behaviour and ecology edit

Social and reproductive behaviour edit

 
Play fighting after a kill in Tswalu Kalahari Reserve
 
Regurgitating food for puppies at den site at Working with Wildlife

The African wild dog have strong social bonds, stronger than those of sympatric lions and spotted hyenas; thus, solitary living and hunting are extremely rare in the species.[45] It lives in permanent packs consisting of two to 27 adults and yearling pups. The typical pack size in the Kruger National Park and the Maasai Mara is four or five adults, while packs in Moremi and Selous contain eight or nine. However, larger packs have been observed and temporary aggregations of hundreds of individuals may have gathered in response to the seasonal migration of vast springbok herds in Southern Africa.[46] Males and females have separate dominance hierarchies, with the latter usually being led by the oldest female. Males may be led by the oldest male, but these can be supplanted by younger specimens; thus, some packs may contain elderly male former pack leaders. The dominant pair typically monopolises breeding.[39] The species differs from most other social carnivorans in that males remain in the natal pack, while females disperse (a pattern also found in primates such as gorillas, chimpanzees, and red colobuses). Furthermore, males in any given pack tend to outnumber females 3:1.[29] Dispersing females join other packs and evict some of the resident females related to the other pack members, thus preventing inbreeding and allowing the evicted individuals to find new packs of their own and breed.[39] Males rarely disperse, and when they do, they are invariably rejected by other packs already containing males.[29] Although arguably the most social canid, the species lacks the elaborate facial expressions and body language found in the gray wolf, likely because of the African wild dog's less hierarchical social structure. Furthermore, while elaborate facial expressions are important for wolves in re-establishing bonds after long periods of separation from their family groups, they are not as necessary to African wild dogs, which remain together for much longer periods.[18] The species does have an extensive vocal repertoire consisting of twittering, whining, yelping, squealing, whispering, barking, growling, gurling, rumbling, moaning and hooing.[47]

African wild dog populations in East Africa appear to have no fixed breeding season, whereas those in Southern Africa usually breed during the April–July period.[45] During estrus, the female is closely accompanied by a single male, which keeps other members of the same sex at bay.[29] The copulatory tie characteristic of mating in most canids has been reported to be absent[48] or very brief (less than one minute)[49] in African wild dog, possibly an adaptation to the prevalence of larger predators in its environment.[50] The gestation period lasts 69–73 days, with the interval between each pregnancy being 12–14 months typically. The African wild dog produces more pups than any other canid, with litters containing around six to 16 pups, with an average of 10, thus indicating that a single female can produce enough young to form a new pack every year. Because the amount of food necessary to feed more than two litters would be impossible to acquire by the average pack, breeding is strictly limited to the dominant female, which may kill the pups of subordinates. After giving birth, the mother stays close to the pups in the den, while the rest of the pack hunts. She typically drives away pack members approaching the pups until the latter are old enough to eat solid food at three to four weeks of age. The pups leave the den around the age of three weeks and are suckled outside. The pups are weaned at the age of five weeks, when they are fed regurgitated meat by the other pack members. By seven weeks, the pups begin to take on an adult appearance, with noticeable lengthening in the legs, muzzle, and ears. Once the pups reach the age of eight to 10 weeks, the pack abandons the den and the young follow the adults during hunts. The youngest pack members are permitted to eat first on kills, a privilege which ends once they become yearlings.[29] African wild dogs have an average lifespan of about 10 to 11 years in the wild.[51]

When separated from the pack, an African wild dog becomes depressed and can die as a result of broken heart syndrome.[52][53]

Male/female ratio edit

Packs of African wild dogs have a high ratio of males to females. This is a consequence of the males mostly staying with the pack whilst female offspring disperse and is supported by a changing sex-ratio in consecutive litters. Those born to maiden females contain a higher proportion of males, second litters are half and half and subsequent litters biased towards females with this trend increasing as females get older. As a result, the earlier litters provide stable hunters whilst the higher ratio of dispersals amongst the females stops a pack from getting too big.[54][5]

Sneeze communication and ‘voting’ edit

 
African wild dog pack in Kruger National Park

Populations in the Okavango Delta have been observed ‘rallying’ before setting out to hunt. Not every rally results in a departure, but departure becomes more likely when more individual dogs ‘sneeze’. These sneezes are characterized by a short, sharp exhale through the nostrils.[55] When members of dominant mating pairs sneeze first, the group is much more likely to depart. If a dominant dog initiates, around three sneezes guarantee departure. When less dominant dogs sneeze first, if enough others also sneeze (about 10), then the group will go hunting. Researchers assert that wild dogs in Botswana "use a specific vocalization (the sneeze) along with a variable quorum response mechanism in the decision-making process [to go hunting at a particular moment]".[56]

Inbreeding avoidance edit

Because the African wild dog largely exists in fragmented, small populations, its existence is endangered. Inbreeding avoidance by mate selection is a characteristic of the species and has important potential consequences for population persistence.[57] Inbreeding is rare within natal packs. Inbreeding may have been selected against evolutionarily because it leads to the expression of recessive deleterious alleles.[58] Computer simulations indicate that all populations continuing to avoid incestuous mating will become extinct within 100 years due to the unavailability of unrelated mates.[57] Thus, the impact of reduced numbers of suitable unrelated mates will likely have a severe demographic impact on the future viability of small wild dog populations.[57]

Hunting and diet edit

 
Wild dogs kill a Common Eland at Working with Wildlife in South Africa

The African wild dog is a specialised pack hunter of common medium-sized antelopes.[59] It and the cheetah are the only primarily diurnal African large predators.[29] The African wild dog hunts by approaching prey silently, then chasing it in a pursuit clocking at up to 66 km/h (41 mph) for 10–60 minutes.[46] The average chase covers some 2 km (1.2 mi), during which the prey animal, if large, is repeatedly bitten on the legs, belly, and rump until it stops running, while smaller prey is simply pulled down and torn apart.[5]

 
African wild dog pack consuming a blue wildebeest in Madikwe Game Reserve, South Africa

African wild dogs adjust their hunting strategy to the particular prey species. They will rush at wildebeest to panic the herd and isolate a vulnerable individual, but pursue territorial antelope species (which defend themselves by running in wide circles) by cutting across the arc to foil their escape. Medium-sized prey is often killed in 2–5 minutes, whereas larger prey such as wildebeest may take half an hour to pull down. Male wild dogs usually perform the task of grabbing dangerous prey, such as warthogs, by the nose.[60] A species-wide study showed that by preference, where available, five prey species were the most regularly selected, namely the greater kudu, Thomson's gazelle, impala, Cape bushbuck and blue wildebeest.[59][61] More specifically, in East Africa, its most common prey is the Thomson's gazelle, while in Central and Southern Africa, it targets impala, reedbuck, kob, lechwe and springbok,[29] and smaller prey such as common duiker, dik-dik, hares, spring hares, insects and cane rats.[45][62] Staple prey sizes are usually between 15 and 200 kg (33 and 441 lb), though some local studies put upper prey sizes as variously 90 to 135 kg (198 to 298 lb). In the case of larger species such as kudu and wildebeest, calves are largely but not exclusively targeted.[59][63][64] However, certain packs in the Serengeti specialized in hunting adult plains zebras weighing up to 240 kg (530 lb) quite frequently.[65] Another study claimed that some prey taken by wild dogs could weigh up to 289 kg (637 lb).[66] This includes African buffalo juveniles during the dry season when herds are small and calves less protected.[67] Footage from Lower Zambezi National Park taken in 2021 showed a large pack of wild dogs hunting an adult, healthy buffalo, though this is apparently extremely rare.[68] One pack was recorded to occasionally prey on bat-eared foxes, rolling on the carcasses before eating them. African wild dogs rarely scavenge, but have on occasion been observed to appropriate carcasses from spotted hyenas, leopards, cheetahs, lions, and animals caught in snares.[12]

Hunting success varies with prey type, vegetation cover and pack size, but African wild dogs tend to be very successful: often more than 60% of their chases end in a kill, sometimes up to 90%.[69] An analysis of 1,119 chases by a pack of six Okavango wild dogs showed that most were short distance uncoordinated chases, and the individual kill rate was only 15.5 percent. Because kills are shared, each dog enjoyed an efficient benefit–cost ratio.[70][71]

