'Hyenas' or 'Hyænas' are moderately large terrestrial
carnivores native to
Africa,
Arabia,
Asia and the
Indian subcontinent. They are members of the
family Hyaenidae.
Physiology
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
mongooses and
meerkats). With the exception of the insectivorous
Aardwolf, hyenas have among the strongest
jaws in the animal kingdom and an adult of the
species has only the big cats (e.g.
lions or
leopards) to fear.
All species have a distinctly bear-like gait due to their front legs being longer than their back legs.
The Aardwolf, striped hyena and brown hyena have luxurious, striped pelts and manes lining the top of their necks which erect when frightened. The spotted hyena's fur is considerably shorter and is spotted rather than striped. Unlike other species, its mane is reversed forwards.
Hyenas are highly intelligent animals, and some scientists claim they are of equal intelligence to certain
apes.
[1] One indication of hyena intelligence is that they will move their kills closer to each other to protect them from
scavengers; another indication is their strategic hunting methods.
[2]
The majority of hyena species show little sexual dimorphism, usually with males being only slightly larger than the females. The spotted hyena is an exception to this as females are larger than the males and dominate them. One unusual feature of the spotted hyena is that females have an enlarged clitoris called a
pseudo-penis or demi-penis. Female hyenas give birth, copulate, and urinate through their protruding genitalia, which stretches to allow the male penis to enter for copulation, and it also stretches during birth. The anatomical position of the genitalia gives females total sexual control over who is allowed to mate with them. Researchers originally thought that one of the things that caused 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 fetus, the development of the female genitalia was not altered.
All species excrete an oily, yellow substance from their anal glands 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 ceremonies 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 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.
Evolution

Skull of ''Hyaena eximia''.

Lower jaw of ''Hyaena eximia''.
The hyaenids have no fossil record before the mid-
Miocene period, about 10 million years ago, thus making them the most recent addition to the
carnivora. It is believed that the family began in Africa and spread through Europe and Asia. The hyena's peak was during the
Pleistocene, with 4 genera and 9 species of hyena.
[3] Extinct hyena genera included
civet-like tree dwellers and speedy species developed to run down prey, along with even more powerfully developed bone crushing species similar to modern hyena. Fossil examples include the genera ''
Protictitherium'', ''
Ictitherium'', ''
Chasmaporthetes'', ''
Adcrocuta'', ''
Pachycrocuta'' and ''
Percrocuta'' (of which ''P. gigantea'' was the largest Hyena which ever lived). Their success was largely due to the fact that the sabre-toothed cats which they coexisted with, were unable to make full use of their prey due to the nature of their dentition. The hyena's powerful jaws and digestive systems allowed them to consume otherwise undigestible parts.
3 As the sabre-toothed cats began to die out and be replaced by short fanged felids which were more efficient eaters, some hyenas began to hunt for themselves and began evolving into new species, the modern spotted hyena being among them.
[4]
Most lines of hyena died out towards the end of the
Miocene, possibly due to competition from early
canids. The running hyena ''
Chasmaporthetes'' survived until the first ice ages, and the Eurasian
Cave Hyena survived until the end of the last ice age, when they died out along with much of the Eurasian megafauna.
Habitat
With the exception of the Striped Hyena which has been seen in the jungles of
India, all modern Hyena species generally reside in arid environments like African savannahs and deserts.
Dietary habits
With the exception of the
Aardwolf, all hyena species are efficient 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, bones and even hooves. Since they eat carrion, their digestive system deals very well with
bacteria.
The spotted hyena is primarily a predator, unlike its cousins. Spotted hyenas are successful
pack hunters of small to large sized ungulates and are the most abundant carnivore on the African continent.
The Aardwolf is a specialised feeder of
termites, thus lacking the size and physical power of its cousins.
In culture
Negative associations have generally stemmed from their tendency to scavenge graves for food (being 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.
Their haunting laughter-like calls inspired the idea in local cultures that they could imitate human voices and call its victims by name. Hyenas are also associated with
divination 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.
