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         Wild Dogs Endangered:     more detail
  1. Livestock predation by endangered African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) in northern Kenya [An article from: Biological Conservation] by R. Woodroffe, P. Lindsey, et all
  2. In Search of the African Wild Dog by Roger and Pat de la Harpe, 2010-03-15
  3. The African Wild Dog: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation (Monographs in Behavior and Ecology) by Scott Creel, Nancy Marusha Creel, 2002-05-20
  4. Running Wild: Dispelling the Myths of the African Wild Dog by John McNutt, Lesley Boggs, et all 1997-01
  5. The African Wild Dog (The Library of Wolves and Wild Dogs) by J. D. Murdoch, M. S. Becker, 2002-08
  6. African Wild Dogs by Victor Gentle, Janet Perry, 2001-12
  7. African Wild Dog: Status Survey And Conservation Action Plan
  8. Decade of the Wolf: Returning the Wild to Yellowstone by Douglas W. Smith, Gary Ferguson, 2005-04-01
  9. Recovery Plan for the Eastern Timber Wolf - Revised 1992 by Eastern Timber Wolf Recovery Team, 1992
  10. Wild Stickers: Endangered Animals by Mike Maydak, 2000-06-01
  11. Wolves for Yellowstone? A Report to the United States Congress - Volumes I, II, III, & IV
  12. Shadow Mountain: A Memoir of Wolves, a Woman, and the Wild by Renee Askins, 2002-08-13
  13. Animal Children The Friends of the Forest and the Plain by - Edith Brown Kirkwood, 2009-07-18
  14. Keepers of the Wolves: The Early Years of Wolf Recovery in Wisconsin by Richard P. Thiel, 2001-11-26

61. African Wild Dog References - Woodland Park Zoo
Sites African wild Dog http//www.amnh.org/nationalcenter/endangered/dog/dog AmericanMuseum of Natural History Photo archive of African wild dogs from Animal
http://www.zoo.org/wild_dog/references.htm

Read All About It: African Wild Dogs

If you're curious about African Wild Dogs and other wild relatives of popular family pets, you can learn more about them through the library. Here are a few suggestions from the King County Library System for your exploration into the realm of the African wild dog.
King County Library System materials:
Books:
Running wild: dispelling the myths of the African wild dog
, by John McNutt, 1996. 149 pp.
A stunningly photographed look at the life of the wild dog, illustrating the author's discussions of the intimate details of pack life.
Wild dogs: the natural history of the nondomestic Canidae , by Jennifer W. Sheldon, 1992. 248 pp.
A scholarly study of foxes, wolves, jackals, coyotes, and other naturally wild dogs, discussing their distribution and habitat, physical characteristics, taxonomy, diet, reproduction, and social organization and behavior.
Especially for kids:
Wolves and wild dogs
, by Norman Barrett, 1991. 32 pp.

62. Rabies In African Wild Dogs (Lycaon Pictus) In The Madikwe Game Reserve
Paper from the Rabies Unit, Onderstepoort Veterinary Institute, 1999.Category Science Biology Carnivora Canines African wild Dog...... The African wild dog (Lycaon pictus) is an endangered canid species, which formerly 12African wild dogs are nomadic, highly social canids and form packs of up
http://www.vet.uga.edu/ivcvm/1999/Hofmeyr/hofmeyr.htm
List of Papers List of Registrants IVCVM Menu Rabies in African Wild Dogs ( Lycaon pictus ) in the Madikwe Game Reserve M. Hofmeyr, J. Bingham, E. P. Lane, A. Ide, and L. Nel Madikwe Game Reserve, North West Parks Board, PO Box 4124, Rustenburg 0300, South Africa (Hofmeyr); Rabies Unit, Onderstepoort Veterinary Institute, Private Bag X5, Onderstepoort 0110, South Africa (Bingham); Department of Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Private Bag X4, Onderstepoort 0110, South Africa (Lane and Ide); and Department of Microbiology and Plant Pathology, Biological and Agricultural Sciences, University of Pretoria, Pretoria 0002, South Africa (Nel) Abstract: Key Words: African wild dog, Lycaon pictus , Rabies Introduction The African wild dog ( Lycaon pictus ) is an endangered canid species, which formerly occupied most of the non-forested areas of sub-Saharan Africa. Currently, this species occurs only in localised areas of this range. African wild dogs are nomadic, highly social canids and form packs of up to 28 individuals with an average of around 8 - 12 members (Fig. 1). The main prey consists of antelope, which they mostly hunt down co-operatively. Packs are strictly hierarchical, each with a dominant (alpha) male and female. Usually only the alpha individuals breed, although the other members help to raise the young by bringing them food and by defending them. The average litter sizes is 7 - 10, although up to 19 may be born.