Small prey such as rodents, hares and birds are hunted singly, with dangerous prey such as cane rats and Old World porcupines being killed with a quick and well-placed bite to avoid injury. Small prey is eaten entirely, while large animals are stripped of their meat and organs, leaving the skin, head, and skeleton intact.[45][72] The African wild dog is a fast eater, with a pack being able to consume a Thomson's gazelle in 15 minutes. In the wild, the species' consumption is 1.2–5.9 kg (2.6–13.0 lb) per African wild dog a day, with one pack of 17–43 individuals in East Africa having been recorded to kill three animals per day on average.[12]

Unlike most social predators, African wild dogs will regurgitate food for other adults as well as young family members.[45] Pups old enough to eat solid food are given first priority at kills, eating even before the dominant pair; subordinate adult dogs help feed and protect the pups.[73]

Enemies and competitors edit

 
Pack confronting a spotted hyena in Sabi Sand Game Reserve

Lions dominate African wild dogs and are a major source of mortality for both adults and pups.[74] Population densities are usually low in areas where lions are more abundant.[75] One pack reintroduced into Etosha National Park was wiped out by lions. A population crash in lions in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area during the 1960s resulted in an increase in African wild dog sightings, only for their numbers to decline once the lions recovered.[74] As with other large predators killed by lion prides, the dogs are usually killed and left uneaten by the lions, indicating the competitive rather than predatory nature of the lions' dominance.[76][77] However, a few cases have been reported of old and wounded lions falling prey to African wild dogs.[78][79] On occasion, packs of wild dogs have been observed defending pack members attacked by single lions, sometimes successfully. One pack in the Okavango in March 2016 was photographed by safari guides waging "an incredible fight" against a lioness that attacked a subadult dog at an impala kill, which forced the lioness to retreat, although the subadult dog died. A pack of four wild dogs was observed furiously defending an old adult male dog from a male lion that attacked it at a kill; the dog survived and rejoined the pack.[80]

African wild dogs commonly lose their kills to larger predators.[81] Spotted hyenas are important kleptoparasites[74] and follow packs of African wild dogs to appropriate their kills. They typically inspect areas where wild dogs have rested and eat any food remains they find. When approaching wild dogs at a kill, solitary hyenas approach cautiously and attempt to take off with a piece of meat unnoticed, though they may be mobbed in the attempt. When operating in groups, spotted hyenas are more successful in pirating African wild dog kills, though the latter's greater tendency to assist each other puts them at an advantage against spotted hyenas, which rarely work cooperatively. Cases of African wild dogs scavenging from spotted hyenas are rare. Although African wild dog packs can easily repel solitary hyenas, on the whole, the relationship between the two species is a one-sided benefit for the hyenas,[82] with African wild dog densities being negatively correlated with high hyena populations.[83] Beyond piracy, cases of interspecific killing of African wild dogs by spotted hyenas are documented.[84] African wild dogs are apex predators, only fatally losing contests to larger social carnivores.[85] When briefly unprotected, wild dog pups may occasionally be vulnerable to large eagles, such as the martial eagle, when they venture out of their dens.[86]

Threats and conservation edit

The African wild dog is primarily threatened by habitat fragmentation, which results to human–wildlife conflict, transmission of infectious diseases and high mortality rates.[2] Surveys in the Central African Republic's Chinko area revealed that the African wild dog population decreased from 160 individuals in 2012 to 26 individuals in 2017. At the same time, transhumant pastoralists from the border area with Sudan moved in the area with their livestock.[85]

The African Wild Dog Conservancy, a non-profit, 501(c)(3), non-governmental organization, began working in 2003 to conserve the African wild dog in northeastern and coastal Kenya, a convergence zone of two biodiversity hotspots. This area largely consists of community lands inhabited by pastoralists. With the help of local people, a pilot study was launched confirming the presence of a population of wild dogs largely unknown to conservationists.[87] Over the next 16 years, local ecological knowledge revealed this area to be a significant refuge for wild dogs and an important wildlife corridor connecting Kenya’s Tsavo National Parks with the Horn of Africa in an increasingly human-dominated landscape. This project has been identified as a wild dog conservation priority by the IUCN/SSC Canid Specialist Group.[88][89]

In culture edit

Ancient Egypt edit

 
Cosmetic palette from the Naqada III period depicting African wild dogs, Louvre.

Depictions of African wild dogs are prominent on cosmetic palettes and other objects from Egypt's predynastic period, likely symbolising order over chaos and the transition between the wild and the domestic dog. Predynastic hunters may have identified with the African wild dog, as the Hunters Palette shows them wearing the animals' tails on their belts. By the dynastic period, African wild dog illustrations became much less represented, and the animal's symbolic role was largely taken over by the wolf.[90][91]

Ethiopia edit

According to Enno Littmann, the people of Ethiopia's Tigray Region believed that injuring a wild dog with a spear would result in the animal dipping its tail in its wounds and flicking the blood at its assailant, causing instant death. For this reason, Tigrean shepherds used to repel wild dog attacks with pebbles rather than with edged weapons.[92]

San people edit

The African wild dog also plays a prominent role in the mythology of Southern Africa's San people. In one story, the wild dog is indirectly linked to the origin of death, as the hare is cursed by the moon to be for ever hunted by African wild dogs after the hare rebuffs the moon's promise to allow all living things to be reborn after death.[93] Another story has the god Cagn taking revenge on the other gods by sending a group of men transformed into African wild dogs to attack them, though who won the battle is never revealed.[94] The San of Botswana see the African wild dog as the ultimate hunter and traditionally believe that shamans and medicine men can transform themselves into wild dogs. Some San hunters will smear African wild dog bodily fluids on their feet before a hunt, believing that doing so will give them the animal's boldness and agility. Nevertheless the species does not figure prominently in San rock art, with the only notable example being a frieze in Mount Erongo showing a pack hunting two antelopes.[94]

Ndebele edit

The Ndebele have a story explaining why the African wild dog hunts in packs: in the beginning, when the first wild dog's wife was sick, the other animals were concerned. An impala went to hare, who was a medicine man. Hare gave Impala a calabash of medicine, warning him not to turn back on the way to Wild Dog's den. Impala was startled by the scent of a leopard and turned back, spilling the medicine. A zebra then went to Hare, who gave him the same medicine along with the same advice. On the way, Zebra turned back when he saw a black mamba, thus breaking the gourd. A moment later a terrible howling was heard: Wild Dog's wife had died. Wild Dog went outside and saw Zebra standing over the broken gourd of medicine, so Wild Dog and his family chased Zebra and tore him to shreds. To this day, African wild dogs hunt zebras and impalas as revenge for their failure to deliver the medicine that could have saved Wild Dog's wife.[95]

In media edit

Documentary edit

  • A Wild Dog's Tale (2013), a single painted dog (named Solo by researchers) befriends hyenas and jackals in Okavango, hunting together. Solo feeds and cares for jackal pups.[96][97]
  • The Pale Pack, Savage Kingdom, Season 1 (2016), was the story of Botswana African wild dog pack leaders Teemana and Molao written and directed by Brad Bestelink, and narrated by Charles Dance premiered on National Geographic.[98][99]
  • Dynasties (2018 TV series), episode 4, Produced by Nick Lyon: Tait is the elderly matriarch of a pack of painted wolves in Zimbabwe's Mana Pools National Park. Her pack is driven out of their territory by Tait's daughter, Blacktip, the matriarch of a rival pack in need of more space for their large family of 32. Their combined territory also shrunk over Tait's lifetime due to the expansion of human, hyena and lion territories. Tait leads her family into the territory of a lion pride in the midst of a drought, with Blacktip's pack in an eight month long pursuit. When Tait died, the pack was observed performing a rare "singing", the purpose of which is unclear.[100]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  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 edit