Christian legend reports that a hyena once brought a blind boy to Macarius the Egyptian who restored his sight to him. Isaiah says of
Babylon that ''"hyenas will howl in their citadels"'' adding their voices to the sounds of desolation to be heard in this once beautiful city (Isaiah 13:22). The hyena was also a symbol of wisdom and cleverness, however, because of its constant laughter, its knowledge was seen to be that of the debased, profane, earthly, or initiatory kind. The wise hyena was a fool compared to the all-knowing God and symbolized the foolishness of man's wisdom as opposed to that of the Father (I Cor 1:25).
[5]
African attitudes toward hyenas are little better than those held in the
Western world. The majority of African tribes view hyenas as
inedible and greedy hermaphrodites. The
Bouda is a mythical tribe reputed to house members able to transform into hyenas.
[6] Belief in ''"Werehyenas"'' is so entrenched within the traditional lore of the
Bornu people of north-eastern
Nigeria, that their language even contains a special word ''bultungin'' which translates as "I change myself into a hyena".
[7]
Early naturalists thought hyenas were
hermaphrodites or commonly practiced
homosexuality, largely due to the female
spotted hyena'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'', Clement of Alexandria noted that the hyena (along with the
hare) was "quite obsessed with sexual intercourse." Many Europeans associated the hyena with sexual deformity, prostitution, and deviant sexual behavior.
In film
Hyenas have been used in animated movies many times, as well as having been rendered in live action films via
CGI.
★ A large clan of hyenas play the role of antagonistic henchman in the
Disney animated film ''
The Lion King''. They are led by three notable hyenas named
Shenzi, Banzai and Ed, who later reappeared as minor characters in the sequel ''
The Lion King 1 1/2''.
★ In Disney's '', a hyena is seen snapping at
Aslan the lion's feet, when he walks to the Stone Table.
★ Hyenas insinuated to be possessed or materialized by the demon
Pazuzu attack and kill a young boy in ''.
★ Woof is a member of the
Jokerz who has had his
DNA genetically spliced with that of a hyena in ''.
★ Sami is a
Tanzanian hyena swiper that appears in ''
Dora's World Adventure''.
★ Yuri Orlov encounters a pack of hyenas in ''
Lord of War''.
★ The
Wargs in
The Lord of the Rings bear a similarity to hyenas, although in the novels, they are described as intelligent wolves.
★
Jane Goodall's '' A documentary about hyenas. 16mm film, 2 reels.
★ In the
1942 live-action film adaptation of ''
The Jungle Book'', hyenas can be seen in a few parts of the movie. Incidentally, the hyenas depicted are spotted hyenas, native only to Africa and not Asia.
In television

Skelerena.
★ A skeletal hyena monster named
Skelerena plagues the Power Rangers in the ''
Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers'' episode "Mirror of Regret".
★ A group of evil, singing hyenas are villains in the
Japanese animated series ''
Kimba the White Lion''.
★ In '' and ''
Krypto the Superdog'', the
Joker keeps a pair of pet hyenas named
Bud and Lou (after the comedians
Bud Abbott and
Lou Costello).
★ Hyenas figure prominently in the
Buffy the Vampire Slayer Episode
"The Pack", in which several characters are possessed by the spirits of a hyena pack.
★ Shenzi, Banzai and Ed appear as semi-regular characters in the Lion King television spin-off ''
Timon & Pumbaa''.
★ A pessimistic hyena named
Hardy Har Har served as the foil to the
Hanna-Barbera character Lippy the Lion.
★ Hyenas have been characters in several episodes of
Cow & Chicken.
★ A hyena named Nebbich played a prominent role in the first season of the animated series ''
The Legends of Treasure Island''.
★ Hyena was the name of a cybernetically enhanced villain on the cartoon Gargoyles
★ In the animated series
Biker Mice From Mars, the villanous slavers, the 'Sand Raiders' resembled humanoid hyenas.
★ In
Disney's
Gargoyles, the brother sister duo of Jackal and Hyena were recurring villains.
★ Hyenas have been featured on
Animal Planet's series entitled ''Growing Up...''.
