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Hyena



 
 
The Hyaenidae is a mammal
Mammal

Mammals are a class of vertebrate animals whose name is derived from their distinctive feature, mammary glands, with which they feed their young....
ian family of order Carnivora
Carnivora

The diverse Order Carnivora includes over 260 species of eutheria mammals. Its members are formally referred to as carnivorans, while the word "carnivore" can refer to any meat-eating animal....
. The Hyaenidae family, native to both Africa
Africa

Africa is the world's second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. At about 30.2 million km? including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area....
n and Asia
Asia

Asia is the world's largest and most populous continent. It covers 8.6% of the Earth's total surface area and, with over 4 billion people, it contains more than 60% of the world's current human population....
n continents consists of four living species, the Striped Hyena
Striped Hyena

The Striped Hyena is an omnivore mammal of the biological family hyaenidae. It lives in Africa, the Middle East, Pakistan and western India....
 and Brown Hyena
Brown Hyena

The Brown Hyena is a hyena living mainly in the Kalahari Desert and Namib Desert deserts of southern Africa....
 (genus Hyaena), the Spotted Hyena
Spotted Hyena

The Spotted Hyena, or Laughing Hyena, is a Carnivora mammal of the family hyaenidae. It is the largest of the hyenas, and is native to sub-Saharan Africa, save for the Congo basin....
 (genus Crocuta) and the Aardwolf
Aardwolf

The aardwolf is a small, Entomophagy hyena-like mammal, native to East Africa and Southern Africa. The name means "earth wolf" in Afrikaans/Dutch language....
 (genus Proteles).

as seem to have originated 26 million years ago from arboreal ancestors bearing similarities to the modern Banded Palm Civet
Banded Palm Civet

The Banded Palm Civet is a civet found in the tall forests of Burma, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand. Though it lives in the forests, it spends much of its time on the ground....
.






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The Hyaenidae is a mammal
Mammal

Mammals are a class of vertebrate animals whose name is derived from their distinctive feature, mammary glands, with which they feed their young....
ian family of order Carnivora
Carnivora

The diverse Order Carnivora includes over 260 species of eutheria mammals. Its members are formally referred to as carnivorans, while the word "carnivore" can refer to any meat-eating animal....
. The Hyaenidae family, native to both Africa
Africa

Africa is the world's second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. At about 30.2 million km? including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area....
n and Asia
Asia

Asia is the world's largest and most populous continent. It covers 8.6% of the Earth's total surface area and, with over 4 billion people, it contains more than 60% of the world's current human population....
n continents consists of four living species, the Striped Hyena
Striped Hyena

The Striped Hyena is an omnivore mammal of the biological family hyaenidae. It lives in Africa, the Middle East, Pakistan and western India....
 and Brown Hyena
Brown Hyena

The Brown Hyena is a hyena living mainly in the Kalahari Desert and Namib Desert deserts of southern Africa....
 (genus Hyaena), the Spotted Hyena
Spotted Hyena

The Spotted Hyena, or Laughing Hyena, is a Carnivora mammal of the family hyaenidae. It is the largest of the hyenas, and is native to sub-Saharan Africa, save for the Congo basin....
 (genus Crocuta) and the Aardwolf
Aardwolf

The aardwolf is a small, Entomophagy hyena-like mammal, native to East Africa and Southern Africa. The name means "earth wolf" in Afrikaans/Dutch language....
 (genus Proteles).