  1. ^ a b c d Martínez-Navarro, B. & Rook, L. (2003). "Gradual evolution in the African hunting dog lineage: systematic implications". Comptes Rendus Palevol. 2 (8): 695–702. Bibcode:2003CRPal...2..695M. doi:10.1016/j.crpv.2003.06.002.
  2. ^ a b c d e Woodroffe, R. & Sillero-Zubiri, C. (2020) [amended version of 2012 assessment]. "Lycaon pictus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T12436A166502262. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-1.RLTS.T12436A166502262.en. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  3. ^ Temminck (1820), Ann. Gen. Sci. Phys., 3:54, pl.35
  4. ^ a b "African Wild Dog (Lycaon pictus Temminck, 1820) - WildAfrica.cz - Animal Encyclopedia". Wildafrica.cz. Retrieved 5 September 2017.
  5. ^ a b c Creel, Scott; Creel, Nancy Marusha (31 December 2019). The African Wild Dog: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation. Princeton University Press. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-691-20700-1.
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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • painteddog.org, Painted Dog Conservation Website
  • painteddog.co.uk/, Painted Dog Conservation United Kingdom Website
  • African Wild Dog Conservancy
  • African Wild Dog Watch
  • [1] at African Wildlife Foundation
  • The Zambian Carnivore Programme
  • Save the African wild dog
  • Painted Dog Conservation (conservation organization)
  • ibream wild dog project