63. Wild Dogs (K-4)
wild dogs. wild dogs are not pets. It is believed that they were once domesticated,but became wild again. The Gray Wolf is an endangered species.
http://www.nmsu.edu/~molbio/dog/wildog.html
Wild Dogs Wild dogs are not pets. They should be left alone. Dingos are from Australia. It is believed that they were once domesticated, but became wild again.
They are 55 - 58 centimeters tall.
They weigh 14 - 20 kilograms.
Dingos eat everything from insects to kangaroos.
Photo courtesy of the Dingo Farm The Jackal is from Africa. They live in dry areas called Savannas.
They are 40 - 50 centimeters tall.
They weigh 7 - 14 kilograms.
They are nocturnal.
Photo courtesy of Africa Nature Photography Home page. The Gray Wolf is an endangered species. They hunt in packs.
They are 60 - 80 centimeters tall.
They weigh 50 - 63 kilograms. Photo by Lynn Rogers, courtesy of International Wolf Center Remember there are 2.5 cm/in and 0.45 kg/lb Return to: Dogs and Us homepage

64. Environmental Conservation - Resources Habitats Species - WWF South Africa
Their decline in numbers, and hence their endangered status, can be attributed inpart and isolated, with the only large, viable population of wild dogs in the
http://www.panda.org.za/conservation/environmental/focalpriorities.htm
Focal conservation priorities. - Sustainable use of renewable natural resources. Species and habitats of special concern. Protected areas. Legislation, policies and treaties. Pollution and consumption of non-renewable natural resources.
1.Sustainable use of renewable natural resources
2.Species and habitats of special concern

3.Protected areas

4.Legislation, policies and treaties
...
5.Pollution and consumption of non-renewable natural resources

1. Sustainable use of renewable natural resources

- encourage sustainable consumptive and non-consumptive use of natural resources
- determine, evaluate and implement measures and controls for sustainable use of natural resources
- reduce the deleterious effects of consumptive use of renewable natural resources
- support the provision of alternative, sustainable resources
- promote environmentally sustainable practices in agriculture, forestry, fisheries, hunting and tourism - mitigate the harmful effects of modified and transformed landscapes One of the most successful projects in this category carried out by WWF-SA is the Green Trust-funded project aimed at developing a management system for the utilisation of mussels along the northern KwaZulu-Natal Coast by both subsistence and recreational gatherers. The Sokhulu community in the Mapelane area has faced decades of persecution for their subsistence use of mussels along this coastline, but through collaboration with the conservation agency, is now harvesting the mussels using new methods, different frequencies and quantities. The gatherers have been given legal access to the resource in exchange for helping determine and promote harvesting methods that are sustainable in the long term.