Evolution

Hyaena Eximia Head
Hyaena Eximia Jaw
Hyenas seem to have originated 26 million years ago from arboreal ancestors bearing similarities to the modern Banded Palm Civet
Banded Palm Civet

The Banded Palm Civet is a civet found in the tall forests of Burma, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand. Though it lives in the forests, it spends much of its time on the ground....
. Plioviverrops, one of the earliest hyenas, was a lithe civet
Civet

The family Viverridae is made up of 35 species, including all of the genet , the Binturong, most of the civets, and the four linsangs.Viverrids are native to most of the Old World tropics, nearly all of Africa , Madagascar, and the Iberian Peninsula....
-like creature that inhabited Eurasia
Eurasia

Eurasia is a large landmass covering about 53,990,000 km? or about 10.6% of the Earth's surface . Often considered a single continent, Eurasia comprises the traditional continents of Europe and Asia, concepts which date back to classical antiquity and the borders for which are somewhat arbitrary....
 20-22 million years ago. Details from the middle ear and dental structure marked it as a primitive hyena. This genus proved successful, its descendants flourishing with more pointed jowls and racier legs, much as the Canidae
Canidae

Canidae is the family of the dogs; a member of this family is called a canid. They include wolf, foxes, coyotes, and jackals. The Canidae family is divided into the "true dogs" of the tribe Canini and the "foxes" of the tribe Vulpini....
 had done in North America
North America

North America is the northern continent of the Americas, situated in the Earth's northern hemisphere and almost totally in the western hemisphere....
. Fifteen million years ago, dog-like hyenas flourished, with 30 different species being identified. Unlike some of their modern descendants, these hyenas were not specialized bone-crushers, but were more nimble, wolf-like animals. The dog-like hyenas had canid-like molars, allowing them to supplement their carnivorous diet with vegetation and invertebrates.

Five to seven million years ago, the hyenas were outcompeted by canids traveling from North America to Eurasia via the Bering land bridge
Bering land bridge

The Bering land bridge was a land bridge roughly 1,000 miles north to south at its greatest extent, which joined present-day Alaska and eastern Siberia at various times during the Pleistocene ice ages....
. The ancestral aardwolves
Aardwolf

The aardwolf is a small, Entomophagy hyena-like mammal, native to East Africa and Southern Africa. The name means "earth wolf" in Afrikaans/Dutch language....
 survived by having adapted themselves to an insectivorous diet to which few canids had specialized. Some hyenas evolved bone crushing teeth which allowed them to avoid competition with the canids, resulting in the hyenas eventually outcompeting a family of similarly built bone crushers called "percrocutoids". The percrocutoids became extinct 7 million years ago, coinciding exactly with the rise of bone crushing hyena species. Unlike the canids who flourished in the newly colonized Eurasian continent, only one hyena species, the cheetah
Cheetah

The cheetah is an atypical member of the cat family that is unique in its speed, while lacking climbing abilities. Therefore it is placed in its own genus, Acinonyx....
-like Chasmaporthetes
Chasmaporthetes

Chasmaporthetes was one of several extinct hyena genera which hunted prey at high speed, had slender teeth and high, slender legs, rather like a modern African cheetah....
 managed to cross to North America. It became extinct 1.5 million years ago.

The peak diversity of the Hyenidae was during the Pleistocene
Pleistocene

The Pleistocene is the epoch from 1.8 million to 10,000 years Before Present covering the world's recent period of repeated glaciations. The name pleistocene is derived from the Greek and ....
, with 4 genera and 9 species of hyena. The bone crushing hyenas became the Old World's dominant scavengers, managing to take advantage of the amount of meat left over from the kills of sabre-toothed cats. One such species was Pachycrocuta
Pachycrocuta

Pachycrocuta was a genus of prehistoric hyenas. The largest and most well-researched species was the giant hyaena Pachycrocuta brevirostris, which stood about at the shoulder and may have weighed more than ? the size of a small lioness....
, a 200 kg (440 lb) mega-scavenger that could crush elephant
Elephant

Elephants are large land mammals of the order Proboscidea and the family Elephantidae. There are three living species: the African Bush Elephant, the African Forest Elephant and the Asian Elephant ....
 bones. As the sabre-toothed cats began to die out and be replaced by short-fanged felids which were more efficient eaters, more hyenas began to hunt for themselves and began evolving into new species, the modern spotted hyena being among them.

