Hyena

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Hyenas
Fossil range: Early Miocene to Recent
Spotted Hyena
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Suborder: Feliformia
Family: Hyaenidae
Gray, 1821
Subfamilies and Genera
Synonyms
  • Protelidae Flower, 1869

The Hyaenidae is a mammalian family of order Carnivora. The Hyaenidae family, native to both African and Asian continents, is divided into the "true hyenas" (Striped and Brown hyenas, along with Crocuta, the Spotted Hyena) and the Aardwolf (subfamily Protelinae).

Contents

[edit] Evolution

Skull of Hyaena eximia.
Skull of Hyaena eximia.
Lower jaw of Hyaena eximia.
Lower jaw of Hyaena eximia.

Hyenas are thought to have originated 22 million years ago from arboreal ancestors bearing similarities to the modern Banded Palm Civet. Plioviverrops, one of the earliest hyenas, was a lithe civet-like creature which inhabited Eurasia 20-22 million years ago. Details from the middle ear and dental structure marked it as a primitive hyena. This genus proved successful, its descendants flourishing with more pointed jowls and racier legs, much as the Canidae had done in North America. Fifteen million years ago, dog-like hyenas flourished, with 30 different species being identified. Unlike some of their modern descendants, these hyenas were not specialized bone-crushers, but were more nimble, wolf-like animals. The dog-like hyenas had canid-like molars, allowing them to supplement their carnivorous diet with vegetation and invertebrates.[1]

Five to seven million years ago, the dog-like hyenas were outcompeted by canids traveling from North America to Eurasia via the Bering land bridge. The ancestral aardwolves survived by having adapted themselves to an insectivorous diet to which few canids had specialized. Some hyenas began evolving bone crushing teeth in order to avoid competing with the canids, resulting in the hyenas eventually outcompeting a family of similarly built bone crushers called "percrocutoids". The percrocutoids became extinct 7 million years ago, coinciding exactly with the rise of bone crushing hyena species. Unlike the canids who flourished in the newly colonized Eurasian continent, only one hyena species, the cheetah-like Chasmaporthetes managed to cross to North America. It went extinct 1.5 million years ago.[1]

The peak diversity of the Hyenidae was during the Pleistocene, with 4 genera and 9 species of hyena.[2] The bone crushing hyenas became the Old World's dominant scavengers, managing to take advantage of the amount of meat left over from the kills of sabre-toothed cats. One such species was Pachycrocuta, a 200 kg (440 lb) mega-scavenger that could crush elephant bones.[1] As the sabre-toothed cats began to die out and be replaced by short-fanged felids which were more efficient eaters, more hyenas began to hunt for themselves and began evolving into new species, the modern spotted hyena being among them.[3]

[edit] Appearance & Biology

Striped Hyena, Hyaena hyaena
Striped Hyena, Hyaena hyaena

Although hyenas bear some physical resemblance to canids, they make up a separate biological family that is most closely related to Herpestidae (the family of mongooses and meerkats), thereby falling within the Feliformia. All species have a distinctly bear-like gait due to their front legs being longer than their back legs. The Aardwolf, Striped Hyena and Brown Hyena have striped pelts and manes lining the top of their necks which erect when frightened. The Spotted Hyena's fur is considerably shorter and (of course) spotted rather than striped. Unlike other species, its mane is reversed forwards. Spotted hyenas have a strong bite proportional to their size, but the view that they have the strongest bite is a myth; and a number of other animals (including the Tasmanian devil) are proportionately stronger.[4][5]

Spotted Hyenas and, to a lesser extent, Striped and Brown Hyenas, have powerful carnassial teeth adapted for cutting flesh and crushing premolars for crushing bone. The Aardwolf has greatly reduced cheek teeth, that are sometimes absent in the adult, but otherwise has the same dentition as the other three species.[6] The dental formula for all hyena species is:

3.1.4.1
3.1.3.1
Brown Hyena Parahyaena brunnea.
Brown Hyena Parahyaena brunnea.

Like felids, hyenas lack the rearword molars of canids and vivverids. By organising their teeth so that the bone crushing premolars do not interfere with the meat slicing carnassials to the rear, hyenas can crush bone without blunting the carnassial's blades.[1]

Hyenas are highly intelligent animals, and some scientists claim they are of equal intelligence to certain apes.[7] One indication of hyena intelligence is that they will move their kills closer to each other to protect them from scavengers; another indication is their strategic hunting methods.[8]

The majority of hyena species show little sexual dimorphism, usually with males being only slightly larger than the females. The spotted hyena is an exception to this as females are larger than the males. One unusual feature of the spotted hyena is that females have an enlarged clitoris called a pseudo-penis, demi-penis or sometimes mistakenly referred to as a nanophallus. Female hyenas give birth, copulate, and urinate through their protruding genitalia, which stretches to allow the male penis to enter for copulation, and it also stretches during birth. The anatomical position of the genitalia gives females total sexual control over who is allowed to mate with them. Researchers originally thought that one cause of this characteristic of the genitals was androgens that were introduced to the fetus very early on in its development. However, it was discovered that when the androgens were held back from the fetus, the development of the female genitalia was not altered.[citation needed]