african, wild, lycaon, pictus, also, known, painted, cape, hunting, wild, canine, native, saharan, africa, largest, wild, canine, africa, only, extant, member, genus, lycaon, which, distinguished, from, canis, dentition, highly, specialised, hypercarnivorous, . The African wild dog Lycaon pictus also known as the painted dog or Cape hunting dog is a wild canine native to sub Saharan Africa It is the largest wild canine in Africa and the only extant member of the genus Lycaon which is distinguished from Canis by dentition highly specialised for a hypercarnivorous diet and by a lack of dewclaws African wild dogTemporal range Middle Pleistocene present 200 000 0 years BP 1 African wild dog in South AfricaConservation statusEndangered IUCN 3 1 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraFamily CanidaeSubfamily CaninaeTribe CaniniGenus LycaonSpecies L pictusBinomial nameLycaon pictus Temminck 1820 3 African wild dog range according to the IUCN Extant resident Probably extant resident It is estimated that there are around 6 600 adults including 1 400 mature individuals living in 39 subpopulations all threatened by habitat fragmentation human persecution and outbreaks of disease As the largest subpopulation probably consists of fewer than 250 individuals the African wild dog has been listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List since 1990 2 The species is a specialised diurnal hunter of terrestrial ungulates which it captures by using its stamina and cooperative hunting to exhaust them Its natural competitors are lions and spotted hyenas the former will kill the dogs where possible whilst the latter are frequent kleptoparasites 4 Like other canids the African wild dog regurgitates food for its young but also extends this action to adults as a central part of the pack s social unit 5 4 6 The young have the privilege of feeding first on carcasses The African wild dog has been revered in several hunter gatherer societies particularly those of the San people and Prehistoric Egypt Contents 1 Etymology and naming 2 Taxonomic and evolutionary history 2 1 Taxonomy 2 2 Evolution 2 3 Admixture with the dhole 2 4 Subspecies 3 Description 4 Distribution and habitat 5 Behaviour and ecology 5 1 Social and reproductive behaviour 5 2 Male female ratio 5 3 Sneeze communication and voting 5 4 Inbreeding avoidance 5 5 Hunting and diet 5 6 Enemies and competitors 6 Threats and conservation 7 In culture 7 1 Ancient Egypt 7 2 Ethiopia 7 3 San people 7 4 Ndebele 8 In media 8 1 Documentary 9 See also 10 Explanatory notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEtymology and naming editThe English language has several names for the African wild dog including African hunting dog Cape hunting dog 7 painted hunting dog 8 painted dog 9 painted wolf 10 and painted lycaon 11 Though the name African wild dog is widely used 12 wild dog is thought by conservation groups to have negative connotations that could be detrimental to its image one organisation promotes the name painted wolf 13 14 15 whilst the name painted dog has been found to be the most likely to counteract negative perceptions 16 Taxonomic and evolutionary history editTaxonomy edit 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 nbsp Gray wolf nbsp Coyote nbsp African wolf nbsp Golden jackal nbsp Ethiopian wolf nbsp Dhole nbsp African wild dog nbsp 2 6 Side striped jackal nbsp Black backed jackal nbsp The earliest written reference for the species appears to be from Oppian who wrote of the thoa a hybrid between the wolf and leopard which resembles the former in shape and the latter in colour Solinus s Collea rerum memorabilium from the third century AD describes a multicoloured wolf like animal with a mane native to Ethiopia 11 The African wild dog was scientifically described in 1820 by Coenraad Jacob Temminck after examining a specimen from the coast of Mozambique He named the animal Hyaena picta erroneously classifying it as a species of hyena It was later recognised as a canid by Joshua Brookes in 1827 and renamed Lycaon tricolor The root word of Lycaon is the Greek lykaios lykaios meaning wolf like The specific epithet pictus Latin for painted which derived from the original picta was later returned to it in conformity with the International Rules on Taxonomic Nomenclature 17 Paleontologist George G Simpson placed the African wild dog the dhole and the bush dog together in the subfamily Simocyoninae on the basis of all three species having similarly trenchant carnassials This grouping was disputed by Juliet Clutton Brock who argued that other than dentition too many differences exist among the three species to warrant classifying them in a single subfamily 18 Evolution edit nbsp Artistic reconstruction by Mauricio Anton of Xenocyon a possible ancestral genusThe African wild dog possesses the most specialized adaptations among the canids for coat colour and diet and for pursuing its prey through its cursorial running ability It has a graceful skeleton and the loss of the first digit on its forefeet increases its stride and speed This adaptation allows it to pursue prey across open terrain for long distances The teeth are generally carnassial shaped and its premolars are the largest relative to body size of any living carnivoran with the exception of the spotted hyena On the lower carnassials first lower molars the talonid has evolved to become a cutting blade for flesh slicing with a reduction or loss of the post carnassial molars This adaptation also occurs in the two other hypercarnivorous canids the dhole and the bush dog The African wild dog exhibits one of the most varied coat colours among mammals Individuals differ in patterns and colours indicating a diversity of the underlying genes The purpose of these coat patterns may be an adaptation for communication concealment or temperature regulation In 2019 a study indicated that the lycaon lineage diverged from Cuon and Canis 1 7 million years ago through this suite of adaptations and these occurred at the same time as large ungulates its prey diversified The findings also suggest that the African wild dog is largely isolated from gene transfer with other canid species 19 The oldest African wild dog fossil dates back to 200 000 years ago and was found in HaYonim Cave Israel 20 1 The evolution of the African wild dog is poorly understood owing to the scarcity of fossil finds Some authors consider the extinct Canis subgenus Xenocyon as ancestral to both the genus Lycaon and the genus Cuon 21 22 23 24 p149 which lived throughout Eurasia and Africa from the Early Pleistocene to the early Middle Pleistocene Others propose that Xenocyon should be reclassified as Lycaon 1 The species Canis Xenocyon falconeri shared the African wild dog s absent first metacarpal dewclaw though its dentition was still relatively unspecialised 1 This connection was rejected by one author because C X falconeri s lack of the first metacarpal is a poor indication of phylogenetic closeness to the African wild dog and the dentition was too different to imply ancestry 25 Another ancestral candidate is the Plio Pleistocene Lycaon sekowei of South Africa on the basis of distinct accessory cusps on its premolars and anterior accessory cuspids on its lower premolars These adaptions are found only in Lycaon among living canids which shows the same adaptations to a hypercarnivorous diet L sekowei had not yet lost the first metacarpal absent in L pictus and was more robust than the modern species having 10 larger teeth 25 Admixture with the dhole edit nbsp Fossil of Lycaon sekowei a possible ancestor of the modern African wild dogThe African wild dog has 78 chromosomes the same number as those of species in the genus Canis 26 In 2018 whole genome sequencing was used to compare the dhole Cuon alpinus with the African wild dog There was strong evidence of ancient genetic admixture between the two species 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 or North Africa 27 Subspecies edit As of 2005 update five subspecies are recognised by MSW3 28 Subspecies Description SynonymsCape wild dog L p pictus Temminck 1820 nbsp The nominate subspecies is also the largest weighing 20 25 kg 44 55 lb 29 It is much more colourful than the East African wild dog 29 although even within this single subspecies there are geographic variations in coat colour specimens inhabiting the Cape are characterised by the large amount of orange yellow fur overlapping the black the partially yellow backs of the ears the mostly yellow underparts and a number of whitish hairs on the throat mane Those in Mozambique are distinguished by the almost equal development of yellow and black on both the upper and underparts of the body as well as having less white fur than the Cape form 30 cacondae Matschie 1915 fuchsi Matschie 1915 gobabis Matschie 1915 krebsi Matschie 1915 lalandei Matschie 1915 tricolor Brookes 1827 typicus A Smith 1833 venatica Burchell 1822 windhorni Matschie 1915 zuluensis Thomas 1904 East African wild dog L p lupinus Thomas 1902 nbsp This subspecies is distinguished by its very dark coat with very little yellow 30 dieseneri Matschie 1915 gansseri Matschie 1915 hennigi Matschie 1915 huebneri Matschie 1915 kondoae Matschie 1915 lademanni Matschie 1915 langheldi Matschie 1915 prageri Matschie 1912 richteri Matschie 1915 ruwanae Matschie 1915 ssongaeae Matschie 1915 stierlingi Matschie 1915 styxi Matschie 1915 wintgensi Matschie 1915 Somali wild dog L p somalicus Thomas 1904 nbsp This subspecies is smaller than the East African wild dog has shorter and coarser fur and has a weaker dentition Its colour closely approaches that of the Cape wild dog with the yellow parts being buff 30 luchsingeri Matschie 1915 matschie Matschie 1915 ruppelli Matschie 1915 takanus Matschie 1915 zedlitzi Matschie 1915 Chadian wild dog L p sharicus Thomas and Wroughton 1907 Brightly coloured with very short 15 mm 0 6 in hair Brain case is fuller than L p pictus 31 ebermaieri Matschie 1915 West African wild dog L p manguensis Matschie 1915 nbsp The West African wild dog used to be widespread from western to central Africa from Senegal to Nigeria Now only two subpopulations survive one in the Niokolo Koba National Park of Senegal and the other in the W National Park of Benin Burkina Faso and Niger 2 32 It is estimated that 70 adult individuals are left in the wild 33 mischlichi Matschie 1915 Although the species is genetically diverse these subspecific designations are not universally accepted East African and Southern African wild dog populations were once thought to be genetically distinct based on a small number of samples More recent studies with a larger number of