Genera of the Hyaenidae (extinct and recent)


The list follows McKenna and Bells Classification of Mammals for prehistoric genera (1997)Malcolm C. McKenna, Susan K. Bell: Classification of Mammals: Above the Species Level in Columbia University Press, New York 1997, 631 Seiten, ISBN 0-231-11013-8 and Wozencraft (2005) in Wilson and Reeders Mammal Species of the World
Mammal Species of the World

Mammal Species of the World, now in its 3rd edition, is a standard reference work in zoology giving descriptions and bibliographic data for the known species of mammals....
 for extant genera . The Percrocutids are in contrast to McKenna and Bells classification not included as a subfamily into the Hyaenidae but as a separate family Percrocutidae
Percrocutidae

The Percrocutidae form an extinct family of hyena-like feliform carnivorans, and that likely filled an equivalent ecological niche. The first percrocutids are known from the middle Miocene of Europe and western Asia and belonged to the genus Percrocuta....
. Furthermore, the genus Paracrocuta, to which the living brown hyena
Brown Hyena

The Brown Hyena is a hyena living mainly in the Kalahari Desert and Namib Desert deserts of southern Africa....
 belongs, is not included into the genus Pachycrocuta but in the genus Hyaena. The Protelinae (Aardwolves) are not traded as a separate subfamily but included in the Hyaeninae.

  • Family Hyaenidae
      • Tongxinictis (Middle Miocene of Asia)
    • Subfamily Ictitheriinae
      • Herpestides (Early Miocene of Africa and Eurasia)
      • Plioviverrops (including Jordanictis, Protoviverrops, Mesoviverrops; Early Miocene to Early Pliocene of Europe, Late Miocene of Asia)
      • Ictitherium
        Ictitherium

        Ictitherium is an extinct genus of hyena.Ictitherium was around long, and looked more like a civet than a modern hyena, possessing a long body with short legs....
         (=Galeotherium; including Lepthyaena, Sinictitherium, Paraictitherium; Middle Miocene of Africa, Late Miocene to Early Pliocene of Eurasia)
      • Thalassictis (including Palhyaena, Miohyaena, Hyaenictitherium, Hyaenalopex; Middle to Late Miocene of Asia, Late Miocene of Africa and Europe)
      • Hyaenotherium (Late Miocene to ?Early Pliocene of Eurasia)
      • Miohyaenotherium (Late Miocene of Europe)
      • Lychyaena (Late Miocene of Eurasia)
      • Tungurictis (Middle Miocene of Africa and Eurasia)
      • Proictitherium (Middle Miocene of Africa and Asia, Middle to Late Miocene of Europe)
    • Subfamily Hyaeninae
      • Palinhyaena (Late Miocene of Asia)
      • Ikelohyaena (Early Pliocene of Africa)
      • Hyaena
        Striped Hyena

        The Striped Hyena is an omnivore mammal of the biological family hyaenidae. It lives in Africa, the Middle East, Pakistan and western India....
         (=Euhyaena, =Hyena; including Parahyaena
        Brown Hyena

        The Brown Hyena is a hyena living mainly in the Kalahari Desert and Namib Desert deserts of southern Africa....
        , Pliohyaena, Pliocrocuta, Anomalopithecus) Early Pliocene (?Middle Miocene) to Recent of Africa, Late Pliocene (?Late Miocene) to Late Pleistocene of Eurasia)
      • Hyaenictis (Late Miocene of Asia?, Late Miocene of Europe, Early Pliocene (?Early Pleistocene) of Africa)
      • Leecyaena (Late Miocene and/or Early Pliocene of Asia)
      • Chasmaporthetes
        Chasmaporthetes

        Chasmaporthetes was one of several extinct hyena genera which hunted prey at high speed, had slender teeth and high, slender legs, rather like a modern African cheetah....
         (=Ailuriaena; including Lycaenops, Euryboas; Late Miocene to Early Pleistocene of Eurasia, Early Pliocene to Late pliocene or Early Pleistocene of Africa, Late Pliocene to Early Pleistocene of North America)
      • Pachycrocuta
        Pachycrocuta

