Pack behavior in specific species
African wild dogs (''Lycaon pictus'') live and hunt in packs. Males assist in raising the pups, and remain with their pack for life, while the females leave their birth pack at about the age of two and a half years old to join a pack with no females. Males outnumber the females in a pack, and usually only one female is present to breed with all males. African wild dogs are notPack behavior in grey wolves
Wolves are pack animals known for forming affiliative bonds within the pack hierarchy. Wolves in packs are known for playing with one another. It has been observed that the playing between wolves are not random: it may be a reflection of the relationships present in the pack, reflecting any tension, cooperation, and competition present. Tensions are noted to become higher around breeding season where the cost and benefits are weighed against each other. Female wolves are known for being the main initiators of affiliative interactions, though a small percentage of males will initiate affiliative interactions. The omega male is not a target of any affiliative interaction. In other studies, researchers have separated the most dominant wolf from the most subordinate wolves. It was recorded that the dominant wolf spent less time sleeping and showed more behavioral stress compared to the omega wolf. The dominant wolf was reported to rest in the section of his enclosure closest to his pack. Furthermore, researchers noted that younger, more subordinate wolves appear to have less attachment to their pack compared to their higher ranking compatriots. Wolves' cooperation is essential for tasks such as hunting and protecting young, though the level of attachment present in the pack are not necessarily equal. The majority of wolves are known for dispersing from their birth pack; this makes measuring attachment behavior within the packs difficult. Though there are cases in which wolves leave their pack, typically when accompanying siblings of the same sex. This behavior is suggested to be a form of adaptive behavior that benefits both pack mates in future conflict. All individuals benefit from being a member of the wolf pack; the weak are supported by the efforts of stronger wolves, and higher ranking individuals enjoy better and larger kills than could be taken on their own. Protection is granted by sheer number, and larger, more plentiful territory can be won and sustained. Care and protection of young is shared, and knowledge can be passed down through generations, creating a unique culture within each group The pack is typically a nuclear family unit. It often consists of 5–10 (though in areas of high prey abundance can be up to 20) mostly related individuals, specifically consisting of a typically unrelated breeding pair also known as the alphas, their offspring, and occasionally a handful of other wolves which can be related or not.PDF available at wolf.orgThe lone wolf
These singular outside wolves, often referred to as lone wolves, are vulnerable to food scarcity and territorial attacks, and generally comprise less than 15% of the total wolf population. Lone wolves usually result from sexually mature offspring leaving their parental pack, though may also occur if harassed subordinates chose to disperse. In times of prey scarcity, low ranking wolves may choose to go off on their own if the pack cannot supply sufficient food. These lone wolves may then attempt to join into an existing wolf pack or, more commonly, find a mate and begin a new pack family as the alphas.The breeding pair ("alphas")
Within the wolf pack, the breeding pair or the dominant breeding pair (in packs with multiples breeders), often referred to in familiar language as the "alpha pair" or the "alphas wolves", are typically the wolves in the family unit which breed and produce offspring; they are the matriarch and patriarch of the family. It was previously believed to be common for an aging or sick alpha to be replaced by one of their offspring, but more recent studies have shown this incestuous behavior to be very rare.The pups
Dominance and the "alpha wolf"
Animals which typically predominate over others are associated with the term ''alpha''. Among pack-living wolves, alpha wolves are the genetic parents of most cubs in the pack. Such access to mating females creates strong selective pressure for intra-sex competition. Wolves show deference to the alpha pair in their pack by allowing them to allocate the distribution of food, typically preferentially feeding the youngest wolves. Wolves use eye contact and posture as an indicator of dominance or submission, which are largely age-based; these postures are rare except in relation to food, as described previously. The smaller and more nuclear a pack is, the status of alpha is less likely to be obtained through fighting, and young wolves instead leave the pack to find a mate and produce offspring of their own. Larger or less-nuclear packs may operate differently and possess more complex and flexible social structures. In the case of other wild canids, the alpha male may not have exclusive access to the alpha female; moreover, other pack members may guard the maternity den used by the alpha female; as with the African wild dog, ''Lycaon pictus''. As dominant roles may be deemed normal among social species with extended parenting, it has been suggested that the additional term ''alpha'' is not required merely to describe dominance due to its ubiquity, but should be reserved for where they are the predominant pack progenitor. For instance, wolf biologist L. David Mech stated:...calling a wolf an ''alpha'' is usually no more appropriate than referring to a human parent or a doe deer as an ''alpha''. Any parent is dominant to its young offspring, so ''alpha'' adds no information. Why not refer to an alpha female as the ''female parent'', the ''breeding female'', the ''matriarch'', or simply the ''mother''? Such a designation emphasizes not the animal's dominant status, which is trivial information, but its role as pack progenitor, which is critical information. The one use we may still want to reserve for ''alpha'' is in the relatively few large wolf packs multiple litters. ... In such cases the older breeders are probably dominant to the younger breeders and perhaps can more appropriately be called the ''alphas''. ... The point here is not so much the terminology but what the terminology falsely implies: a rigid, force-based dominance hierarchy.
Use in dog training
See also
* Pack hunter * Dog behaviorReferences
{{Authority control Dogs Wolves Dog training and behavior