Canis lupaster African Wolf

 The African wolf (Canis lupaster) or golden wolf formerly known as the African golden jackal, is a canine native to North Africa, West Africa, the Sahel, northern East Africa, and the Horn of Africa. It is listed as least concern on the IUCN Red List. In the Middle Atlas in Morocco, it was sighted in elevations as high as 1,800 m (5,900 ft). It is primarily a predator of invertebrates and mammals as large as gazelle fawns, though larger animals are sometimes taken. Its diet also includes animal carcasses, human refuse, and fruit. The African wolf is a monogamous and territorial species; offspring remain with the family to assist in raising their parents' younger pups.

It was previously classified as an African variant of the Golden Jackal (Canis aureus), with at that time at least one subspecies (C. a. lupaster) having been classified as a wolf. In 2015, a series of analyses on the species' mitochondrial DNA and nuclear genome demonstrated that it was, in fact, distinct from the golden jackal, and more closely related to the gray wolf and the coyote (Canis latrans). It is nonetheless still close enough to the golden jackal to produce hybrid offspring, as indicated through genetic tests on jackals in Israel, and a 19th-century captive crossbreeding experiment. Further studies demonstrated that it is the descendant of a genetically admixed canid of 72% Gray wolf (Canis lupus) and 28% Ethiopian wolf (Canis simensis) ancestry.

The below galleries have images of the subspecies I have encountered over the years:

North African or Algerian Golden Wolf (Canis lupaster algirensis) - Seen in Bouhedma National Park in Tunisia.

 

North African Golden Wolf (Canis lupaster lupaster) - Simien Mountains, Ethiopia. Initially identified as African Golden Jackal