Hungry dingo,
Baby or injured Emu,
Lunch.
The adult Emu is a fast runner, so it would not be prey-of-choice for a dingo.
The role, or niche, or the Dingo is to be a predator.
Pretty sure there are none. Lucky dingo's
Pretty sure there are none. Lucky dingo's
The dingo practically only has one predator, which is man.
Dingo
Emu chicks have stripes for camouflage and protection. The stripes of a young emu chick make it much harder for a predator to detect in grassland and open bushland, which is the emu's natural habitat.
the dingo is its main predator.
Pretty sure there are none. Lucky dingo's
Dingos have no natural predators, as they are Australia's top and only land-based predator, though, the dingo does have prey that can fight back, kangaroos, etc. The dingo's only "predator" is people.
The dingo has no natural native predators. Man has become a predator of the dingo, setting dingo traps to keep this animal away from stock. Wild, feral dogs are a threat to the native dingo also, but much inter-breeding goes on between wild dogs and true dingoes.
Here are several. The emu, cassowary and the dingo and the saltwater crocodile are just a few.
The scientific name for the dingo is canis lupus dingo. It was recently changed from its previous name, canis familiaris.