African Wild Dogs | African Wild Dogs Hunting Pictures
African Wild Dog pack sharing a meal
The Painted Dogs usually hunt twice
a day and almost all the pack takes part. If there are pups to take care of,
then both the bitches and the male dogs take turns in baby-sitting. Usually the
pack is up to 20 dogs, but packs of 90 dogs have been observed. When Mbwa Mwitu
hunt, they recklessly charge their victims and kill them instantly. There
usually is one hunting leader and as the patches on the fur are different for
every specimen, the dogs easily recognize each other. Another advantage from
the patches is that the pack looks bigger than it is and the prey gets confused.
After killing the prey that usually is a Thomson gazelle or an impala, the Wild
Dogs usually eat as much as they can.
When they get back to the
baby-sitting Painted Dogs, the baby-sitters appear to “kiss” the hunters,
licking and poking at the corners of each other’s mouths. But this is really a
food-begging behavior that plays an important role in social bonding within the
pack. Then the dogs that have ate as much as they could, regurgitate (throw up)
the food for the pack members. This way not only the hunters have a chance to
feed.