List of apex predators: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Sweetstudent (talk | contribs) m →Extant predators: removed vandalism |
|||
Line 67: | Line 67: | ||
*[[Maned Wolf]] |
*[[Maned Wolf]] |
||
*[[Nile Monitor]] |
*[[Nile Monitor]] |
||
*[[n00b*]] |
|||
*[[Ocelot]] |
*[[Ocelot]] |
||
*[[Ornate Monitor]] |
*[[Ornate Monitor]] |
Revision as of 19:55, 12 April 2010
This article needs additional citations for verification. (November 2007) |
This is a partial list of apex predators — those predators that are not preyed upon as healthy adults in the wild. Full scavengers (e.g. most vultures), although they may not be preyed on either, are not counted as apex predators unless they at least partially depend on capturing live prey. Many species listed here are only Apex predators within certain environments, e.g. Coyotes are only apex predators when larger predators such as the Gray Wolf or the Brown Bear are absent.
Extant predators
On land
- African Civet
- African Rock Python[1]
- African Wild Dog
- American Badger
- American Black Bear
- Arctic Fox
- Asian Black Bear
- African Golden Cat
- Asian Golden Cat
- Black Bear
- Black Mamba
- Boa Constrictor
- Bobcat
- Bornean Clouded Leopard
- Brown Bear
- Brown Tree Snake*
- Burmese Python
- Caiman
- Caracal
- Cat*
- Chacma Baboon
- Cheetah
- Chimpanzee
- Clouded Leopard
- Cougar
- Coyote
- Crab-eating Fox
- Crocodile Monitor
- Culpeo*
- Dhole
- Dingo
- Dog*
- Eastern Wolf
- Ethiopian Wolf
- European Badger
- Eurasian Lynx
- Fossa
- Gaboon viper
- Gray Wolf
- Grizzly Bear
- Green Anaconda
- Himalayan Wolf
- Human*
- Indian Wolf
- Jackal
- Jaguar
- King Cobra
- Komodo Dragon
- Lace Monitor
- Large Indian Civet
- Leopard
- Lion
- Lynx
- Malabar Large-spotted Civet
- Mandrill
- Maned Wolf
- Nile Monitor
- Ocelot
- Ornate Monitor
- Perentie
- Phil
- Philippine water monitor
- Polar Bear
- Ratel
- Red Fox
- Red Wolf
- Reticulated Python
- Serval
- Short-eared Dog
- Snow Leopard
- Spectacled Bear
- Spotted Hyena
- Sun Bear
- Tasmanian Devil
- Tiger
- Tiger Quoll
- Water Monitor
- White-throated monitor
- Wolverine
In the air
- Antarctic Skua
- Bald Eagle
- Barred Eagle Owl
- Blakiston's Fish Owl
- Brown Fish Owl
- Cape Eagle Owl
- Crested Eagle
- Crowned Hawk-Eagle
- Eurasian Eagle Owl
- Forest Eagle Owl
- Giant Petrel
- Golden Eagle
- Great Horned Owl
- Great Skua
- Harpy Eagle
- Harrier Hawk
- Harris Hawk
- Lappet-faced Vulture
- New Guinea Harpy Eagle
- Osprey
- Pel's Fish Owl
- Philippine Eagle
- Powerful Owl
- Rock Eagle Owl
- Shelley's Eagle Owl
- South Polar Skua[2]
- Steller's Sea Eagle
- Tawny Fish Owl
- Verreaux's Eagle Owl
- Wedge-tailed Eagle
- White-tailed Eagle
- [[Phil}
In aquatic environments
- Alligator Snapping Turtle
- Alligator Gar
- American Alligator
- American Crocodile
- Arapaima
- Baiji (Chinese River Dolphin)
- Baikal Seal
- Beluga Sturgeon
- Black Caiman
- Black Marlin
- Blue Marlin
- Boto
- Box Jellyfish
- Bull Shark
- Common Snapping Turtle
- Electric Catfish
- Electric Eel[3]
- Electric Ray
- False Gharial
- Gharial
- Giant Otter
- Giant Salamander
- Giant Snakehead
- Giant Trevally[4]
- Great Barracuda
- Great White Shark
- Greenland Shark
- Lake Trout[5]
- Large Mouth Bass
- Leopard Seal[6]
- Lionfish
- Mediterranean Monk Seal[7]
- Leatherback turtle
- Loggerhead Sea Turtle
- Moray Eel
- Mugger crocodile
- Murray Cod
- Muskellunge
- Nile Crocodile
- North Pacific Giant Octopus
- Northern Pike
- Orca
- Salmon shark
- Saltwater Crocodile
- Sawfish
- Smallmouth Bass[5]
- Sperm Whale
- Tiger Shark
- Walleye
Notes: Animals with an "*" are only apex predators as introduced species. Humans, while asterisked, are already native to many ecosystems, but have drastically affected ecosystems to which they have more recently been introduced.
