- Adjule
Infobox Paranormalcreatures
Creature_Name = Adjule
Image_Caption =
Grouping =Cryptid
Sub_Grouping =Canid
Country =Mauritania
Region =Sahara
Habitat =
First_Reported =
Last_Sighted =
Status = unrecognizedThe Adjule, also known as Kelb-el-khela, is acryptid canine , often seen in theNorth Africa n region, especially the areas in and aroundSahara Desert . Reported primarily by the nomadicTuaregs , andThéodore Monod in 1928, the adjule is said to be aphantom which takes the form of adog orwolf . Variant names to it creature are "kelb el khela" ( "bush dog") for the male and "tarhsît" for the female. However, despite still firm belief in its existance through modern urban myths, this cryptid has since been debunked and its sightings attributed to wild canines mistaken for the adjule, such as theAfrican Wild Dog which is now extinct in certain areas of the Sahara. There is one unconfirmed canid-like animal sighting from the coastal area of Mauritania in 1992; Hunters living in the coastal areas of the Western Sahara, to the north of Mauritania, described an animal resembling the wild dog, which hunted in packs. However, this was not confirmed for "Lycaon pictus" species (IUCN/CSG, 1997).References
* Théodore Monod, “Sur la présence du Sahara du Lycaon pictus (Temm.) (Résultats scientifiques de la Mission Saharienne Augiéras-Draper),” Bulletin de la Société Zoologique de France 53 (1928): 262–264.
* Woodroffe, R., Ginsberg, J.R. and Macdonald, D.W. (1997) The African wild dog: status survey and conservation action plan - IUCN Canid Specialist Group. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.
* Eberhart, George M., "Mysterious Creatures: A Guide to Cryptozoology", 2 vols (ABC-Clio: Santa Barbara, 2002).External links
* [http://www.bcscc.ca/cryptidlist.htm Cryptid list]
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