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Dede, a African Wild Dog, is a special addition to the San Antonio Zoo.
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African Wild Dog
Meet some of the San Antonio Zoo's newest residents --- African wild dogs. "Dede," the female is 9 years old, and "Dayle," the male is 5 years old.
Auto Value Experts is sponsoring Dede. We are working to help provide funds for the San Antonio Zoo to support their efforts with Dede to help them in research that will directly effect the survival of this amazing species.
Featured as one of the premier species in the Zoo's new Africa Live 2! exhibit, wild dogs are not only fun to watch, but they are very important from a conservation standpoint.
Roaming the savannahs of Central and Southern Africa, wild dogs live in small to large packs. Competing with lions, leopards, and other predators for food, wild dogs work together to survive. To prevent their food from being stolen, wild dogs eat very quickly. In fact, a single wild dog can eat up to twenty pounds of meat in 10 minutes. Think about that for a moment ...the equivalent would be one person eating 200-quarter pound hamburgers!
Also known as painted dogs, these amazing animals are one of Africa's most endangered predators with less than 5,000 estimated to be left in the wild. That's one reason the San Antonio Zoo is working with African Wild Dog Conservation to fund wild dog field conservation, research and education.
Physical Characteristics
The African wild dog, also called the hunting dog, is a vanishing species in East Africa. Field studies have shown that the wild dog is a highly intelligent and social animal. Like most predators, it plays an important role in eliminating sick and weak animals, thereby helping maintain a natural balance and ultimately improving prey species. The stereotype of the wild dog as a cruel butcher is slowly being replaced by a less harsh image.
The African wild dog has a colorful, patchy coat, large bat-like ears and a bushy tail with a white tip that may serve as a flag to keep the pack in contact while hunting.
Habitat
Wild dogs live mostly in arid zones and in the savanna. They also are found in woodland and mountain habitats where their prey lives.
Behavior
African wild dogs live in packs of six to 20. The aggression exhibited towards prey is completely nonexistent between members of the pack and there is little intimidation among the social hierarchy. Their large range of vocalizations includes a short bark of alarm, a rallying howl and a bell-like contact call that can be heard over long distances. Elaborate greeting rituals are accompanied by twittering and whining. The entire pack is involved in the welfare of the pups, which are born in thick brush or in a den.
The hunting members of the pack return to the den where they regurgitate meat for the nursing female and pups. Although litters are very large, very few pups survive. Sometimes the dens are flooded, or the pups die from exposure or disease. When pack numbers are reduced, hunting is not as efficient and adults may not bring back sufficient food for the pups. The entire pack is involved in the welfare of the pups; both males and females babysit the young and provide food for them.
Diet
Wild dogs prey on gazelles and other antelopes, warthogs, wildebeest calves, rats and birds. They have a peculiar, playful ceremony that initiates each hunt: they circulate among themselves, vocalizing and touching until they get excited. When prey is targeted, some of the dogs run close to the animal, while others follow behind, taking over when the leaders tire. They can run long distances at speeds up to 35 miles per hour. Of the large carnivores, wild dogs are probably the most efficient hunters—targeted prey rarely escapes.
Predators and Threats
Throughout Africa, wild dogs have been shot and poisoned by farmers, hunters and, at one time, by rangers. Even though protected in parks and reserves, wild dog populations are dangerously low.
Did You Know?
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No two wild dogs are marked exactly the same, making it easy to identify different individuals. Why such a pattern should develop, and how it serves the hunting dog, has long intrigued scientists.
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Wild dogs are usually on the move over a very large range, covering for example, some 900 square miles in the Serengeti. After a litter is born, however, they will limit their travelling and hunting to areas closer to the den.

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