samples showed that extensive intermixing has occurred between East African and Southern African populations in the past Some unique nuclear and mitochondrial alleles are found in Southern African and northeastern African populations with a transition zone encompassing Botswana Zimbabwe and southeastern Tanzania between the two The West African wild dog population may possess a unique haplotype thus possibly constituting a truly distinct subspecies 34 The original Serengeti and Maasai Mara population of painted dogs is known to have possessed a unique genotype but these genotypes may be extinct 35 Description edit nbsp Closeup of an African wild dog in Kruger National Park nbsp African wild dog skull left compared with that of the gray wolf right Note the former s shorter muzzle and fewer molars The African wild dog is the bulkiest and most solidly built of African canids 36 The species stands 60 to 75 cm 24 to 30 in at the shoulders measures 71 to 112 cm 28 to 44 in in head and body length and has a tail length of 29 to 41 cm 11 to 16 in Adults have a weight range of 18 to 36 kg 40 to 79 lb On average dogs from East Africa weigh around 20 25 kg 44 55 lb By body mass they are only outsized amongst other extant canids by the gray wolf species complex 29 37 38 Females are usually 3 7 smaller than males Compared to members of the genus Canis the African wild dog is comparatively lean and tall with outsized ears and lacking dewclaws The middle two toepads are usually fused Its dentition differs from that of Canis by the degeneration of the last lower molar the narrowness of the canines and proportionately large premolars which are the largest relative to body size of any carnivore other than hyenas 39 The heel of the lower carnassial M1 is crested with a single blade like cusp which enhances the shearing capacity of the teeth thus the speed at which prey can be consumed This feature termed trenchant heel is shared with two other canids the Asian dhole and the South American bush dog 7 The skull is relatively shorter and broader than those of other canids 36 The fur of the African wild dog differs significantly from that of other canids consisting entirely of stiff bristle hairs with no underfur 36 Adults gradually lose their fur as it ages with older individuals being almost naked 40 Colour variation is extreme and may serve in visual identification as African wild dogs can recognise each other at distances of 50 100 m 160 330 ft 39 Some geographic variation is seen in coat colour with northeastern African specimens tending to be predominantly black with small white and yellow patches while southern African ones are more brightly coloured sporting a mix of brown black and white coats 7 Much of the species coat patterning occurs on the trunk and legs Little variation in facial markings occurs with the muzzle being black gradually shading into brown on the cheeks and forehead A black line extends up the forehead turning blackish brown on the back of the ears A few specimens sport a brown teardrop shaped mark below the eyes The back of the head and neck are either brown or yellow A white patch occasionally occurs behind the fore legs with some specimens having completely white fore legs chests and throats The tail is usually white at the tip black in the middle and brown at the base Some specimens lack the white tip entirely or may have black fur below the white tip These coat patterns can be asymmetrical with the left side of the body often having different markings from the right 39 Distribution and habitat editAfrican wild dogs once ranged across much of sub Saharan Africa being absent only in the driest deserts and lowland forests The species has been largely exterminated in North and West Africa and its population has greatly reduced in Central Africa and northeast Africa The majority of the species population now occurs in Southern Africa and southern East Africa more specifically in countries such as Botswana Namibia and Zimbabwe However it is hard to track where they are and how many there are because of the loss of habitat 2 A stable population comprising more than 370 individuals is present in South Africa particularly the Kruger National Park 41 The African wild dog inhabits mostly savannas and arid zones generally avoiding forested areas 29 This preference is likely linked to the animal s hunting habits which require open areas that do not obstruct vision or impede pursuit 36 Nevertheless it will travel through scrub woodland and montane areas in pursuit of prey Forest dwelling populations have been identified including one in the Harenna Forest a wet montane forest up to 2 400 m 7 900 ft in altitude in the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia 42 At least one record exists of a pack being sighted on the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro 29 In Zimbabwe the species has been recorded at altitudes of 1 800 m 5 900 ft 12 In Ethiopia they have been found at high altitudes several live wild dog packs have been sighted at altitudes of 1 900 to 2 800 m 6 200 to 9 200 ft and a dead individual was found in June 1995 at 4 050 m 13 290 ft on the Sanetti Plateau 43 The species is very rare in North Africa and the remaining populations may be of high conservation value since they are likely to be genetically distinct from other African wild dog populations The African wild dog is mostly absent in West Africa with the only potentially viable population occurring in Senegal s Niokolo Koba National Park African wild dogs are occasionally sighted in other parts of Senegal Guinea and Mali In Central Africa the species is extinct in Gabon the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Republic of Congo The only viable populations occur in the Central African Republic Chad and especially Cameroon The African wild dog is distributed patchily in East Africa having been eradicated in Uganda and much of Kenya 44 Behaviour and ecology editSocial and reproductive behaviour edit nbsp Play fighting after a kill in Tswalu Kalahari Reserve nbsp Regurgitating food for puppies at den site at Working with WildlifeThe African wild dog have strong social bonds stronger than those of sympatric lions and spotted hyenas thus solitary living and hunting are extremely rare in the species 45 It lives in permanent packs consisting of two to 27 adults and yearling pups The typical pack size in the Kruger National Park and the Maasai Mara is four or five adults while packs in Moremi and Selous contain eight or nine However larger packs have been observed and temporary aggregations of hundreds of individuals may have gathered in response to the seasonal migration of vast springbok herds in Southern Africa 46 Males and females have separate dominance hierarchies with the latter usually being led by the oldest female Males may be led by the oldest male but these can be supplanted by younger specimens thus some packs may contain elderly male former pack leaders The dominant pair typically monopolises breeding 39 The species differs from most other social carnivorans in that males remain in the natal pack while females disperse a pattern also found in primates such as gorillas chimpanzees and red colobuses Furthermore males in any given pack tend to outnumber females 3 1 29 Dispersing females join other packs and evict some of the resident females related to the other pack members thus preventing inbreeding and allowing the evicted individuals to find new packs of their own and breed 39 Males rarely disperse and when they do they are invariably rejected by other packs already containing males 29 Although arguably the most social canid the species lacks the elaborate facial expressions and body language found in the gray wolf likely because of the African wild dog s less hierarchical social structure Furthermore while elaborate facial expressions are important for wolves in re establishing bonds after long periods of separation from their family groups they are not as necessary to African wild dogs which remain together for much longer periods 18 The species does have an extensive vocal repertoire consisting of twittering whining yelping squealing whispering barking growling gurling rumbling moaning and hooing 47 African wild dog populations in East Africa appear to have no fixed breeding season whereas those in Southern Africa usually breed during the April July period 45 During estrus the female is closely accompanied by a single male which keeps other members of the same sex at bay 29 The copulatory tie characteristic of mating in most canids has been reported to be absent 48 or very brief less than one minute 49 in African wild dog possibly an adaptation to the prevalence of larger predators in its environment 50 The gestation period lasts 69 73 days with the interval between each pregnancy being 12 14 months typically The African wild dog produces more pups than any other canid with litters containing around six to 16 pups with an average of 10 thus indicating that a single female can produce enough young to form a new pack every year Because the amount of food necessary to feed more than two litters would be impossible to acquire by the average pack breeding is strictly limited to the dominant female which may kill the pups of subordinates After giving birth the mother stays close to the pups in the den while the rest of the pack hunts She typically drives away pack members approaching the pups until the latter are old enough to eat solid food at three to four weeks of age The pups leave the den around the age of three weeks and are suckled outside The pups are weaned at the age of five weeks when they are fed regurgitated meat by the other pack members By seven weeks the pups begin to take on an adult appearance with noticeable lengthening in the legs muzzle and ears Once the pups reach the age of eight to 10 weeks the pack abandons the den and the young follow the adults during hunts The youngest pack members are permitted to eat first on kills a privilege which ends once they become yearlings 29 African wild dogs have an average lifespan of about 10 to 11 years in the wild 51 When separated from the pack an African wild dog becomes depressed and can die as a result of broken heart syndrome 52 53 Male female ratio edit Packs of African wild dogs have a high ratio of males to females This is a consequence of the males mostly staying with the pack whilst female offspring disperse and is supported by a changing sex ratio in consecutive litters Those born to maiden females contain a higher proportion of males second litters are half and half and subsequent litters biased towards females with this trend increasing