All species excrete an oily, yellow substance from their anal glands onto objects to mark their territories. When scent marking, the anal pouch is turned inside out, or everted. Hyenas also do this as a submissive posture to more dominant hyenas. Genitals, the anal area, and the anal glands are sniffed during greeting ceremonies in which each hyena lifts its leg and allows the other to sniff its anal sacks and genitals. All four species maintain latrines far from the main denning area where dung is deposited. Scent marking is also done by scraping the ground with the paws, which deposits scent from glands on the bottoms of the feet. Hyenas do not raise their legs when urinating as male or dominant canids do.[9]

Unlike the canids, hyenas do not regurgitate or carry back food for their young[9], due to the speed with which the food is digested.[1]

[edit] Habitat

With the exception of the Striped Hyena which has been seen in the jungles of India, all modern Hyena species generally reside in arid environments like African savannahs and deserts.

[edit] Dietary habits

Hyena in Masai Mara, Kenya is feeding on zebra carcass
Hyena in Masai Mara, Kenya is feeding on zebra carcass

Except for the Aardwolf, all hyena species are efficient scavengers as well as hunters.[citation needed] They have extremely strong jaws in relation to their body size and have a very powerful digestive system with highly acidic fluids, making them capable of eating and digesting their entire prey, including skin, teeth, horns, bones and even hooves. Since they eat carrion, their digestive system deals very well with bacteria.

The spotted hyena is primarily a predator, unlike its cousins. Spotted hyenas are successful pack hunters of small to large sized ungulates and are the most abundant carnivore on the African continent.

The Aardwolf is a specialised feeder of termites, thus lacking the size and physical power of its cousins.

[edit] In culture

Spotted Hyena, Crocuta crocuta, inhabits most of Africa.
Spotted Hyena, Crocuta crocuta, inhabits most of Africa.

Negative associations have generally stemmed from Hyenas' tendency to scavenge graves for food. They are one of the few creatures naturally suited for this due to their ability to devour and digest every part of a carcass, including bone.[citation needed] As such, many associate hyenas with gluttony, uncleanliness, and cowardice.

Their haunting laughter-like calls inspired the idea in local cultures that they could imitate human voices and call their victims by name. Hyenas are also associated with divination and sometimes thought of as tools of demons and witches. In African folklore, witches and sorcerers are thought to ride hyenas, or even turn into them.

African attitudes toward hyenas are little better than those held in the European cultures. The Bouda is a mythical tribe reputed to house members able to transform into hyenas.[2] Belief in "Werehyenas" is so entrenched within the traditional lore of the Bornu people of north-eastern Nigeria, that their language even contains a special word bultungin which translates as "I change myself into a hyena".[10]

Early naturalists thought hyenas were hermaphrodites or commonly practiced homosexuality, largely due to the female spotted hyena's unique urogenital system. According to early writings such as Ovid's Metamorphoses and the Physiologus, the hyena continually changed its sex and nature from male to female and back again. In Paedagogus, Clement of Alexandria noted that the hyena (along with the hare) was "quite obsessed with sexual intercourse." Many Europeans associated the hyena with sexual deformity, prostitution, and deviant sexual behavior.

Hyenas have been used in animated movies many times, as well as having been rendered in live action films, commonly cast as hysterical and unhinged villains. Examples include those featured in the Disney animated film The Lion King who are called Shenzi, Banzai and Ed, one ball-playing individual in Bedknobs and Broomsticks, and many more shown in animated films.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e Macdonald, David (1992). The Velvet Claw, 256. ISBN 0563208449. 
  2. ^ a b Hyaenidae. Retrieved on 2007-05-31.
  3. ^ Denis-Huot, Christine & Denis-Huot, Michel (2003). The Art of being a Lion, pp.224. ISBN 158663707X. 
  4. ^ Ancient Worlds News - Marsupial has the deadliest bite - 04/04/2005
  5. ^ Wroe, S, McHenry, C, and Thomason, J. (2005). "Bite club: comparative bite force in big biting mammals and the prediction of predatory behaviour in fossil taxa.". Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences 272: 619-625. 
  6. ^ Richardson, Philip K.R. & Bearder, Simon (1984). in Macdonald, D.: The Encyclopedia of Mammals. New York: Facts on File, 154-159. ISBN 0-87196-871-1. 
  7. ^ Said by biologist Jeff Corwin, in an episode of "The Jeff Corwin Experience" concentrating on spotted hyenas
  8. ^ Lind, Hans. "Bogen om Dyrepsykologi". 
  9. ^ a b Kruuk, Hans (1972). The Spotted Hyena: A study of predation and social behaviour, pp.335. ISBN 0563208449. 
  10. ^ lycaon

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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