65. Wild Dogs In Pet_Directory/Pets/Dogs/Wild_Dogs - SimplyPets.com
supports captive breeding of endangered canines such as African wild Dog and EthiopianWolf, promotes conservation of Coyotes and Dingo. wild dogs •Rate Site
http://www.simplypets.com/Pet_Directory/Pets/Dogs/Wild_Dogs/

Pet Quotations
Free Email Pet Food Recipes Pet News ... Dogs
Wild Dogs
  • Rate Site Shop for books on wolves, coyotes and other dog family species, including books for adults and children. Use links to sites about the wolf, wolves in Yellowstone, more. Can You I.D. Your Dog with DNA? Rate Site All one has to do is get a tissue sample from an animal, extract the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), and then map the genes on that mtDNA molecule. If two animals have the same map, then they were related sometime in the past. Article by Ray Coppinger, Ph.D., Canid Genetics Rate Site DNA, genetic inheritance, researchers, the relationship of wolf and dog, and more. Canid News Rate Site And other publications about wild dogs, from the IUCN/SSC Canid Specialist Group. Canid Skull Rate Site Diagram of the skull of a canid (wolf, dog, coyote). Diagramme du crâne d'un félin. Chordata - Mammalia - Canis. Canid Specialist Group Membership Rate Site Listing of research experts on canid species. Canid Species Here are links to accounts of the natural history of each of the 35 species of wild canids by region of the world. Prepared by the Canid Specialist Group of the World Conservation Union. Canidae Rate Site General information about the canidae, including a species listing.
  • 66. Brookfield Zoo | Field Guide - African Wild Dog
    There are fewer than 5,000 African wild dogs left in the wild, makingthem one of the most endangered large mammals in the world.
    http://www.brookfieldzoo.org/pagegen/htm/fix/fg/fg_body.asp?sAnimal=African wild

    67. Wild Dogs Need Urgent Conservation To Save Them
    wild dogs are in trouble. They are the most endangered carnivore species in SouthAfrica, with the only viable population occurring in the Kruger National Park
    http://www.wildlifedecisionsupport.com/interact/news/605.html

    ENTRANCE
    LATEST
    WildlifeDecisionSupport.com News Update
    Wild dogs need urgent conservation to save them January 09, 2003
    As wild dog numbers continue to decrease, with only about 350 dogs in South Africa and an estimated 4 500 in the whole of Africa, new approaches are being sought to ensure their conservation. Wild dogs are in trouble. They are the most endangered carnivore species in South Africa, with the only viable population occurring in the Kruger National Park, but even this population has halved in the past five years. Although scientists believe this to be part of a natural fluctuation, this finding serves to emphasise the seriousness of the predicament facing wild dogs in South Africa. Wild dogs need urgent conservation to save them from extinction, and new and innovative methods need to be developed to achieve this goal. This is exactly what Peter Lindsey is doing, with funding from the Green Trust. He’s doing a “a bioeconomic analysis of wild dog conservation in southern Africa”, the findings of which he hopes will indicate what exactly it would take to enable wild dogs to become economically self-sustaining – able to ‘stand on their own four feet’. In order to do this, Lindsey will first need to determine the status and distribution of wild dogs in South Africa, especially those living outside of protected areas. This will give a good indication of exactly what needs to be conserved.

    68. Harnas
    September 1997, a group of maltreated wild dogs was rescued and as a result of this,a new project, protecting and rehabilitating these endangered species, was
    http://www.harnas.org/harnas/projekte.html
    Goals and projects Your browser has javascript disabled. This may cause some functions not to work as expected.
    School projects
    Visits to primary schools encouraged Harnas to initiate a countrywide project to teach children about the various animals in Namibia. Knowing that today's children might be tomorrow's animal conservationists, they hope that contact with tame wild animals will reduce their fear and give them the opportunity to ask questions. By means of this project the van der Merwes want to foster an understanding of the importance of respectful relations with nature and to promote a willingness to protect animals.
    Wild dogs
    In September 1997, a group of maltreated wild dogs was rescued and as a result of this, a new project, protecting and rehabilitating these endangered species, was founded. Even though two wild dogs each lost a hind leg because of the maltreatment, the van der Merwes succeeded in integrating the captured group into a pack. A study is currently being conducted to record the characteristics of the wild dogs, as well as their social behaviour in the pack. A breeding programme has been introduced to counteract the extinction of wild dogs in their natural habit and to justify their possible rehabilitation into a safe territory.
    Research
    Commencing with the wild dogs, data of all animal species is to be collected and recorded. Apart from their life story, veterinarian information on diseases and vaccinations will assist in locating suitable partners for the breeding programmes. Studies on social behaviour and photos will assist in identifying those animals from Harnas that would be suitable for rehabilitation.