        Pachycrocuta was a genus of prehistoric hyenas. The largest and most well-researched species was the giant hyaena Pachycrocuta brevirostris, which stood about at the shoulder and may have weighed more than ? the size of a small lioness....
         (Pliocene and Pleistocene of Eurasia and Africa)
      • Adcrocuta (Late Miocene of Eurasia)
      • Crocuta
        Spotted Hyena

        The Spotted Hyena, or Laughing Hyena, is a Carnivora mammal of the family hyaenidae. It is the largest of the hyenas, and is native to sub-Saharan Africa, save for the Congo basin....
         (=Crocotta; including Eucrocuta; Late Pliocene to recent of Africa, Late Pliocene to Late Pleistocene of Eurasia)
      • Proteles (=Geocyon; Pleistocene to Recent of Africa)


Appearance and biology


Striped Hyena
Although hyenas bear some physical resemblance to canids, they make up a separate biological family that is most closely related to Herpestidae (the family of mongoose
Mongoose

A mongoose is a member of the family Herpestidae , a family of small, cat-like Carnivoras.The word mongoose is derived from the Marathi language name mangus "mongoose", perhaps ultimately from Dravidian languages ....
s and meerkat
Meerkat

The meerkat or suricate Suricata suricatta is a small mammal and a member of the mongoose family. It inhabits all parts of the Kalahari Desert in Botswana and South Africa....
s), thereby falling within the Feliformia
Feliformia

The Feliformia are a suborder within the order Carnivora and includes the 'true-cats' , hyenas, mongooses, civets and related taxa. The other suborder of Carnivora is Caniformia ....
. All species have a distinctly bear-like gait due to their front legs being longer than their back legs. The Aardwolf
Aardwolf

The aardwolf is a small, Entomophagy hyena-like mammal, native to East Africa and Southern Africa. The name means "earth wolf" in Afrikaans/Dutch language....
, Striped Hyena and Brown Hyena have striped pelts and manes lining the top of their necks which erect when frightened. The Spotted Hyena's fur is considerably shorter and spotted rather than striped. Unlike other species, its mane is reversed forwards.

Spotted Hyenas and, to a lesser extent, Striped and Brown Hyenas, have powerful carnassial
Carnassial

Carnassials are large teeth found in many carnivorous mammals, used for shearing flesh and bone in a scissor or shear-like way. In the Carnivora, the carnassials are the modified last upper premolar and the first lower molar , but in the prehistoric creodonts, the carnassials were further back in the jaw — first upper and second lower o...
 teeth adapted for cutting flesh and premolar
Premolar

The premolar teeth or bicuspids are transitional teeth located between the Canine_tooth and Molar_ teeth. In humans, there are two premolars per quadrant, making eight premolars total in the mouth....
s for crushing bone. Spotted hyenas have a strong bite proportional to their size, but the view that they have the strongest bite is a myth; and a number of other animals (including the Tasmanian devil
Tasmanian Devil

The Tasmanian Devil is a carnivore marsupial now found in the wild only in the Australian island states and territories of Australia of Tasmania....
) are proportionately stronger. The Aardwolf has greatly reduced cheek teeth, sometimes absent in the adult, but otherwise has the same dentition as the other three species. The dental formula
Dentition

Dentition is the tooth development of teeth and their arrangement in the mouth.All mammals except the monotremes, the xenarthrans, the pangolins, and the cetaceans have up to four distinct types of teeth, with a maximum number for each....
 for all hyena species is: Labiolingually, their mandibles are much stronger at the canine teeth than in canids, reflecting the fact that hyenas crack bones with both their anterior dentition and premolars, unlike canids which do so with their post-carnassial molars. Like felids, hyenas lack the rearward molars of canids and vivverids. By organising their teeth so that the bone-crushing premolars do not interfere with the meat-slicing carnassials to the rear, hyenas can crush bone without blunting the carnassials' blades.

