About the Dhole (Asiatic Wild Dog)
The dhole — also called the Asiatic wild dog — is one of India's most impressive and underappreciated predators, hunting in packs of 5 to 12 animals that can bring down prey many times their own size including sambar deer, gaur calves, and even young tigers. Dholes are extraordinarily agile and relentless hunters, wearing down prey with sustained chases before the pack overwhelms it. Despite their impressive predatory abilities, dholes receive far less public attention than tigers and leopards and are one of the world's least understood canids.
Dholes communicate with a remarkable variety of whistles, screams, and chuckles rather than barking like domestic dogs — the whistle call, used to assemble the pack, is particularly distinctive and haunting. A pack returning to a rendezvous site creates an extraordinary cacophony of high-pitched social calls. India holds the world's most important dhole populations, concentrated in the southern forests of Karnataka, Kerala, and Tamil Nadu as well as the central Indian forests of Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. Nagarahole and Bandipur are particularly reliable for dhole sightings.
- Dhole packs often use open forest roads at dawn — slow, quiet drives through Nagarahole, Bandipur, and Kabini's buffer zone frequently encounter packs on the move.
- Dholes are most active in the early morning when they hunt. Their distinctive whistle calls can be heard across the forest and guide you to the pack's location.
- During the denning season (January–March) packs return regularly to the den site and pups may be visible — ask your guide about known den areas.