    69. TWD -- Wolves And Wild Dogs
    THE WOLF THE ECOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR OF AN endangered SPECIES Mech, L. David c FOXES,WOLVES, AND wild dogs OF THE WORLD Alderton, David c.1994, Facts On File ISBN
    http://my.erinet.com/~jwoolf/wolves.html
    Wolves and Other Canids
    Wolves have been a special interest of mine for many years, and I have a lot of books about them. Being interested in wolves leads naturally to being interested in other canids, so I have more than a few books about other members of the canid family too.
    Books about wolves
    There's probably been more written about wolves than about any other single living animal. I'm mainly interested in the science of wolves, so that's what my wolf books are mainly about. My books about wolves include: THE COMPANY OF WOLVES
    Steinhart, Peter
    c.1995, Alfred A. Knopf
    ISBN: 0-679-41881-4
    In-depth look at wolves and knowledge about wolves over roughly the last century. Includes detailed looks at red wolves, the wolves of Isle Royale, and the wolves that were recently reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park. The Company of Wolves is like a complement or update to Barry Lopez's book Of Wolves and Men . Steinhart more or less updates Lopez's view of wolves with the fruits of an additional twenty years of wolf research. FOLLOWING THE PACK: THE WORLD OF WOLF RESEARCH*
    Link and Crowley
    c.1994, Voyageur Press

    70. WILD DOGS
    lands of Southern Africa. An endangered species, African wild Dogsfind protection and companionship in extendedfamily groups.
    http://www.pulseplanet.com/archive/Jun98/1638.html
    Program #1638
    June 1998
    WILD DOGS
    ambience:
    African Wild Dogs, "who call"
    We're listening to the sounds of Wild Dogs calling to each other across the savannas and scrub lands of Southern Africa. An endangered species, African Wild Dogs find protection and companionship in extended-family groups. I'm Jim Metzner, and this is the Pulse of the Planet, presented by the American Museum of Natural History. Josh Ginsburg is Director of the Asia Program at the Wildlife Conservation Society. "Wild dogs look sort of like wolves, but not terribly much. They've got long legs and very lean bodies. They're almost greyhound-like. But they have very large ears that they move around to listen to the environment and to see what's happening. And they live in packs like wolves, with a group of males which are related to each other and a group of females that are related to each other and maybe eight to ten adults and six to eight pups in each pack. I think behaviorally they're somewhat like dogs in that they're very loyal and they're very group oriented. If you have domestic dogs go into the wild as they have in many cities and countries around the world, you have them become feral and feral dogs live in packs; they have very strong social systems; they have very structured hierarchies. And wild dogs have all that as well." The sound we're hearing now, the "who call" is one adaptation which allows African wild dogs to communicate with others in their pack, even over great distances.

    71. Mala Mala News - NOVEMBER 1996 - WILD DOGS ON MALAMALA
    The endangered African wild dog is a social species, the average pack size in and tohear that, as of January this year, a pair of wild dogs was regularly seen
    http://www.africantravel.com/rattray/news/mmn9610.html
    MALAMALA NOVEMBER 1996
    A LITTER BIT 'O' MAGIC

