Sparrows, which are common in urban and rural areas, may serve as a food source for wild and domestic carnivores.
Wear and cracking of the carnassial teeth in a wild carnivore (e.g. wolves, lions) may result in the death of the individual due to starvation.
Afterward, like a wild carnivore, she lay in a semistupor as her heavy meal digested.
Humans can be infected by eating infected pork or horse or wild carnivores such as fox, cat or bear.
Definitive hosts of Spirometra include dogs, cats, birds, and wild carnivores, while humans are accidental hosts.
Upon that animal, a large emu and wild hog-like carnivore, a Gulphog, is the main predator.
T. murrelli also infects humans, especially from black bear meat; it is distributed among wild carnivores in North America.
Rabies may also spread through exposure to infected domestic farm animals, groundhogs, weasels, bears and other wild carnivores.
Hunters past and present have waged relentless war on America's wild carnivores.
The discovery that a wild carnivore was tree in their midst created an uproar among the citizens of Zurich.