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Monday, 1 June 2026

Cancer In British Red Foxes

Fox SH001 31 05 26 photo (c)2026 Fox Study

In Cancer Prevalence and Etiology in Wild and Captive Animals Madsen,  Arnal,  Vittecoq et al it is stated that:

"Wildlife cancer statistics are, however, highly scattered in the scientific literature and hence challenging to access. Moreover, tumors in wildlife are most commonly detected during postmortem examination and therefore hard to confirm without histopathological examinations. However, even such analyses can be inaccurate because of high levels of autolysis (organ disintegration) (McAloose and Newton, 2009).

" In addition, individuals harboring tumors often display a decrease in body condition frequently resulting in higher levels of parasite/pathogen infections and concomitant increased levels in morbidity and mortality (Vittecoq et al., 2013) "

The paper lists only one known red fox case: Vulpes v. pennsylvanicus American red fox Adenoma Ratcliffe (1933)

To this I can add two British cases -one from the Bristol Fox Necropsy Study:

029       Dog   4.80kg  Old Adult (which means over 5yrs)  Poor/Emaciated  Severe necropathy and lymphoma (cancer)

The second is a new case and only occurred yesterday (Sunday 31 05 2026): a fox (SH001 31 05 26) was in a collapsed state and my colleague, LM, attempted to secure it to take to a vet, however, as in such cases, the fox used a burst of energy and started swimming toward an island in a pond (mini lake). The fox was being unsuccessful and so LMs daughter swan out and retrieved it where it was taken care of before going to a vet (not LMs regular one).

The vet reported that the fox died while under anaesthesia (we have questions here) but the results of the examination and X-rays was that the it had broken canine teeth, pelvic swelling and osteosarcoma.

Osteosarcoma is an aggressive type of primary bone cancer that typically affects children, teens, and young adults. It most commonly develops in the long bones near the knee or shoulder. Standard treatment combines chemotherapy and surgery to remove the tumor and save the affected limb.  With wildlife and foxes in particular veterinary care is in the hit-or-miss stage and based on whether the vet decides it is too costly, not worthwhile, etc. Wildlife has no National Health Service.

Luckily LM maintains video observation of foxes in the area so was able to give a brief background report on this fox:

"I've watched the whole video of her at normal speed on Friday night. She was moving normally, but she sat down for 2 mins which she hadn't done before , her ears were slightly not upright . She didn't come Saturday night, I think she got as far as my side of the pond . Where I found her Sunday am at 0630.

"So the onset was acute not degenerative. She has no injuries or bite marks. Vixen 4.52 kg and full teats -as she thawed out the teats were squeezed and milk emerged.

"She will be going for toxicology and Histopathy."

Histopathology is the microscopic examination of tissue to study the manifestations of disease. It is the gold standard for diagnosing cancers, inflammatory conditions, and infectious diseases. By analyzing cellular structure, pathologists determine the exact nature of an abnormality, helping clinicians decide on the best treatment.)

"Just foxes" still applies in wildlife work and 99% of UK fox rescues/wildlife hospitals tell me that they do not submit foxes for PMs so it is very possible -very likely in fact- that we miss a great deal that might push our knowledge on fox diseases and illnesses and treatments forward.

That we now have two UK fox cancer cases is sad but worthy of note.

Any updates will follow as received.

Sunday, 31 May 2026

"The UK is currently one of the most nature-depleted countries on Earth"

 


"The UK is currently one of the most nature-depleted countries on Earth, with an average 19% decline in species abundance since 1970. Nearly 1 in 6 (16%) of the over 10,000 studied species are threatened with extinction, placing the country in the bottom 10% globally for biodiversity intactness"

Friday, 22 May 2026

Fox Cub Dies Due To Netting -AGAIN

 


Sadly an avoidable death in this case. We have had a number of deaths because people cannot empty inflatable pools and cubs fall in and drown or because people are so lazy that they put up netting for football etc but will not consider wildlife and pull it up in the evenings. Another net caused death.

127 Friday 22 05 2026 Dead young male cub, caught in netting --- Moravian Road BS15 8ND I removed all the netting –rigor mortis had set in” (note. RM sets in 1-2 hours after death and peaks at 6 -12 hours)

Cancer In British Red Foxes

F ox SH001 31 05 26 photo (c)2026 Fox Study In Cancer Prevalence and Etiology in Wild and Captive Animals Madsen,  Arnal,  Vittecoq et al ...