      WILD DOGS ON MALAMALA The endangered African wild dog is a social species, the average pack size in and around the Kruger Park being about nine. In a wild dog pack, breeding is usually restricted to one or two females, but all members of the pack help to look after feeding them and the mother with regurgitated meat. It was therefore interesting to hear that, as of January this year, a pair of wild dogs was regularly seen in the area of the Kruger Park MalaMala boundary. From Kruger Park photo identification records, it became apparent that the male was SHM1 and the female, GDF31. SHMl was first spotted in Kruger in 1993 as an adult. Until January 1996, he was mostly alone, roaming a 743 km area around the Stevenson-Hamilton koppies. He was occasionally seen in the company of several yearling females from the Doispane pack, whose range overlapped with his own, but before long he was alone again. GDF31 was one of 11 pups born in 1994 to the Gomondwane pack, which ranged over the Crocodile Bridge district. Wild dog identification is made simple in that every dog, despite their similarity to the untrained eye, has different colour markings. These markings permit scientists in the Kruger National Park to identify each dog from the colour markings on their left hand side. Tourists in the Kruger Park and surrounding private game reserves are encouraged to submit colour photographs, taken of wild dogs while on safari, to the scientists in Skukuza to assist in territory determination and identification.

    72. Wildlife Pictures - Information & News -- Pregnant Wild Dogs Released Into Umfol
    wild dogs are critically endangered, with only about 4 000 left inthe world. The dogs two males and two females - had been kept
    http://www.wildlifepics.co.za/news/100401.html
    Pregnant wild dogs released into Umfolozi Game Reserve
    April 10, 2001 Four wild dogs were released into the Umfolozi Game Reserve in Zululand on March 30 as part of The Green Trust's ongoing Wild Dog Project. (The Green Trust is managed by the World Wide Fund For Nature - South Africa and financed by Nedbank.) Wild dogs are critically endangered, with only about 4 000 left in the world. The dogs - two males and two females - had been kept in a boma (outside enclosure) for several months. On Friday 30 March, the boma was opened and a fresh impala carcass left in the grass outside to entice the four canines from their temporary home. The Wild Dog Project in the Umfolozi reserve is a necessary intervention. "If the wild dog populations in South Africa are not actively managed, the wild dog faces extinction," states Wild Dog Project Co-ordinator, Michael Somers. "Our work at Umfolozi is not to build up pack numbers in the park - it is not big enough for this - but rather to generate a wild dog gene pool so that larger parks can be restocked." He believes the only long-term solution to the problem is the creation of transfrontier parks that will give wild dogs enough room to roam. The only park with viable populations at the moment is the Kruger National Park.

    73. African Wild Dog
    Future of endangered African wild dogs The future of African wild dogs is lookingbrighter after the birth of a big litter at Zululand's HluhluweUmfolozi Park
    http://cybersleuth-kids.com/sleuth/Science/Animals/Mammals/African_Wild_Dog/

    74. EWCP - Threats To Ethiopian Wolves
    Is The endangered Ethiopian Wolf The Next Mammal Candidate For Extinction? Wolves,coyotes, wild dogs and foxes have been persecuted and killed for hundreds of
    http://www.wildcru.org/endangeredspecies/ethiopianwolf/ewcp/threats.htm
    Endangered species carnivores Ethiopian wolf conservation programme Threats to Ethiopian wolves The main threats facing Ethiopian wolves are essentially those encountered by most wildlife today: habitat loss and fragmentation and human interference. The recent decline in the numbers of wolves seems to be due to a combination of factors that result, directly or indirectly, from the above causes such as: road kills, shooting, disease epizootics, hybridization with domestic dogs and possibly loss of genetic variability. Loss of habitat can affect the survival of Ethiopian wolves in two ways:
    i) by decreasing the total habitat available, placing an upper limit on the global population
    ii) through habitat fragmentation
    Loss of habitat results in:
    - population isolation, increasing the rate of genetic variability loss
    - smaller populations, increasing rates of demographic stochasticity