Hyenas, in particular the spotted hyena, are highly intelligent animals with some studies strongly suggesting convergent evolution
Convergent evolution

Convergent evolution describes the acquisition of the same biological trait in unrelated lineages.The wing is a classic example of convergent evolution in action....
 in hyena and primate
Primate

A primate is a member of the biological order Primates , the group that contains lemurs, the Aye-aye, Lorisidaes, galagos, tarsiers, monkeys, and apes, with the last category including humans....
 intelligence. Spotted hyena societies are more complex than those of other carnivorous mammals and have been reported to be remarkably similar to those cercopithecine primates in respect to group size, structure, competition and cooperation. One indication of hyena intelligence is that they will move their killed prey closer together to protect them from scavenger
Scavenger

Scavenging, or necrophagy, is a carnivorous feeding behaviour in which a predator consumes corpses or carrion that were not killed to be eaten by the predator or others of its species....
s. Another indication is their strategic hunting methods.

The majority of hyena species show little sexual dimorphism
Sexual dimorphism

Sexual dimorphism is the systematic difference in form between individuals of different sex in the same species. Examples include color , size, and the presence or absence of parts of the body used in courtship displays or fights, such as ornamental feathers, horns, antlers or tusks....
, with males being only slightly larger than the females. The spotted hyena is an exception to this with females larger than males. One unusual feature of the spotted hyena is that females have an enlarged clitoris
Clitoris

The clitoris is a sex organ that is present only in female mammals. In humans, the visible button-like portion is located near the anterior junction of the labia minora, above the opening of the urethra and vagina....
 called a pseudo-penis
Pseudo-penis

A pseudo-penis is a term used of any structure found on an animal that while superficially appearing to be a penis, is derived from a different developmental path....
, demi-penis or sometimes mistakenly referred to as a nanophallus. Female hyenas give birth, copulate and urinate through their protruding genitalia which stretches to allow the male penis to enter for copulation; it also stretches during birth. The anatomical position of the genitalia gives females complete control over which males are allowed to mate with them. Researchers originally thought that one cause of this characteristic of the genitals was androgens that were introduced to the fetus very early on in its development. However, it was discovered that when the androgens were held back from the female fetus
Fetus

A fetus is a developing mammal or other viviparous vertebrate, after the embryonic stage and before childbirth. The plural is fetuses, or sometimes feti....
, the development of her genitalia was not altered. Spotted hyenas have a matriarchal social structure that biologists speculate evolved because it is in the best interests of the female hyena to dominate the male hyena as it provides no assistance in rearing the cubs
Cubs

Cubs may refer to:*Chicago Cubs, a baseball team of the National League of Major League Baseball**Iowa Cubs, a minor league baseball team of the Pacific Coast League...
.

All species excrete an oily, yellow substance from their anal glands
Anal glands

The anal glands or anal sacs are small, paired sacs located on either side of the anus between the Sphincter ani externus muscle and Sphincter ani internus muscle....
 onto objects to mark their territories. When scent marking the anal pouch is turned inside out, or everted. Hyenas also do this as a submissive posture to more dominant hyenas. Genitals, the anal area and the anal glands are sniffed during greeting behavior in which each hyena lifts its leg and allows the other to sniff its anal sacks and genitals. All four species maintain latrines far from the main denning area where dung
Dung

Dung may refer to:* Dung, animal feces* Dung, Doubs, a commune in the Doubs department in France* Mundungus Fletcher , a character in Harry Potter...
 is deposited. Scent marking is also done by scraping the ground with the paws, which deposits scent from glands on the bottoms of the feet. Hyenas do not raise their legs when urinating as male or dominant canids do.

Unlike the canids, hyenas do not regurgitate or carry back food in their stomachs for their young because of the speed with which the food is digested by the adults.

Hyenas can carry strains of rabies
Rabies

Rabies is a virus zoonotic neurotropic virus disease that causes acute encephalitis in mammals. It is most commonly caused by a bite from an infected animal, but occasionally by other forms of contact....
 but not develop symptoms.