Extinct predators that were likely apex predators
- Abelisaurus
- Acrocanthosaurus
- Allosaurus
- Albertosaurus
- Andrewsarchus
- Anomalocaris
- Arctodus simus (Giant Short-faced Bear)[8]
- Argentavis
- Bali Tiger
- Baryonyx
- Basilosaurus
- Bullockornis
- Brygmophyseter
- Cameroceras
- Canis dirus (Dire Wolf)
- Carcharodontosaurus
- Cryolophosaurus
- Dakosaurus
- Daspletosaurus
- Deinonychus
- Deinosuchus
- Deltadromeus
- Dilophosaurus
- Dimetrodon
- Dinofelis
- Dromaeosaurus
- Dryptosaurus
- Dromornis
- Dunkleosteus
- Entelodont
- Eotitanosuchus
- Falkland Islands Wolf[9]
- Gastornis
- Genyornis
- Giganotosaurus
- Gorgonops
- Gorgosaurus
- Guanlong
- Haast's Eagle
- Hokkaido Wolf
- Honshu Wolf
- Homotherium
- Hyaenodon
- Javan Tiger
- Koolasuchus
- Kronosaurus
- Kryostega
- Liopleurodon
- Majungasaurus
- Megalania
- Megalosaurus
- Megalodon[10]
- Megistotherium
- Miracinonyx (American Cheetah)
- Neanderthal
- Neovenator
- Ornithosuchus
- Panthera onca gombagenzis (European Jaguar)
- Panthera leo atrox (American Lion)
- Panthera leo spelaea (European Cave Lion)
- Phorusrhacos
- Poposaurus
- Postosuchus
- Predator X
- Propleopus
- Pterygotus
- Rauisuchus
- Rhamphosuchus
- Quinkana
- Sarcosuchus
- Saurornithoides
- Saurosuchus
- Simosuchus
- Smilodon (Saber-toothed Cat)
- Suchomimus
- Tarbosaurus
- Tarascosaurus
- Thylacoleo (Marsupial Lion)
- Thylacosmilus (Marsupial Saber-tooth)
- Thylacine
- Teratornis
- Titanis
- Titanoboa
- Torvosaurus
- Troodon
- Tylosaurus
- Tyrannosaurus rex
- Ursus maritimus tyrannus (Giant Prehistoric Polar Bear)
- Ursus spelaeus (Cave Bear)
- Utahraptor
- Velociraptor
References
- ^ http://www.kidsgowild.com/kidsgowild/animalfacts/87891/87905
- ^ Bargagli, Roberto (2004). Antarctic Ecosystems. Springer. pp. 282–287. ISBN 3-540-22091-7.
- ^ ELECTROPHORUS ELECTRICUS
- ^ DeMartini, Edward E., Friedlander, Alan M., and Holzwarth, Stephani R. (2005). "Size at sex change in protogynous labroids, prey body size distributions, and apex predator densities at NW Hawaiian atolls". Marine ecology progress series 297: 259 -271. ISSN: 0171-8630. Retrieved on 2006-12-21.
- ^ a b Lepak, Jesse M., Kraft, Clifford E., and Weidel, Brian C. (2006). "Rapid Food Web Recovery in Response to Removal of an Introduced Apex Predator". Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 63(3): 569-575. ISSN: 0706-652X. Retrieved on 2006-12-13.
- ^ Kuhn, Carey E., McDonald, Birgitte I., Shaffer, Scott A., Barnes, Julie, Crocker, Daniel E., Burns, Jennifer, and Costa, Daniel P. (2006). "Diving physiology and winter foraging behavior of a juvenile leopard seal (Hydrurga leptonyx)". Polar Biology 29(4): 303-307. ISSN: 0722-4060. Retrieved on 2006-12-21.
- ^ Levner, Eugene; Linkov, Igor; Proth, Jean-Marie (2005). Strategic Management of Marine Ecosystems. Springer. p. 41. ISBN 1-402-03158-0.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Conrad, Norman (2000). Reading the Entrails: An Alberta Ecohistory. University of Calgary Press. p. 9. ISBN 1-552-38012-2.
- ^ "Rare & Extinct Creatures: Warrah or Falkland Islands Wolf". The Messybeast. Retrieved 2008-03-29.
- ^ Prehistoric Predators - Monster Shark (TV-Series). National Geographic. 2007.
{{cite AV media}}
: External link in
(help)|title=