cuon alpinus การใช้
- Some important species in the Cuon alpinus " and " Manis pentadactyla ".
- Milk teeth suggest that " Cuon alpinus " sheltered its offspring at the site.
- Dhole ( " Cuon alpinus " ) teeth and bones are the most numerous among carnivores.
- Other mammals in the park are the Malayan tapir, Sumatran dhole ( " Cuon alpinus sumatrensis " ) and siamang ( " Hylobates syndactylus syndactylus " ).
- It was theorised that this is due to the tiger mistaking the dogs for dholes ( " Cuon alpinus " ), which have been known to kill tigers on rare occasions.
- The "'European dhole "'( " Cuon alpinus europaeus " ) was a paleosubspecies of dhole which ranged throughout much of Western and Central Europe during the late Middle Pleistocene.
- Legend has it that the third abbot of Bangkaew mating was thought to be either a golden jackal ( " Canis aureus " ) or a dhole ( " Cuon alpinus " ) living in the surrounding forest.
- About half of the large mammals found in Kerala are reported from Chimmony Wildlife Sanctuary, especially some of the globally threatened species such as tiger ( Panthera tigris ), Asian elephant ( Elephas maximus ) and wild dog ( Cuon alpinus ).
- Wayne ( 1986 ) concluded that the dog is closer in skull morphology to " C . latrans, C . aureus, C . adustus, C . mesomelas, Cuon alpinus " and " Lycaon pictus " than to the wolf.
- Several species of large mammal occur in the delta, but their populations are small and scattered, with the possible exceptions of the wild dog, and otters ( " Panthera pardus, P . tigris, Cuon alpinus ", and " Lutra " species ).
- Two canid species have common names specifically calling them " wild dogs ", but are entirely different species from the domestic dog ( " Canis lupus familiaris " ) : the African wild dog ( " Lycaon pictus, " ) and the Indian wild dog ( " Cuon alpinus " ), more commonly known as the dhole.
- Charles Darwin in his " Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication " when discussing the origin of the domestic dog, mentions that Hodgson succeeded in taming the young of the race " primaevus " of the dhole or Indian wild dog ( " Cuon alpinus " ), and in making them as fond of him and as intelligent as ordinary dogs.