Habitat

With the exception of the Striped Hyena which has been seen in the jungles of India
India

India, officially the Republic of India , is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, the List of countries by population country, and the most populous liberal democracy in the world....
, all modern Hyena species generally reside in arid environments like African savannah
Savannah

Savannah or savanna is a type of grassland.It can also mean:...
s and deserts.

Dietary habits

Except for the aardwolf, all living hyena species are hunters and scavengers. They have extremely strong jaws in relation to their body size and have a very powerful digestive system with highly acidic fluids, making them capable of eating and digesting their entire prey, including skin, teeth, horns and bones. Hair and hooves are usually regurgitated. Because their digestive system deals very well with bacteria
Bacteria

The Bacteria are a large group of unicellular microorganisms. Typically a few micrometres in length, bacteria have a wide range of shapes, ranging from spheres to rods and spirals....
, they have no aversion to and readily eat carrion
Carrion

Carrion refers to the carcass of a dead animal. Carrion is an important food source for large carnivores and omnivores in most ecosystems. Examples of carrion-eaters, or scavengers, include Hyenas, Vultures, Virginia Opossum, Tasmanian Devils, Black Bears, Komodo Dragons, Bald Eagles, Raccoons and Blue-tongued lizards....
.

The spotted hyena is primarily a predator, unlike some of its cousins. Spotted hyenas are successful pack hunter
Pack hunter

A pack hunter is a predator belonging to the animal kingdom, which has evolved to hunt its prey by working together with other members of its species....
s of small to large sized ungulates and are the most abundant carnivores in Sub-Saharan Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa

Sub-Saharan Africa is a geographical term used to describe the area of the African continent which lies south of the Sahara, or those African countries which are fully or partially located south of the Sahara....
.

Because the aardwolf
Aardwolf

The aardwolf is a small, Entomophagy hyena-like mammal, native to East Africa and Southern Africa. The name means "earth wolf" in Afrikaans/Dutch language....
 is a specialized feeder of termites, it lacks the size and physical power of its cousins.

In culture

Many cultures have historically viewed the hyena in a bad light. Negative associations have generally stemmed from hyenas' tendency to scavenge grave
Grave

Grave may refer to:*Grave *Grave accent*Grave *Tempo#Basic_tempo_markings*Grave, NetherlandsGrave might also refer to:*Peter Graves, an American film and television actor known for his starring role in the television series...
s for food. They are one of the few creatures naturally suited for this due to their ability to devour and digest every part of a carcass, including bone. As such, many associate hyenas with gluttony, uncleanliness and cowardice. The word hyena is derived from the Greek
Ancient greek language

#REDIRECT Ancient Greek...
 hyaina, meaning "pig", and has a long association with cruelty, treachery and greed.

The haunting laughter-like calls of the spotted hyena inspired the idea in local cultures that they could imitate human voices and call their victims by name. Hyenas are also associated with divination
Divination

Divination is the attempt to gain insight into a question or situation by way of a standardized process or ritual. Diviners ascertain their interpretations of how a querent should proceed by reading signs, events, or omens, or through alleged contact with a supernatural agency....
 and sometimes thought of as tools of demons and witches. In African folklore witches and sorcerers are thought to ride hyenas or even turn into them.

Africa
Africa

Africa is the world's second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. At about 30.2 million km? including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area....
n attitudes toward hyenas are little better than those held in the European cultures
Western world

The term Western world, the West or the Occident can have multiple meanings dependent on its context . Accordingly, the basic definition of what constitutes "the West" varies, expanding and contracting over time, in relation to various historical circumstances....
. The Bouda
Bouda

Werehyenas are mythological or folkloric creatures capable of assuming the shape of hyenas. They are present in the stories of several African and Eurasian cultures....
 is a mythical tribe reputed to house members able to transform into hyenas. Belief in "Werehyenas" is so entrenched within the traditional lore of the Bornu
Bornu

Bornu may refer to:* Bornu Empire, a historical state of West Africa* Borno State, Nigeria...
 people of north-eastern Nigeria
Nigeria

Nigeria, officially the Federal Republic of Nigeria, is a federation constitutional republic comprising States of Nigeria and one Federal Capital Territory, Nigeria....
, that their language even contains a special word bultungin which translates as "I change myself into a hyena".

