Behavior Arabian wolves do not usually live in large packs, and instead hunt in pairs or in groups of about three or four animals. They are most frequently active around water sources at sunrise and mid-afternoon. However, they more commonly travel at night. Due to food availability, Arabian wolves often associate with human settlements.
Diet Arabian wolves are mainly carnivorous, but also omnivorous and in some areas largely dependent on human garbage and excess products. They also eat cats, sweet fruits,
roadkill and other
carrion. Opportunistically, almost any small animal including fish, snails, baby baboons can be part of their diet. Because Arabian wolves can attack and eat any domestic animals up to the size of a goat, pastoral
Bedouins and other farmers will often shoot, poison, or trap them.
Other wildlife interactions There is at least one case in
Israel of a
striped hyena (
Hyaena hyaena) associating and cooperating with a wolf pack. It is proposed that this is a case of
mutualism: the hyena could benefit from the wolves' superior ability to hunt large, agile prey. The wolves could benefit from the hyena's superior sense of smell, to locate and dig out tortoises, to crack open large bones, and to tear open discarded food containers like tin cans. As with other wolf subspecies, Arabian wolves can facilitate a
trophic cascade by suppressing smaller carnivores such as
golden jackals (
Canis aureus) and
foxes (Genus
Vulpes). This allows smaller herbivores to become more abundant. Arabian wolves compete with other carnivores including the
caracal (
Caracal caracal) and
Arabian leopard (
Panthera pardus nimr). Historically they also competed with the
Asiatic cheetah (
Acinonyx jubatus venaticus) and the
Asiatic lion (
Panthera leo persica), but these species are now extinct within the Arabian wolf's range. ==Range and conservation==