Roaming free (feral) dogs DO gather into packs and anytime you have 2 or more dogs...domesticated or free...one will become the "alpha dog" and the other(s) will respect that dog as the big chief...top dog! Always a "pecking order."
There are many groups of animals that is called a pack, here are some…Dogs (wild)GrouseRatsStoatsWeaselsWolves (general)Hound
well only lions live in prides other animals have different collective nouns for there groups like pack ,pod or a troop.
In Australia, there are around 200,000 dingoes. An estimated 20 percent of these 200,000 are dingo-dog hybrids. Dingoes eat small animals such as lizards, rabbits, and rodents.
No, it is not. The whale is the strongest animal.
The lynx does not live in a pack with other lynx. But, they do usually roam as a male and female when the female has young to protect.
they are pack animals and live in herds
Except for a mother with cubs, pandas are solitary animals.
Like most canids, Huskies are pack animals.
Desert iguanas are not 'pack' animals. They are usually solitary but may share an area with other iguanas.
There are many groups of animals that is called a pack, here are some…Dogs (wild)GrouseRatsStoatsWeaselsWolves (general)Hound
Pack Animals was created in 2008.
African wild dogs
No. They are not pack animals.
The Pack Live was created in 1979.
No because wolves live in pack and zebra can't live in pack because it's not possible
Snakes are solitary animals. They don't live in 'packs', they aren't wolves.
Tasmanian tigers, or Thylacines, are extinct now, but they tended to be solitary animals, not roaming in packs.