Curse of the Devil's Dogs
Traditionally viewed as dangerous pests, Africa's wild dogs have nearly been wiped out. But thanks to new conservation efforts, the smart, sociable canines appear ready to make a comeback
- By Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Greg Rasmussen says he dislikes the term "wild dog" because it reinforces the animal's nasty reputation. He prefers "painted dog," and indeed, among canid experts, Rasmussen is "Mr. Painted Dog." His base is at Zimbabwe's Hwange National Park, in northern Matabeleland, about 120 miles from spectacular Victoria Falls. Hwange spreads across 5,650 square miles, 90 percent of it Kalahari sand. At the northeastern edge of the park, a huddle of bungalows houses Painted Dog Conservation (PDC), a program set up by Rasmussen in 2002. There are about 150 wild dogs in the park, and Rasmussen has studied them in their natural habitat for two decades.
At the center, I settle into a chalet-style room with a view of a water hole, a draw for wild animals because of a persistent drought. More than 100 elephants troop in to slurp up water and spray themselves with cooling mud just a few yards from where I sit in the darkness. A leopard slinks across the flat dry pan toward the hole, causing several sable antelope, led by a male with huge curving horns, to skitter away. But I see no wild dogs. They get much of their fluids from the blood of prey.
Rasmussen, stocky and 50 years old, was born in London and came to Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia) with his mother and father, a schoolteacher at a private academy, when he was 11. "I loved animals and found myself in heaven," he says. In 1988, an American wild dog researcher, Joshua Ginsberg, offered him a job observing the animals in Hwange National Park because, Ginsberg recalls, Rasmussen "obviously enjoyed being out in the bush for months at a time observing wild animals, and I needed someone like that to follow the wild dogs."
Rasmussen started to live with a pack, following the wild dogs around the national park in his SUV and sleeping near them. "Their hunts usually start when the temperature is cool," he says. "By 9 a.m., it's too hot to hunt, and so the dogs lie up all day, sleeping together in a great heap." Often they hunt by the light of the moon. "They're very successful in the moonlight, and get more kudu than other prey on these hunts."
What attracted Rasmussen to the wild dogs and kept him going through the lonely days and nights out in the bush was what he calls their "perfect social harmony." They rarely fight among themselves, Rasmussen says, and "the pack members daily reinforce their bonding by elaborate greeting rituals, with leaps, tail wagging, squeals, twittering and face licking—when they wake up, just before they hunt and when they come back from a kill." As Gunther says, "The wild dog is one of the most intensely social animals we know. The pack is always living, playing, walking, running, hunting and feeding together."
Rasmussen remembers once seeing a wild dog get swatted by a lion, opening a deep gash around its neck. The wound was so bad that a veterinarian Rasmussen consulted recommended putting the animal down. "The pack knew better than the vet," Rasmussen says with a smile. "The dogs dragged their wounded member away and looked after it for three months. They appointed one of the dogs I called Circus to act like a medic, constantly licking the wound and making sure the injured dog got food after the pack returned from a kill. Three months later I saw the injured dog, its neck now healed, back in the pack and taking part in the hunt." Later, Rasmussen observed a dog he called Doc seemingly deputized to be the pack's medic. Doc fed and tended five injured dogs, Rasmussen says, feeding them by regurgitating food, something wild dogs can do at will.
Rasmussen found that the animals' social organization is so complete that each pack member was allotted a task suited to its skills. A dog he named Magellan proved almost useless in the hunt, and was once seen running after a rabbit while the other wild dogs tore after a kudu. But Magellan soon took on another role—babysitter. "He stood guard over the pups while the others were away at a hunt," Rasmussen says, "alerting them of any danger so they could quickly shoot down into the protection of the den."
Wild dog litters can number up to 20 pups—one of the largest litters of carnivores—and the pups stay in and around their underground den for about three months before they begin to run with the pack. Usually only the dominant pair of dogs in each pack breeds, the alpha male and alpha female, and they mate for life. (Beta females sometimes also have pups.) "The other dogs are incredibly loyal to the puppies and join in to raise them," says Rasmussen. Unlike lions and hyenas, they allow their young to feed first after a kill, even before the dominant pair.
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Comments (13)
African wild dog arfe just like us trying to live. we have no right to take there home and to kill them. they are like us trying to live. like i said beofr it is the mom fault for not watching the 3 year old boy. they don t know bettter, i am sick of people thinking african wild dog are bad animal. they are good animal
Posted by bob on April 29,2013 | 09:57 PM
I'm doing a report on the african wild dog and it has been lots of fun my whole class was to pick an endangered animal and I chose to do the african wild dog. We have to make a 16 page book and 12 pages are info and data that we have collected for the report
Posted by on December 12,2012 | 04:26 PM
Your " misunderstood " wild dogs just mauled a 3 year old at the Pittsburgh Zoo. They tore him apart in seconds with no provocation.
Posted by Craig on November 5,2012 | 01:17 PM
I can answer my own question ...
African Wild Dog
Sotho – Lekanyane
Swahili - Mbwa mwitu
Tsonga / Shangaan – mahlolwa
Tswana - Lethalerwa
Xhosa - Ixhwili
Zulu - Inkentshane
Afrikaans - Wildehond
Posted by Grant on June 27,2009 | 07:55 PM
What is the Zulu name for the Wild Dog/ Painted dog?
Posted by Grant on June 27,2009 | 07:51 PM
Does anyone know their population at the moment??
Posted by Josh Leonard on May 5,2009 | 05:38 PM
Hi!!!it was really good! Just a suggestion you should put more things in it about Demistic dogs being a pain in the bush cause im doing a project on it
Posted by on March 3,2009 | 12:51 AM
Hi, very interesting article! I would love to help out on a Painted Hunting Dog conservation project, but all the ones I've looked at so far are too expensive for me - any suggestions. I fell in love with the PHD when I visited Africa last year. I had the pleasure of helping raise the 4 pups that were on the farm at the time. These beautiful creatures need saving! Any information would be greatfully appreciated. Thanks, Sara
Posted by Sara on February 1,2009 | 03:27 PM
I am looking for some information on a dog they nicknamed the demon dog. I think its real name starts with a c. I had seen a peice of article about it on tv, but missed most of it, there is a legend about it sucking the blood from its prey. If you can email me any information on it. thank you
Posted by leslie on January 25,2009 | 06:07 PM
Hi. I read this article for a crrent events project. But, then I found out more about the wild dogs, and it was quite interesting. The wild dogs are loosing their homes because of man. Man has been taking over all the beautiful areas in the world. I want to help them. We have to fight fire against fire. Like, protesting. We have to help, and we need more people to do it with us.
Posted by Eleanor on November 15,2008 | 07:45 AM
Is there anyway for us as kids to help The Devil's Dogs? I am 15yrs old and i want to help, tell me if there is anyway i can help? please inform me if anything =)
Posted by Jasmine on February 29,2008 | 11:31 PM
hello, i am intrested in helping these wild dogs. i am only 12 if there is anything i can do please inform me?? thank you ,
Posted by soleil on January 15,2008 | 08:19 PM
I had the unique pleasure of seeing a pack of eight wild dogs in Kruger in 2002. Three adults cared for five pups. They ran in a triangular formation with the pups in the middle. It's amazing to think that such ordinary-sized animals are out there on the savanna with the big cats. Fantastic article about fantastic creatures.
Posted by Josh on December 15,2007 | 11:27 PM