Sentences with word «dhole»

Assigned tasks include everything from fitting Dholes with tracking collars and analyzing the data the collars collect to surveying the flora and fauna of the parks.
In 2011, dhole packs were recorded by camera traps in the Chitwan National Park.
I'm not sure how you got the impression that dholes are dogs, though.
However, black is not evident in the Canidae family — wild dogs such as Dingo, Culpeo, Dhole, Bush Dog or wolves, jackals, foxes or coyotes.
Dholes are classed as endangered by the IUCN.
African wild dogs can run up to 37 miles per hour and Dhole can run 34 miles per per hour.
Dholes can kill prey up to ten times their own size and run very fast.
The Dhole is a wild Indian dog, also known as a Red Dog or Fox Dog.
Native to Central, South to Southeast Asia, the Dhole (also known as the Asiatic wild dog, red dog, and whistling dog) is about the size of a German Shepherd but looks a whole lot more like a long legged fox!
India's National Parks (open Oct - May) are home to tigers, Indian bison, dholes, swamp deer, leopards, bears and birdlife.
First - of - a-kind surveys of forests in Karen state in southeast Myanmar also yielded records of at least 31 species of mammals, including tigers, Asian elephants, Phayre's langurs and dholes.
Among those were two concessions covering nearly 50,000 acres granted to Try Pheap Group inside Virachey National Park, a supposedly federally protected area and home to sun bears, small - clawed otters, and dholes, an endangered species of wild dog.
We look forward especially to some work with other endangered dog species such as the dhole (Cuon alpinus) or the South American bush dog (Speothos venaticus.)
«Tigers, leopards, and dholes are doing a delicate dance in these protected areas, and all are managing to survive.
As WCS reports, tigers and dholes are classified as Endangered by IUCN; leopards are considered Vulnerable.
Tiger And Prey Populations Stabilized The footage obtained this year shows the vast variety of animals, many of them rare, roaming through Thailand's forests: tigers, elephants, leopards, dholes (a wild species of dog), clouded leopards, bantengs (a wild species of cattle), gaurs, sun bears, lisangs, wild boars, muntjacs (a type of small deer), hog badgers, pangolins, green peafowl, and Malayan tapirs.
So it came as a surprise for researchers in India to find tigers, leopards, and dholes (Asian wild dog) living side by side with surprisingly little conflict.
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