    75. Wildfile-May
    wild dogs may not be Africa's fastest, largest or most beautiful creatures but ahealthy population of these wideranging endangered means there's still time.
    http://www.outthere.co.za/may97/wildmay1.html
    Photo: Dave Hamman/ABPL
    Compiled by
    Now that the wild dog has joined the fast-growing list of 'endangered species', it might have a better chance of survival. By Caroline Wheal
    lirting with extinction can do wonders for your public image. Since being tagged "Africa's most endangered large carnivore," the African wild dog (Lucaon pictus) Healthy numbers of these 'painted wolves', with their distinctive mottled coats of black, orange-brown and white, used to roam throughout southern and East Africa, but the deadly combination of habitat loss, domestic canine diseases and shoot-outs with farmers protecting their livestock has taken the sub-Saharan populations to near-extinction. In 1990, a rabies virus followed by canine distemper the next year, wiped out most of the packs in the Serengeti and Masai Mara. Today, there are about 5000 wild dogs left in Africa, and only three groups of more than 350 adults. These remaining robust populations live in northern Botswana, Tanzania's Selous Game Reserve and the Kruger National Park in South Africa. In pursuit, wild dogs can run up to 60km/h. Most kills occur 600 to 800m of where the chase began. Once a pack has brought down its prey, wild dogs become the terrestrial equivalent of a school of piranhas, stripping the carcass to bone and skin in minutes. They eat fast, before lions and hyenas pirate their kill.

    76. African Wild Dogs - Pictures, Breeders, Puppies, Rescues
    African wild dogs are the continent's most endangered predator. African wild dogpacks numbering a hundred or more animals a century ago, now are about 10.
    http://www.gotpetsonline.com/pictures-gallery/dogs-pictures/african-wild-dogs-pi
    Pictures Dogs
    African Wild Dogs
    Pictures, Breeders, Puppies, Rescues
    African wild dogs are the continent's most endangered predator. African wild dog packs numbering a hundred or more animals a century ago, now are about 10. The total population today is probably less than 60 dogs on the Serengeti. A strong, musky odor seems to help the pack find individuals that have become separated from the group. African wild dogs can reach speeds of more than 40 miles per hour (65 km/h).
    Do you care about your African Wild Dog? Click here to learn about the newest and best vitamin product available for your African Wild Dog.
    African Wild Dogs
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    77. Wild Dogs Links Page
    WILDLIFE CONSERVATION MONITORING CENTRE www.wcmc.org.uk. endangered WILDLIFETRUST www.ewt.org.za/. WORLD WIDE FUND FOR NATURE www.panda.org/.
    http://www.mluri.sari.ac.uk/wilddogs/wdlinks.htm
    Saturday April 12, 2003 "Research Today for Land Use Tomorrow" Text Only Version
    LICAONE FUND: www.licaonefund.org ZOO NEW ENGLAND: http://www.zoonewengland.com/ ON SAFARI INTERNATIONAL: http://www.osi.co.zw/ WILDLIFE CONSERVATION MONITORING CENTRE: www.wcmc.org.uk ENDANGERED WILDLIFE TRUST: www.ewt.org.za/ WORLD WIDE FUND FOR NATURE: www.panda.org/ AFRICAM: www.africam.co.za/ IUCN: www.iucn.org/
    See how the Institute benefits the following: Land Management Education Commercial Activities Researchers ... Policy We aim to be an international leader in research on the use of rural land resources for the benefit of people and the environment. The Macaulay Institute
    Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen, AB15 8QH, UK Tel: +44 (0) 1224 498200 Fax: +44 (0) 1224 311556

    78. Wild Dog Background Info
    The African wild dog is a highly endangered large carnivore with only an estimated3000 5000 occuring naturally in the wild. The population of wild dogs in the
    http://www.mluri.sari.ac.uk/wilddogs/wdback.htm
    Saturday April 12, 2003 "Research Today for Land Use Tomorrow" Text Only Version
    Background
    The Lowveld Wild Dog Project was set up in 1996 as a joint PhD research project between the Macaulay Land Use Research Institute and Aberdeen University in Scotland and the Institute of Environmental Studies in Zimbabwe. The main aim of the research was to investigate the behaviour and ecology of a population of African wild dogs, Lycaon pictus , in the absence of their two main competitors, lion Panthera leo and spotted hyaena Crocuta crocuta The project has been working mainly on Save Valley Conservancy (SVC), a large privately owned game reserve in the south east lowveld region of Zimbabwe. However, it has also been monitoring the whole population of wild dogs within the southeast lowveld region of Zimbabwe. To date ten radio collars have been fitted to wild dogs in different packs to assist with the research and monitoring. The project currently employs four African trackers that have proved to be invaluable field assistants. All three are experienced at foot tracking as well as radio tracking and are proficient at using handheld GPS units. Each tracker has his own mountain bike to help them keep up with the wide ranging dogs and they have been trained to write accurate reports on sightings of dogs, tracking movements and any kills located. The field work part of the PhD research finished in October 1999 but the project will continue if enough funding can be sourced.

