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In Greece, rodents, insects, carrion, and fruits comprise the jackal's diet. However, they rarely eat garbage, due to large numbers of stray dogs preventing them access to places with high human density. [11] Jackals in Turkey have been known to eat the eggs of the endangered green sea-turtle. [14]
The vegetative parts of this plant are more similar in appearance to a fungus than a plant. [8] These plants do not have chlorophyll and do not perform photosynthesis. They obtain their nutrients entirely from a host plant, such as a species of Euphorbia. The plant is composed of thick succulent roots with no stems and the flower develops on ...
The golden jackal (Canis aureus), also called the common jackal, is a wolf-like canid that is native to Eurasia.The golden jackal's coat varies in color from a pale creamy yellow in summer to a dark tawny beige in winter.
Jackals are canids native to Africa and Eurasia.While the word "jackal" has historically been used for many canines of the subtribe canina, in modern use it most commonly refers to three species: the closely related black-backed jackal (Lupulella mesomelas) and side-striped jackal (Lupulella adusta) of Central and Southern Africa, and the golden jackal (Canis aureus) of south-central Europe ...
The side-striped jackal is a slender, medium-sized canid, which tends to be slightly larger on average than the black-backed jackal. Body mass ranges from 6.5 to 14 kg (14 to 31 lb), head-and-body length from 69 to 81 cm (27 to 32 in) and tail length from 30 to 41 cm (12 to 16 in). [16]
Golden jackals appear prominently in Indian and Nepali folklore, where they often take over the role of the trickster taken by the red fox in Europe and North America. The story of The Blue Jackal for example has the jackal disguising itself with blue paint as Neelaakanth, the guardian of all animals, and tricking the other animals into providing food for him, so that he may continue ...
Sonoma tree vole, Arborimus pomo (CDFW special concern; endemic) Western red-backed vole, Clethrionomys californicus; Sagebrush vole, Lemmiscus curtatus; California vole, Microtus californicus. Monterey vole, M. c. halophilus (endemic) Mojave River vole, M. c. mohavensis (CDFW special concern; endemic)
Black-backed jackals have never been successfully eradicated in hunting areas, despite strenuous attempts to do so with dogs, poison, and gas. [11] Black-backed jackal coursing was first introduced to the Cape Colony in the 1820s by Lord Charles Somerset , who as an avid fox hunter, sought a more effective method of managing jackal populations ...