as females get older As a result the earlier litters provide stable hunters whilst the higher ratio of dispersals amongst the females stops a pack from getting too big 54 5 Sneeze communication and voting edit nbsp African wild dog pack in Kruger National ParkPopulations in the Okavango Delta have been observed rallying before setting out to hunt Not every rally results in a departure but departure becomes more likely when more individual dogs sneeze These sneezes are characterized by a short sharp exhale through the nostrils 55 When members of dominant mating pairs sneeze first the group is much more likely to depart If a dominant dog initiates around three sneezes guarantee departure When less dominant dogs sneeze first if enough others also sneeze about 10 then the group will go hunting Researchers assert that wild dogs in Botswana use a specific vocalization the sneeze along with a variable quorum response mechanism in the decision making process to go hunting at a particular moment 56 Inbreeding avoidance edit Because the African wild dog largely exists in fragmented small populations its existence is endangered Inbreeding avoidance by mate selection is a characteristic of the species and has important potential consequences for population persistence 57 Inbreeding is rare within natal packs Inbreeding may have been selected against evolutionarily because it leads to the expression of recessive deleterious alleles 58 Computer simulations indicate that all populations continuing to avoid incestuous mating will become extinct within 100 years due to the unavailability of unrelated mates 57 Thus the impact of reduced numbers of suitable unrelated mates will likely have a severe demographic impact on the future viability of small wild dog populations 57 Hunting and diet edit nbsp Wild dogs kill a Common Eland at Working with Wildlife in South AfricaThe African wild dog is a specialised pack hunter of common medium sized antelopes 59 It and the cheetah are the only primarily diurnal African large predators 29 The African wild dog hunts by approaching prey silently then chasing it in a pursuit clocking at up to 66 km h 41 mph for 10 60 minutes 46 The average chase covers some 2 km 1 2 mi during which the prey animal if large is repeatedly bitten on the legs belly and rump until it stops running while smaller prey is simply pulled down and torn apart 5 nbsp African wild dog pack consuming a blue wildebeest in Madikwe Game Reserve South AfricaAfrican wild dogs adjust their hunting strategy to the particular prey species They will rush at wildebeest to panic the herd and isolate a vulnerable individual but pursue territorial antelope species which defend themselves by running in wide circles by cutting across the arc to foil their escape Medium sized prey is often killed in 2 5 minutes whereas larger prey such as wildebeest may take half an hour to pull down Male wild dogs usually perform the task of grabbing dangerous prey such as warthogs by the nose 60 A species wide study showed that by preference where available five prey species were the most regularly selected namely the greater kudu Thomson s gazelle impala Cape bushbuck and blue wildebeest 59 61 More specifically in East Africa its most common prey is the Thomson s gazelle while in Central and Southern Africa it targets impala reedbuck kob lechwe and springbok 29 and smaller prey such as common duiker dik dik hares spring hares insects and cane rats 45 62 Staple prey sizes are usually between 15 and 200 kg 33 and 441 lb though some local studies put upper prey sizes as variously 90 to 135 kg 198 to 298 lb In the case of larger species such as kudu and wildebeest calves are largely but not exclusively targeted 59 63 64 However certain packs in the Serengeti specialized in hunting adult plains zebras weighing up to 240 kg 530 lb quite frequently 65 Another study claimed that some prey taken by wild dogs could weigh up to 289 kg 637 lb 66 This includes African buffalo juveniles during the dry season when herds are small and calves less protected 67 Footage from Lower Zambezi National Park taken in 2021 showed a large pack of wild dogs hunting an adult healthy buffalo though this is apparently extremely rare 68 One pack was recorded to occasionally prey on bat eared foxes rolling on the carcasses before eating them African wild dogs rarely scavenge but have on occasion been observed to appropriate carcasses from spotted hyenas leopards cheetahs lions and animals caught in snares 12 Hunting success varies with prey type vegetation cover and pack size but African wild dogs tend to be very successful often more than 60 of their chases end in a kill sometimes up to 90 69 An analysis of 1 119 chases by a pack of six Okavango wild dogs showed that most were short distance uncoordinated chases and the individual kill rate was only 15 5 percent Because kills are shared each dog enjoyed an efficient benefit cost ratio 70 71 Small prey such as rodents hares and birds are hunted singly with dangerous prey such as cane rats and Old World porcupines being killed with a quick and well placed bite to avoid injury Small prey is eaten entirely while large animals are stripped of their meat and organs leaving the skin head and skeleton intact 45 72 The African wild dog is a fast eater with a pack being able to consume a Thomson s gazelle in 15 minutes In the wild the species consumption is 1 2 5 9 kg 2 6 13 0 lb per African wild dog a day with one pack of 17 43 individuals in East Africa having been recorded to kill three animals per day on average 12 Unlike most social predators African wild dogs will regurgitate food for other adults as well as young family members 45 Pups old enough to eat solid food are given first priority at kills eating even before the dominant pair subordinate adult dogs help feed and protect the pups 73 Enemies and competitors edit nbsp Pack confronting a spotted hyena in Sabi Sand Game ReserveLions dominate African wild dogs and are a major source of mortality for both adults and pups 74 Population densities are usually low in areas where lions are more abundant 75 One pack reintroduced into Etosha National Park was wiped out by lions A population crash in lions in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area during the 1960s resulted in an increase in African wild dog sightings only for their numbers to decline once the lions recovered 74 As with other large predators killed by lion prides the dogs are usually killed and left uneaten by the lions indicating the competitive rather than predatory nature of the lions dominance 76 77 However a few cases have been reported of old and wounded lions falling prey to African wild dogs 78 79 On occasion packs of wild dogs have been observed defending pack members attacked by single lions sometimes successfully One pack in the Okavango in March 2016 was photographed by safari guides waging an incredible fight against a lioness that attacked a subadult dog at an impala kill which forced the lioness to retreat although the subadult dog died A pack of four wild dogs was observed furiously defending an old adult male dog from a male lion that attacked it at a kill the dog survived and rejoined the pack 80 African wild dogs commonly lose their kills to larger predators 81 Spotted hyenas are important kleptoparasites 74 and follow packs of African wild dogs to appropriate their kills They typically inspect areas where wild dogs have rested and eat any food remains they find When approaching wild dogs at a kill solitary hyenas approach cautiously and attempt to take off with a piece of meat unnoticed though they may be mobbed in the attempt When operating in groups spotted hyenas are more successful in pirating African wild dog kills though the latter s greater tendency to assist each other puts them at an advantage against spotted hyenas which rarely work cooperatively Cases of African wild dogs scavenging from spotted hyenas are rare Although African wild dog packs can easily repel solitary hyenas on the whole the relationship between the two species is a one sided benefit for the hyenas 82 with African wild dog densities being negatively correlated with high hyena populations 83 Beyond piracy cases of interspecific killing of African wild dogs by spotted hyenas are documented 84 African wild dogs are apex predators only fatally losing contests to larger social carnivores 85 When briefly unprotected wild dog pups may occasionally be vulnerable to large eagles such as the martial eagle when they venture out of their dens 86 Threats and conservation editThe African wild dog is primarily threatened by habitat fragmentation which results to human wildlife conflict transmission of infectious diseases and high mortality rates 2 Surveys in the Central African Republic s Chinko area revealed that the African wild dog population decreased from 160 individuals in 2012 to 26 individuals in 2017 At the same time transhumant pastoralists from the border area with Sudan moved in the area with their livestock 85 The African Wild Dog Conservancy a non profit 501 c 3 non governmental organization began working in 2003 to conserve the African wild dog in northeastern and coastal Kenya a convergence zone of two biodiversity hotspots This area largely consists of community lands inhabited by pastoralists With the help of local people a pilot study was launched confirming the presence of a population of wild dogs largely unknown to conservationists 87 Over the next 16 years local ecological knowledge revealed this area to be a significant refuge for wild dogs and an important wildlife corridor connecting Kenya s Tsavo National Parks with the Horn of Africa in an increasingly human dominated landscape This project has been identified as a wild dog conservation priority by the IUCN SSC Canid Specialist Group 88 89 In culture editAncient Egypt edit nbsp Cosmetic palette from the Naqada III period depicting African wild dogs Louvre Depictions of African wild dogs are prominent on cosmetic palettes and other objects from Egypt s predynastic period likely symbolising order over chaos and the transition between the wild and the domestic dog Predynastic hunters may have identified with the African wild dog as the Hunters Palette shows them wearing the animals tails on their belts By the dynastic period African wild dog illustrations became much less represented and the animal s symbolic role was largely taken over by the wolf 90 91 Ethiopia edit According to Enno Littmann the people of Ethiopia s Tigray Region believed that injuring a wild dog with a spear would result in the animal dipping its tail in its wounds and flicking the blood at