Early naturalists thought hyenas were hermaphrodite
Hermaphrodite

A hermaphrodite is an organism having both male and female reproductive organs. In many species, hermaphroditism is a common part of the life-cycle, enabling a form of sexual reproduction in which partners are not separated into distinct male and female types of individual....
s or commonly practiced homosexuality
Homosexuality

Homosexuality refers to human sexual behavior or same-sex attraction between people of the same sex or to homosexual orientation. As a sexual orientation, homosexuality refers to "having sexual and romantic attraction primarily or exclusively to members of one?s own sex"; "it also refers to an individual?s sense of personal and social identi...
, largely due to the female spotted hyena
Spotted Hyena

The Spotted Hyena, or Laughing Hyena, is a Carnivora mammal of the family hyaenidae. It is the largest of the hyenas, and is native to sub-Saharan Africa, save for the Congo basin....
's unique urogenital system. According to early writings such as Ovid's Metamorphoses and the Physiologus, the hyena continually changed its sex and nature from male to female and back again. In Paedagogus
Paedagogus

Paedagogus, second in the great trilogy of Clement of Alexandria.Having laid a foundation in the knowledge of divine truth in the first book, he goes on in the Paedagogus to develop a Christian ethic....
, Clement of Alexandria noted that the hyena (along with the hare
Hare

Hares and jackrabbits are leporids belonging to the genus Lepus. Very young hares, less than one year old, are called leverets....
) was "quite obsessed with sexual intercourse." Many Europeans associated the hyena with sexual deformity, prostitution
Prostitution

The word prostitution is used to indicate:1. The exposing or otherwise offering oneself or someone else with the purpose of tempting potential customers to exchange money or goods for the promise of cooperativeness in sexual intercourse from the exposed person;...
 and deviant sexual behavior.

Hyenas (usually "Laughing Hyenas") have been used in animated movies many times as well as having been rendered in live action films, commonly cast as hysterical and unhinged villains. Examples include Shenzi, Banzai and Ed
Shenzi, Banzai and Ed

Shenzi, Banzai and Ed are a trio of villainous spotted hyenas who first appeared in the 1994 The Walt Disney Company animated film The Lion King....
 from the Disney animated film The Lion King
The Lion King

The Lion King is a American Animation film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation, released in theaters on June 15, 1994 by Walt Disney Pictures....
, one ball-playing individual in Bedknobs and Broomsticks
Bedknobs and Broomsticks

Bedknobs and Broomsticks is a 1971 musical film produced by Walt Disney Productions which combines live action and animation; it premiered on October 7 1971....
, and the Joker
Joker (comics)

The Joker is a Character , a comic book supervillain published by DC Comics and appearing as an enemy of Batman. Created by Jerry Robinson, Bill Finger and Bob Kane, the character first appeared in Batman #1 ....
's pets, Bud and Lou
Bud and Lou

Bud and Lou are fictional characters, the pet Spotted Hyena of Joker on the cartoon series Krypto the Superdog, which the Joker himself never appeared in....
.

See also

  • Crocotta
    Crocotta

    The crocotta , is a mythical dog-wolf of India or Ethiopia, said to be a deadly enemy of men and dogs....
  • Hyena butter
    Hyena butter

    Hyena butter is a secretion from the anal gland of hyenas used to mark Territory and to identify individuals by odor. The gooey substance is spread onto objects within the territory of the hyena by rubbing their posterior against the object they mark....


External links

  • from Richard D. Estes's "The Safari Companion" (ISBN 1-890132-44-6)