the difference is that ones a girl and ones a boy :)
Domestic dogs and dingoes are both subspecies of the wolf.
No, but a timber wolf is a grey wolf. The timber wolf is a subspecies of the grey wolf, which also includes Arctic Wolves, Mexican Gray Wolves, domestic dogs and dingoes (domestic dogs are descended from wolves and considered the same species, canis lupus, though a different subspecies; dingoes are themselves descended from domestic dogs and are also considered canis lupus).
The predatory threat to dingoes comes from four animals. The first is other dingoes, but domestic dogs, jackals and humans also kill dingoes.
They bark and growel and make other sounds like domestic dogs.
Dingoes are wild dogs that live in Australia. They do not herd.
Wild dog is a catch all term that can cover wolves, African wild dogs, dingoes and even domestic dogs turned feral.
It could but they live in two different parts. Dingoes live in the outback while goats are domestic and are mainly herded in farms. Although dingoes would have access to feral (rangeland) kids.
Dogs are related to wolves, foxes, coyotes, jackals, dingoes, raccoon dogs and a number of other species.
Well mainlands of Polynesia are mitochondrial DNA data. This indicate and introduction through Mainland Southeast Asia for the Australian dingoes and the Polynesian domestic dogs.
As with a pack of dogs, it is a pack of dingoes (the noun 'pack' is the collective noun).
The first dogs, or canines, in Australia were dingoes, which came to Australia with the Aborigines. The domestic dog came to Australia with the First Fleet of convicts and officers. There were Captain Arthur Phillip's greyhounds, along with an unknown number of younger dogs and puppies.
Dingoes do not live in Tasmania primarily due to geographical isolation and historical factors. They were likely excluded from the island due to the Bass Strait, which separates Tasmania from mainland Australia. Additionally, the introduction of domestic dogs and competition with other predators, such as Tasmanian devils, may have further prevented dingoes from establishing a population there.