old alpha wolf wallpaper
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Human attitudes and opinions about the maned wolf vary across populations, ranging from fear and tolerance to aversion. In some regions of Brazil, parts of the animal’s body are believed to help cure bronchitis, kidney disease, and even snake bites. It is also believed that it can bring good luck. These parts can be teeth, the heart, ears and even dry stools. In Bolivia it is believed that mounting a saddle made of maned wolf leather protects from bad luck. Despite these superstitions, there is no large-scale use of parts of this animal.
In urban societies in Brazil people tend to be sympathetic to the maned wolf, seeing no values in it as a hunting animal or pest. They often consider its preservation to be important, and although these societies associate it with force and ferocity, they do not consider it a dangerous animal. Although popular in some places and common in many zoos, it can go unnoticed. Studies in zoos in Brazil showed that up to 30% of respondents were either unaware or unable to recognize a maned wolf.
It was considered a common animal by the Guarani people and the first names used by Europeans, such as the Spanish jesuit missionary Joseph of Anchieta, were the same used by the native peoples (yaguaraçú). The Spanish naturalist Felix de Azara also used the Guarani name to describe it. Azara was also one of the first to describe the biology of the species and consider it an important part of Paraguay’s fauna. Much of the negative view of the maned wolf as a poultry predator stems from European ethnocentrism, where peasants often had problems with wolves and foxes.
The maned wolf rarely causes antipathy in the human populations of the places in which it lives. For this reason it has been used as a flag species for the preservation of the Brazilian cerrado. It has also been represented on the 100 Cruzeiros Reais coin, which circulated in Brazil between 1993 and 1994.
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Wolf
Once prey is brought down, wolves begin to feed excitedly, ripping and tugging at the carcass in all directions, and bolting down large chunks of it.[131] The breeding pair typically monopolizes food to continue producing pups. When food is scarce, this is done at the expense of other family members, especially non-pups.[132] The breeding pair typically eats first. They usually work the hardest at killing prey, and may rest after a long hunt and allow the rest of the family to eat undisturbed. Once the breeding pair has finished eating, the rest of the family tears off pieces of the carcass and transports them to secluded areas where they can eat in peace. Wolves typically commence feeding by consuming the larger internal organs, like the heart, liver, lungs, and stomach lining. The kidneys and spleen are eaten once they are exposed, followed by the muscles.[133] A wolf can eat 15–19% of its body weight in a single feeding.
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