its assailant causing instant death For this reason Tigrean shepherds used to repel wild dog attacks with pebbles rather than with edged weapons 92 San people edit The African wild dog also plays a prominent role in the mythology of Southern Africa s San people In one story the wild dog is indirectly linked to the origin of death as the hare is cursed by the moon to be for ever hunted by African wild dogs after the hare rebuffs the moon s promise to allow all living things to be reborn after death 93 Another story has the god Cagn taking revenge on the other gods by sending a group of men transformed into African wild dogs to attack them though who won the battle is never revealed 94 The San of Botswana see the African wild dog as the ultimate hunter and traditionally believe that shamans and medicine men can transform themselves into wild dogs Some San hunters will smear African wild dog bodily fluids on their feet before a hunt believing that doing so will give them the animal s boldness and agility Nevertheless the species does not figure prominently in San rock art with the only notable example being a frieze in Mount Erongo showing a pack hunting two antelopes 94 Ndebele edit The Ndebele have a story explaining why the African wild dog hunts in packs in the beginning when the first wild dog s wife was sick the other animals were concerned An impala went to hare who was a medicine man Hare gave Impala a calabash of medicine warning him not to turn back on the way to Wild Dog s den Impala was startled by the scent of a leopard and turned back spilling the medicine A zebra then went to Hare who gave him the same medicine along with the same advice On the way Zebra turned back when he saw a black mamba thus breaking the gourd A moment later a terrible howling was heard Wild Dog s wife had died Wild Dog went outside and saw Zebra standing over the broken gourd of medicine so Wild Dog and his family chased Zebra and tore him to shreds To this day African wild dogs hunt zebras and impalas as revenge for their failure to deliver the medicine that could have saved Wild Dog s wife 95 In media editDocumentary edit A Wild Dog s Tale 2013 a single painted dog named Solo by researchers befriends hyenas and jackals in Okavango hunting together Solo feeds and cares for jackal pups 96 97 The Pale Pack Savage Kingdom Season 1 2016 was the story of Botswana African wild dog pack leaders Teemana and Molao written and directed by Brad Bestelink and narrated by Charles Dance premiered on National Geographic 98 99 Dynasties 2018 TV series episode 4 Produced by Nick Lyon Tait is the elderly matriarch of a pack of painted wolves in Zimbabwe s Mana Pools National Park Her pack is driven out of their territory by Tait s daughter Blacktip the matriarch of a rival pack in need of more space for their large family of 32 Their combined territory also shrunk over Tait s lifetime due to the expansion of human hyena and lion territories Tait leads her family into the territory of a lion pride in the midst of a drought with Blacktip s pack in an eight month long pursuit When Tait died the pack was observed performing a rare singing the purpose of which is unclear 100 See also edit nbsp Mammals portal nbsp Animals portalAfrican Wild Dog Conservancy Botswana Wild Dog Research Project Harnas Wildlife Foundation Institute of Zoology Painted Dog Conservation Wildlife Conservation NetworkExplanatory notes 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 Martinez Navarro B amp Rook L 2003 Gradual evolution in the African hunting dog lineage systematic implications Comptes Rendus Palevol 2 8 695 702 Bibcode 2003CRPal 2 695M doi 10 1016 j crpv 2003 06 002 a b c d e Woodroffe R amp Sillero Zubiri C 2020 amended version of 2012 assessment Lycaon pictus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T12436A166502262 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 1 RLTS T12436A166502262 en Retrieved 17 February 2022 Temminck 1820 Ann Gen Sci Phys 3 54 pl 35 a b African Wild Dog Lycaon pictus Temminck 1820 WildAfrica cz Animal Encyclopedia Wildafrica cz Retrieved 5 September 2017 a b c Creel Scott Creel Nancy Marusha 31 December 2019 The African Wild Dog Behavior Ecology and Conservation Princeton University Press p 158 ISBN 978 0 691 20700 1 Whittington Jones Brendan 2015 African Wild Dogs On the Front Line Jacana ISBN 978 1 4314 2129 9 a b c Woodroffe R McNutt J W amp Mills M G L 2004 African Wild Dog Lycaon pictus In Sillero Zubiri C Hoffman M amp MacDonald D W eds Foxes Jackals and Dogs Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan Gland Switzerland IUCN SSC Canid Specialist Group pp 174 183 ISBN 978 2 8317 0786 0 Roskov Y Abucay L Orrell T Nicolson D Bailly N Kirk P M Bourgoin T DeWalt R E Decock W De Wever A Nieukerken E van Zarucchi J Penev L eds 2018 Canis lycaon Temminck 1820 Catalogue of Life 2018 Checklist Catalogue of Life Retrieved 30 November 2018 Painted Dog Conservation Main page Painted Dog Conservation African wild dog facts and photos National Geographic 10 June 2011 Archived from the original on 12 April 2021 Retrieved 28 May 2023 a b Smith C H 1839 Dogs W H Lizars Edinburgh p 261 269 a b c d Skinner J D amp Chimimba C T 2005 The African wild dog The Mammals of the Southern African Sub region Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 474 480 ISBN 978 0 521 84418 5 Scott Jonathan 1991 Painted Wolves Wild Dogs of the Serengeti Mara Viking Press p 8 ISBN 0241124859 Kristof N D 2010 Every wild dog has its day The New York Times Retrieved 18 October 2010 The Painted Wolf Foundation A Wild Dog s Life The Painted Wolf Foundation Retrieved 7 December 2018 Blades B 2020 What s in a name An evidence based approach to understanding the implications of vernacular name on conservation of the painted dog Lycaon pictus Language amp Ecology 2019 2020 1 27 Bothma J du P amp Walker C 1999 Larger Carnivores of the African Savannas Springer pp 130 157 ISBN 978 3 540 65660 9 a b Clutton Brock J Corbet G G Hills M 1976 A review of the family Canidae with a classification by numerical methods Bull Br Mus Nat Hist 29 119 199 doi 10 5962 bhl part 6922 Chavez Daniel E Gronau Ilan Hains Taylor Kliver Sergei Koepfli Klaus Peter Wayne Robert K 2019 Comparative genomics provides new insights into the remarkable adaptations of the African wild dog Lycaon pictus Scientific Reports 9 1 8329 Bibcode 2019NatSR 9 8329C doi 10 1038 s41598 019 44772 5 PMC 6554312 PMID 31171819 Stiner M C Howell F C Martinez Navarro B Tchernov E amp Bar Yosef O 2001 Outside Africa Middle Pleistocene Lycaon from Hayonim Cave Israel Bollettino della Societa Paleontologica Italiana 40 293 302 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 Archived from the original on 14 March 2012 Retrieved 28 April 2008 in French Baryshnikov Gennady 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 Marco Berte Davide F Rook Lorenzo Sardella Raffaele 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 Xiaoming Tedford Richard H Dogs Their Fossil Relatives and Evolutionary History New York Columbia University Press 2008 a b Hartstone Rose A Werdelin L De Ruiter D J Berger L R amp Churchill S E 2010 The Plio pleistocene ancestor of Wild Dogs Lycaon sekowei n sp Journal of Paleontology 84 2 299 308 Bibcode 2010JPal 84 299H doi 10 1666 09 124 1 S2CID 85585759 Smith P J Enenkel K A E 2014 Zoology in Early Modern Culture Intersections of Science Theology Philology and Political and Religious Education Intersections of Science Theology Philology and Political and Religious Education Brill p 83 ISBN 978 90 04 27917 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Gopalakrishnan Shyam Sinding Mikkel Holger S Ramos Madrigal Jazmin Niemann Jonas Samaniego Castruita Jose A Vieira Filipe G Caroe Christian Montero Marc de Manuel Kuderna Lukas Serres Aitor Gonzalez Basallote Victor Manuel Liu Yan Hu Wang Guo Dong Marques Bonet Tomas Mirarab Siavash Fernandes Carlos Gaubert Philippe Koepfli Klaus Peter Budd Jane Rueness Eli Knispel Heide Jorgensen Mads Peter Petersen Bent Sicheritz Ponten Thomas Bachmann Lutz Wiig Oystein Hansen Anders J Gilbert M Thomas P 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 Wozencraft W C 2005 Order Carnivora In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press pp 532 628 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b c d e f g h i j k Estes R 1992 The behavior guide to African mammals including hoofed mammals carnivores primates University of California Press pp 410 419 ISBN 978 0 520 08085 0 a b c Bryden H A 1936 Wild Life in South Africa George G Harrap amp Company Ltd pp 19 20 Thomas Oldfield Wroughton R C 1907 XLIII New mammals from Lake Chad and the Congo mostly from the collections made during the Alexander Gosling expedition Magazine of Natural History 19 375 Victor Montoro 14 July 2015 Lions cheetahs and wild dogs dwindle in West and Central African protected areas Mongabay Retrieved 10 January 2016 West African wild dog Zoological Society of London ZSL Retrieved 3 May 2021 Edwards J 2009 Conservation genetics of African wild dogsLycaon pictus Temminck 1820 in South Africa Magister Scientiae Pretoria University of Pretoria hdl 2263 29439 Woodroffe Rosie Ginsberg Joshua R April 1999 Conserving the African wild dog Lycaon pictus II Is there a role for reintroduction Oryx 33 2 143 151 doi 10 1046 j 1365 3008 1999 00053 x S2CID 86776888 See p 147 a b c d Rosevear D R 1974 The carnivores of West Africa London Trustees of the British Museum Natural History pp 75 91 ISBN 978 0 565 00723 2 McNutt J W 1996 Adoption in African wild dogs Lycaon pictus Journal of Zoology 240 1 163 173 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1996 tb05493 x Castello J R 2018 Canids of the World Wolves Wild Dogs Foxes Jackals Coyotes and Their Relatives Princeton University Press pp 230 a b c d e Creel Scott Creel Nancy Marusha 2002 The African Wild Dog Behavior Ecology and Conservation Princeton University Press pp 1 11 ISBN 978 0 691 01654 2 Pole A Gordon I J Gorman M L MacAskill M 2004 Prey selection by African wild dogs Lycaon pictus in southern Zimbabwe Journal of Zoology 262 2 207 215 doi 10 1017 s0952836903004576 Nicholson Samantha K Marneweck David G Lindsey Peter A Marnewick Kelly Davies Mostert Harriet T 11 February 2020 A 20 Year Review of the Status and Distribution of African Wild Dogs Lycaon pictus in South Africa African Journal of Wildlife Research 50 1 8 doi 10 3957 056 050 0008 hdl 2263 82809 ISSN 2410 7220 S2CID 213655919 Dutson Guy Sillero Zuberi Claudio 2005 Forest dwelling African wild dogs in the Bale Mountains Ethiopia PDF Canid News 8 3 1 6 Malcolm James R Sillero Zubiri C 2001 Recent records of African wild