Rudyard Kipling summed it best: "The strength of the pack is the wolf, and the strength of the wolf is the pack."
yes they do
Dogs, known to be "A Man's Best Friend" only work in packs in the wild. Canines can also work in packs if they are pets, but it is way less likely to work in packs more than wild ones. So, in the conclusion, the answer is: Yes, wild dogs work in packs.
Wild dogs live in Africa
They tend to live in there sled packs that they pull the sled in
A dogs special feature is they hunt in packs (when wild) and move stealthly.
There have always been wild dogs present in the wild. Wild dogs are the origin of domesticated dogs. Dogs were domesticated millions of years ago by people as hunting aids and companions and obviously not all wild dogs could be domesticated due to the number of wild dogs present on the earth in comparison to the number of people in those times, so some wild dogs remain, though the number of wolves are becoming minimal in comparison to domesticated dogs.
Mainly alone, as most cats.
Wild Mustangs live in packs/groups/herds. There is usually one male that is dominant over all the females.
animals that live in the wild are lions for instance. they live free and sometimes are in groups or packs.
Australia has the wild dogs called Dingos
Wolves? Hyenas?
You better start searching for her. A dog in heat is easy prey for packs of wild dogs.