    79. Dogs : Wild Dogs
    Websites related to wild dogs Wolf dogs Preserving Our World's wild Canines Thewild Dog Foundation support captive breeding of highly endangered canines
    http://dogs.yellopet.com/dogbreeds_a_to_z/wild_dogs_wolf_dogs.htm
    Dogs Search Engine: Search Tips
    Wild Dogs
    You are here: Dogs Directory Dogbreeds A to Z
    Websites related to
  • Ginger's Exotic Wolf Webcam - Wolf cams are Ginger's exotic nature hobby, these cams are live via webcam and javacam. The safety and care of the wolf and all animals are Ginger's passion.
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  • The Searching Wolf - Information about wolves. Comprehensive list of wolf sites. How to howl tutorial. Many wolf pictures, including puppies. Extensive bibliography of wolf technical journal articles (1988-present). Many wolf resource lists. Where to see wolves section. News of the wolf world section and much more ...
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  • Wild Dog Foundation - Preserving Our World's Wild Canines - The Wild Dog Foundation, a project of The World Carnivore Society, is dedicated to help promote wolf restoration, support captive breeding of highly endangered canines ...
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  • Gesellschaft zum Schutz der Wölfe e. V.
  • 80. SWAN /All Libraries
    2002 3 African wild dogs / by Victor Gentle And Janet Perry. 2002 4 All The King'sAnimals The Return Of endangered wildlife To Swaziland / written And
    http://swan.sls.lib.il.us:90/kids/0,11,35/search/dendangered species/dendangered
    KEYWORD AUTHOR TITLE SUBJECT All SWAN libraries Acorn Acorn Juvenile Alsip-Merrionette Park Alsip-Merrionette Park Juvenile Anderson/Oglesby Anderson/Oglesby Juvenile Bedford Park Bedford Park Juvenile Beecher Beecher Juvenile Bellwood Bellwood Juvenile Berkeley Berkeley Juvenile Berwyn Berwyn Juvenile Blue Island Blue Island Juvenile Broadview Broadview Juvenile Brookfield Zoo Brookfield Zoo Education Calumet City Calumet City Juvenile Calumet Park Calumet Park Juvenile Chicago Heights Chicago Heights Juvenile Chicago Ridge Chicago Ridge Juvenile Cicero Cicero Juvenile Cicero Branch Cicero Branch Juvenile Clarendon Hills Clarendon Hills Juvenile Crestwood Crestwood Juvenile Crete Crete Juvenile Dolton Dolton Juvenile Downers Grove Downers Grove Juvenile Eisenhower Eisenhower Juvenile Elmhurst Elmhurst Juvenile Elmwood Park Elmwood Park Juvenile Evergreen Park Evergreen Park Juvenile Flossmoor Flossmoor Juvenile Forest Park Forest Park Juvenile Frankfort Frankfort Juvenile Frankfort Bookmobile Glenwood-Lynwood Glenwood-Lynwood Juvenile Grande Prairie Grande Prairie Juvenile Harvey Harvey Juvenile Hillside Hillside Juvenile Hinsdale Hinsdale Juvenile Hodgkins Hodgkins Juvenile Homewood Homewood Juvenile Indian Prairie Indian Prairie Juvenile Justice Justice Juvenile La Grange La Grange Juvenile La Grange Park La Grange Park Juvenile Lyons Lyons Juvenile Matteson Matteson Juvenile Maywood Maywood Juvenile McClure Junior High School McClure Junior High School Audiovisual McConathy

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