What's next? I am really hoping for the rest of Carnivora (bears and pinnipeds).
Bears, Pinnipeds, Hyenas, oh my!Correct - working on the post now.
The thread will also cover the Hyenidae, rather than devoting a whole thread to four specieseven though this is not a taxonomically sound grouping.
Can anyone tell me the difference between the Japanese Racoon Dog and the Mainland Racoon Dog (other then the fact that one lives In Japan, and the other the mainland)? Judging from the photos on this thread, they look basically the same.
Aren't many (namely eastern North American) populations of Red Fox thought to be hybrids with European animals?
That was the thinking for a long time, yeah, but it seems from genetic studies that there hasn't been all that much interbreeding relatively speaking.
@TeaLovingDave The gallery of Zoológico Simón Bolívar contains photos of the (probably) Costa Rican subspecies of the Grey Fox. Did you see my post about the Ecuadorian Culpeo?
I’m sure I can do better than this - this is taken from my phone; I’ve got some better pictures on my camera.
I’m sure I can do better than this - this is taken from my phone; I’ve got some better pictures on my camera.
Ruppell’s Fox | ZooChatWhere'd you see it?
~Thylo
Ruppell’s Fox | ZooChat
Oasys Mini Hollywood in Spain. If TLD put the collection name along with the photos in the threads it would be more helpful![]()
Coyote (Canis latrans)
The original range of this species was restricted to the western United States, Central America and southwestern Canada; however with the extirpation of the Grey Wolf, Red Wolf and Eastern Wolf from large portions of North America the range of the species has substantially increased and it now extends across the vast majority of the continent, south as far as Panama and missing only from the extreme north-east of Canada.
19 subspecies proposed; many of these may comprise regional variants given the recent spread of the species into the areas in question.
C. l. latrans
C. l. cagottis - photo by @Adam Khor
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C. l. clepticus
C. l. dickeyi
C. l. frustor - photo by @Ituri
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C. l. goldmani
C. l. hondurensis
C. l. impavidus
C. l. incolatus
C. l. jamesi
C. l. lestes - photo by @Ituri
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C. l. mearnsi - photo by @ThylacineAlive
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C. l. microdon
C. l. ochropus
C. l. peninsulae
C. l. texensis - photo by @ThylacineAlive
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C. l. thamnos
C. l. umpquensis
C. l. vigilis
Moreover, populations in the eastern United States and Canada comprise introgressive hybrids between C. latrans, C. lupus and C. lycaon:
Photo by @savethelephant
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