Dingoes

Dingoes are wild dogs native to Australia, but some lived in dingo santcuaries in North America. If humans disappear, will the dingoes survive?

Life After People
1 Day After People

Humans disappeared forever.

2 Months After People
Several dingo sanctuaries were left abandoned in Texas and Colorado, but most of them escaped from captivities and roam freely, while others are still thriving back in Australia before humans disappeared.

3 Months After People
The dingoes starting to adapt and spread across their new environment and started and other dingoes in other parts of Txeas managed to survive and form packs to hunt other animals and flourish.

25 Years After People
Despite the dingoes being successful of surviving, they face competition from the already-recovering Mexican gray wolves, which were once endangered from humans, but are now making a comeback. Dingoes will have to tolerate the recovering species or die out completely.

125 Years After People
The cities are now gone, many of their prey had also moved back to the wild, so the dingoes had to move into the wild or die.

135 Years After People
The descendants of dingoes have survived have survived because they are well equipped to survive in the world without humans. They are similar to their ancestors, but they became slightly larger than coyotes, they are equiped to survive and they hunt prey items that are thriving (such as deer, elks, goats, descendants of zoo antelopes and descendants of zoo camels and other escaped zoo animals.) They are the only main rivals to the gray wolves after coyotes died out. Despite competition with wolves, they are thriving well. The wild dingoes are found in forests and open grasslands of North America and Australia.