Domestic dogs
This reading profile brings together 7 source-linked articles that reference domestic dogs.
Fauna does not yet have a full sourced identification profile for this name, so this page keeps the relevant reading together without inventing missing species detail.Source-linked reading
- Field guideCoyote tracks or dog tracks?Two canids leave similar prints in the same mud. The trail they leave behind separates them more reliably than the print does.
- Field guideReading an urban parkUrban parks are habitat within a larger city network, not isolated green islands. Vegetation layers, water, patch connections, buildings, lighting, noise, people, and pets all help explain where wildlife is noticed.
- Field guideDomestication vs. tamingHabituation, learning, handling, and conditioning can reduce one individual's fear of people without changing its ancestry. Domestication reshapes populations through selection, drift, management, and adaptation to human-created niches. Domestic individuals can be wary or aggressive, and tame individuals can remain members of wild lineages.
- Field guideReading a forest edgeA forest edge is a transition rather than a line. Its width, vertical structure, adjacent habitats, and disturbance history influence which organisms use it, while some forest specialists depend on conditions farther inside.
- Field guideReading a wetlandWetlands are shaped by persistent or recurring water, hydric soils, and adapted vegetation, but surface water is not always present. Read several zones and seasons rather than judging the habitat from one shoreline view.
- Field guideReading burrows, dens, and lodgesAn opening or mound is only the first clue. Its construction, position in the landscape, tracks, food remains, and changes over time make a stronger case for who built or uses it.
- Field guideShorebird observation basicsShorebirds change plumage and often feed in mixed flocks, so begin with size and structure, then add behavior and habitat. Use tide and flock response to choose a viewing position that preserves feeding and resting space.