In video games
★
Capcom's first
PlayStation 2 Mega Man X entry, ''
Mega Man X7'', featured a Maverick boss patterned after a hyena: ''Flame Hyenard''. Like real-life hyenas, Flame Hyenard was identifiable by his loud whooping cries.
★ Players encounter zombified hyenas in the Raccoon City Zoo in the "Wild Things" chapter of ''.
★ Shenzi, Banzai and Ed play minor villains alongside their hyena brethren in
Kingdom Hearts 2.
★ In
World of Warcraft, hyenas can be seen in various locations, and trained as pets by the Hunter class.
★ In the game Space Station: Silicon Valley for the Nintendo 64, you can play as a hyena in the jungle levels.
★ The Pokemon
Poochyena and
Mightyena both resemble hyenas.
★ Hyenas can be trained as pets in the
massively multiplayer game
Guild Wars Nightfall
★ In
Cabela's Dangerous Hunts and
Cabela's African Safari, hyenas could be hunted in both games.
In literature
★ A group of were-hyena characters, led by the
hermaphrodictic play a role in book ''
Narcissus in Chains''.
★ In the book-series ''
Earth's Children'' by
Jean M. Auel, the leading character Ayla has an irrational disgust for hyenas, due to previous experiences with them.
★ In
Ernest Hemingway's ''
The Snows of Kilimanjaro'', a hyena watches over the dying Harry, and is constantly waking them up during the night.
★ In
Yann Martel's ''
Life of Pi'', the leading character, Piscine, shares a lifeboat with several zoo animals, including a hyena.
★ In James Mischener's ''
The Covenant'', Mal Adriaan travels a large part of his journey with a tame Hyena named Swarts. After the death of his slave Dikkop, Adriaan begins talking to Swarts as a human being. When Swarts is killed by a Lion, Adriaan continues talking to the dead Hyena, even after returning to civilization.
★ In ''
The Island of Doctor Moreau'' by H. G. Wells, one of the most dangerous of the Beast People is a humanoid hybrid of hyena and swine.
In comics
★ There have been two different supervillains, one male and one female, in the
DC Universe to use the name "
Hyena". Both are were-hyenas.
★ A character named "Hyena" existed in the
Amalgam Universe. He was a blend of the
Joker and
Sabretooth and the arch-enemy of
Dark Claw.
★ Several major characters in Ursula Vernon's
webcomic Digger, such as 'Ed', Grim Eyes, and Boneclaw Mother, are hyenas.
In amusement parks
★ A pair of belly-laughing hyenas are featured in the
Disneyland attraction "
It's a Small World".
★ A small pack of hyenas are featured laughing at the plight of some natives cornered up a
totem pole by a
rhinoceros in the
Disneyland "
Jungle Cruise" attraction.
Notes
1. Said by biologist Jeff Corwin, in an episode of "The Jeff Corwin Experience" concentrating on spotted hyenas
2. "The Book about Animal Psychology" ("Bogen om Dyrepsykologi"), chapter 4, "Social behaviour" by Danish biologist Hans Lind.
3. Hyaenidae
4. The Art of being a Lion, Denis-Huot, Christine & Denis-Huot, Michel, , , , 2003, ISBN 158663707X
5. http://ww2.netnitco.net/users/legend01/hyena.htm
6. The spotted hyena from Aristotle to the Lion King: reputation is everything - In the Company of Animals
7. http://www.geocities.com/thesevenclans/lycaon.html
See also
★
Crocotta
★
Hyena butter
External links
★
Hyena: Wildlife summary from the African Wildlife Foundation
★
Robin M. Weare's Hyena pages
★
Excerpt about hyenas from Richard D. Estes's "The Safari Companion" (ISBN 1-890132-44-6)
★
Kay E. Holekamp laboratory
★
A mechanism for virilization of female spotted hyenas in utero
★
The Hyaenidae Family from Lioncrusher's Domain
★
The Hyaena Specialist Group
★
evolution of the family
★
"Hyenas" The Movie: The First Horror Movie About Hyenas
★
Quick Guide - Spotted hyena (deals with intelligence and social interaction)