Strike01_macaque_attacked_by_pack_of_dogs_still... Direct

Macaques, particularly in regions like South and Southeast Asia, are highly adaptable, making them frequent inhabitants of urban parks, temples, and residential areas. However, these spaces are rarely neutral. They are heavily populated by feral dogs, which are often fed by residents or scavenge in human refuse. When macaques, which are typically arboreal, are forced to forage on the ground due to lack of natural food sources, they enter the prime territory of dog packs. This proximity inevitably leads to violent encounters.

The encroachment of cities into natural habitats has created unprecedented interfaces between humans, wildlife, and domestic animals. A harrowing, often violent, example of this is the recurring theme of macaques being attacked by packs of feral dogs in urbanized or peri-urban environments. This phenomenon—symbolized by scenes like "Strike01_Macaque_attacked_by_pack_of_dogs_still..."—is not merely an isolated incident of nature, but a symptom of ecological disruption. It highlights the desperation of wildlife forced into human-dominated spaces and the resulting, sometimes fatal, conflict with free-roaming domestic dogs. Strike01_Macaque_attacked_by_pack_of_dogs_still...

Title: The Concrete Jungle: Urban Wildlife and the Macaque-Dog Conflict Macaques, particularly in regions like South and Southeast

Do you have a or the actual video/image this title refers to? When macaques, which are typically arboreal, are forced