dogs Lycaon pictus from Ethiopia Canid News 4 Fanshawe J H Ginsberg J R Sillero Zubiri C amp Woodroffe R 1997 The Status and Distribution of Remaining Wild Dog Populations In Woodroffe R Ginsberg J amp MacDonald D eds Status Survey and Conservation Plan The African Wild Dog Gland IUCN SSC Canid Specialist Group pp 11 56 a b c d e Kingdon J 1988 East African mammals an atlas of evolution in Africa Vol Volume 3 Part 1 Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 36 53 ISBN 978 0 226 43721 7 a b Nowak R M 2005 Walker s Carnivores of the World Baltimore Johns Hopkins Press p 112 ISBN 978 0 8018 8032 2 Robbins R L October 2000 Vocal Communication in Free Ranging African Wild Dogs Lycaon pictus Behaviour 137 10 1271 1298 JSTOR 4535774 Kleiman D G 1967 Some aspects of social behavior in the Canidae American Zoologist 7 2 365 372 doi 10 1093 icb 7 2 365 Creel S 1998 Social organization and effective population size in carnivores In Caro T M ed Behavioral ecology and conservation biology Oxford University Press pp 246 270 ISBN 978 0 19 510490 5 Kleiman D G Eisenberg J F 1973 Comparisons of canid and felid social systems from an evolutionary perspective Animal Behaviour 21 4 637 659 doi 10 1016 S0003 3472 73 80088 0 PMID 4798194 Allen Michael Mulheisen Crystal Allen Crystal Lycaon pictus African wild dog Animal Diversity Web Retrieved 20 December 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Dogs in the Wild Defending Wild Dogs How Wild Dogs Recover from Broken Hearts PBS Nature 2023 Retrieved 23 February 2023 Dogs in the Wild Defending Wild Dogs PBS Nature 31 January 2023 Retrieved 23 February 2023 Painted Dogs Archived from the original on 1 February 2022 Retrieved 12 June 2021 Walker Reena H King Andrew J McNutt J Weldon Jordan Neil R 13 September 2017 Sneeze to leave African wild dogs Lycaon pictus use variable quorum thresholds facilitated by sneezes in collective decisions Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 284 1862 20170347 doi 10 1098 rspb 2017 0347 ISSN 0962 8452 PMC 5597819 PMID 28878054 Walker R H King A J McNutt J W Jordan N R 2017 Sneeze to leave African wild dogs Lycaon pictus use variable quorum thresholds facilitated by sneezes in collective decisions Proceedings of the Royal Society B 284 1862 20170347 doi 10 1098 rspb 2017 0347 PMC 5597819 PMID 28878054 a b c Becker P A Miller P S Gunther M S Somers M J Wildt D E amp Maldonado J E 2012 Inbreeding avoidance influences the viability of reintroduced populations of African wild dogs Lycaon pictus PLOS ONE 7 5 e37181 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 737181B doi 10 1371 journal pone 0037181 PMC 3353914 PMID 22615933 Charlesworth D amp Willis J H 2009 The genetics of inbreeding depression Nature Reviews Genetics 10 11 783 96 doi 10 1038 nrg2664 PMID 19834483 S2CID 771357 a b c Pole A Gordon I J Gorman M L amp MacAskill M 2004 Prey selection by African wild dogs Lycaon pictus in southern Zimbabwe Journal of Zoology 262 2 207 215 doi 10 1017 S0952836903004576 Morell V 1996 Hope Rises for Africa s wild dog International Wildlife 26 3 28 37 Hayward M W O Brien J Hofmeyr M amp Kerley G I 2006 Prey preferences of the African wild dog Lycaon pictus Canidae Carnivora ecological requirements for conservation Journal of Mammalogy 87 6 1122 1131 doi 10 1644 05 mamm a 304r2 1 Painted Wolf Animal Diversity Web Kruger S C Lawes M J amp Maddock A H 1999 Diet choice and capture success of wild dog Lycaon pictus in Hluhluwe Umfolozi Park South Africa Journal of Zoology 248 4 543 551 doi 10 1017 s0952836999008146 Ramnanan R Swanepoel L H amp Somers M J 2013 The diet and presence of African wild dogs Lycaon pictus on private land in the Waterberg region South Africa African Journal of Wildlife Research 43 1 68 74 doi 10 3957 056 043 0113 hdl 2263 37231 S2CID 54975768 Malcolm J R amp Van Lawick H 1975 Notes on wild dogs Lycaon pictus hunting zebras Mammalia 39 2 231 240 doi 10 1515 mamm 1975 39 2 231 S2CID 83740058 Clements H S Tambling C J Hayward M W amp Kerley G I 2014 An objective approach to determining the weight ranges of prey preferred by and accessible to the five large African carnivores PLOS ONE 9 7 e101054 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 9j1054C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0101054 PMC 4079238 PMID 24988433 Kruger S Lawes M Maddock A 1999 Diet choice and capture success of wild dog Lycaon pictus in Hluhluwe Umfolozi Park South Africa Journal of Zoology 248 4 543 551 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1999 tb01054 x Nkajeni U WATCH More than 15 wild dogs take down an adult buffalo Sunday Times South Africa Retrieved 16 July 2023 Schaller G B 1973 Golden Shadows Flying Hooves New York Alfred A Knopf p 277 ISBN 978 0 394 47243 0 Hubel Tatjana Y Myatt Julia P Jordan Neil R Dewhirst Oliver P McNutt J Weldon Wilson Alan M April 2016 Additive opportunistic capture explains group hunting benefits in African wild dogs Nature Communications 7 1 11033 Bibcode 2016NatCo 711033H doi 10 1038 ncomms11033 PMC 4820541 PMID 27023355 S2CID 7943459 Hubel T Y Myatt J P Jordan N R Dewhirst O P McNutt J W Wilson A M 2016 Energy cost and return for hunting in African wild dogs and cheetahs Nature Communications 7 1 11034 Bibcode 2016NatCo 711034H doi 10 1038 ncomms11034 PMC 4820543 PMID 27023457 Woodroffe R Lindsey P A Romanach S S amp Ranah S M O 2007 African wild dogs Lycaon pictus can subsist on small prey implications for conservation Journal of Mammalogy 88 1 181 193 doi 10 1644 05 mamm a 405r1 1 Nowak R M 2005 Walker s Carnivores of the World Baltimore Johns Hopkins Press p 113 ISBN 978 0 8018 8032 2 a b c Woodroffe R amp Ginsberg J R 1997 Past and Future Causes of Wild Dogs Population Decline In Woodroffe R Ginsberg J amp MacDonald D eds Status Survey and Conservation Plan The African Wild Dog Gland IUCN SSC Canid Specialist Group pp 58 73 Woodroffe R Ginsberg J R 1999 Conserving the African wild dog Lycaon pictus I Diagnosing and treating causes of decline Oryx 33 2 132 142 doi 10 1046 j 1365 3008 1999 00052 x Creel S amp Creel N M 1996 Limitation of African wild dogs by competition with larger carnivores Conservation Biology 10 2 526 538 doi 10 1046 j 1523 1739 1996 10020526 x Creel S amp Creel N M 1998 Six ecological factors that may limit African wild dogs Lycaon pictus Animal Conservation 1 1 1 9 doi 10 1111 j 1469 1795 1998 tb00220 x Pienaar U de V 1969 Predator prey relationships amongst the larger mammals of the Kruger National Park Koedoe 12 1 108 176 doi 10 4102 koedoe v12i1 753 Schaller G B 1972 The Serengeti lion A study of predator prey relations Chicago University of Chicago Press p 188 ISBN 978 0 226 73639 6 McNutt J amp Boggs L P 1997 Running Wild Dispelling the Myths of the African Wild Dog Washington D C Smithsonian Books Creel S amp Creel M N 1998 Six ecological factors that may limit African wild dogs Lycaon pictus Animal Conservation 1 1 1 9 doi 10 1111 j 1469 1795 1998 tb00220 x Kruuk H 1972 The Spotted Hyena A Study of Predation and Social Behaviour University of California Press pp 139 141 ISBN 978 0 226 45508 2 Creel S amp Creel N M 2002 The African Wild Dog Behavior Ecology and Conservation Princeton University Press pp 253 254 ISBN 978 0 691 01654 2 Palomares F amp Caro T M 1999 Interspecific killing among mammalian carnivores The American Naturalist 153 5 492 508 doi 10 1086 303189 hdl 10261 51387 PMID 29578790 S2CID 4343007 a b Abischer T Ibrahim T Hickisch R Furrer R D Leuenberger C amp Wegmann D 2020 Apex predators decline after an influx of pastoralists in former Central African Republic hunting zones PDF Biological Conservation 241 108326 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2019 108326 S2CID 213766740 Jackman B amp Scott J 2012 The marsh lions the story of an African pride Bradt Travel Guides McCreery E K Robbins R L 2004 Sightings of African wild dogs Lycaon pictus in southeastern Kenya PDF Canid News 7 4 1 5 Sillero Zubiri C Hoffmann M Macdonald D W 2004 Canids Foxes Wolves Jackals and Dogs Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan Gland Switzerland and Cambridge UK IUCN SSC Canid Specialist Group IUCN pp 335 336 Archived from the original on 6 October 2011 Retrieved 4 October 2011 Githiru et al 2007 African wild dogs Lycaon pictus from NE Kenya Recent records and conservation issues Zoology Department Research Report National Museum of Kenya Baines J 1993 Symbolic roles of canine figures on early monuments Archeo Nil Revue de la societe pour l etude des cultures prepharaoniques de la vallee du Nil 3 57 74 doi 10 3406 arnil 1993 1175 S2CID 193657797 Hendrickx S 2006 The dog the Lycaon pictus and order over chaos in Predynastic Egypt in Kroeper K Chlodnicki M amp Kobusiewicz M eds Archaeology of Early Northeastern Africa Studies in African Archaeology 9 Poznan Poznan Archaeological Museum 723 749 Littman Enno 1910 Publications of the Princeton Expedition to Abyssinia vol 2 Leyden Late E J Brill pp 79 80 Culture Out of Africa www dhushara com Retrieved 3 March 2019 a b De la Harpe R amp De la Harpe P 2010 In search of the African wild dog the right to survive Sunbird p 41 ISBN 978 1 919938 11 0 Greaves Nick 1989 When Hippo was Hairy and other tales from Africa Bok Books pp 35 38 ISBN 978 0 947444 12 9 National Geographic TV Shows Specials amp Documentaries National Geographic Channel 2013 Archived from the original on 23 September 2014 The Amazing Story of Solo the African Wild Dog Who Lost Her Pack Video The Safarist 20 December 2014 INTERVIEW Savage Kingdom returns with wild wild drama Hollywood Soapbox 23 November 2017 Retrieved 9 January 2020 The Pale Pack National Geographic 17 October 2017 Retrieved 9 January 2020 Shaw Alfie 2019 Painted wolf singing ritual filmed for first time BBC Earth Archived from the original on 21 November 2020 Further reading editVan Lawick H amp Goodall J 1971 Innocent Killers Houghton Mifflin Company BostonExternal links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Lycaon pictus painteddog org Painted Dog Conservation Website painteddog co uk Painted Dog Conservation United Kingdom Website African Wild Dog Conservancy African Wild Dog Watch Wild Dog conservation in Zimbabwe Namibia Nature Foundation Wild Dog Project Conservation of African wild dogs in Namibia 1 at African Wildlife Foundation The Zambian Carnivore Programme Save the African wild dog Wildentrust org Painted Dog Conservation conservation organization Photos videos and information from ARKive ibream wild dog project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African wild dog amp oldid 1207443798, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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