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Friday, 30 April 2021

British Foxes and the Need for Hair and DNA Analysis

                                                                                                                                  

In Jose R. Castello's Canids of the World one phrase is repeated on many of the fox taxonomy notes when the statement that it (fox type) is believed to be a sub-species of Vulpes vulpes: "The validity of this and other subspecies has not been confirmed by genetic analysis".

The Russian fox is noted as an old type and description/history seems fairly clear. However, the most information available on "Russian foxes" are pages of links to taming and domestication of foxes as pets. Considering the past of the former USSR that foxes were not studied in the wild is not surprising.
The Cyprus red fox has the same advisory and certain authors have claimed the importation of foxes at least twice from various sources.
It is always when a canid has been driven to extinction (like other species) that science then shifts its lardy ass and asks "Didn't anyone study them? Shameful" and too late.
We have two main urban fox populations in the UK (that we know of) -Bristol and London. Bristol having once been a major trade port it is possible that there were markets for selling foxes there rather than have foxes land at London, be transported to a seller and then transported around the UK. Commercially, it makes more sense in 18th and 19th century infrastructures (if they can be called that) to import into major ports then be sold on by sellers in those towns.
However, we have foxes in Bristol and London and these should (again our knowledge is very limited) represent a cross section of imported foxes. Both cities also have a lot of fox feeders/watchers and it might be possible to recruit them to gather at least hair samples from "their" foxes for analysis. As fgar as I am aware this would be the first such attempted large study and could lead on to other associated studies.
When it comes to the importance such a study would have on British natural history it would be major. Results could be used and built on by researchers in other countries or even islands where foxes exist and there is a question mark as to their origins.
Persuading the fox feeders and watchers to help out will need a lot of diplomacy and persuasion but can be achieved.
The difficulty comes in finding a university or lab that is willing to donate spare time to the study of the hair samples because there is no funding for such projects however ground breaking they may be.
THAT is what I see as being needed in this field.

Tuesday, 27 April 2021

The question is: Should we be feeding foxes? The Fox Man answers all

 This is from SomersetLive in May, 2020. I wish fox feeders would read this and take note. A fox requires around 100 cal//kg per day to keep it going. Last week I noted one feeder dishing out 6 chicken legs, some fried bacon, raw eggs and even chips "as a treat". That lot came to several hundreds of cals. I see photographs of perfectly slim, healthy foxes that feeders describe as "looking hungry". There are foxes across the UK that know the exact time of day to turn up at a back door for their free meals -breakfast and supper.

There are people, and it seems to be a big social media thing, who feed foxes in the garden and bit by bit entice them to eat from their hands or go further by enticing the fox to come into their klitchens and even living rooms. Now, the fox is no threat but the humamns are. They are habituating wild canids to humans which ios not a good thing for foxes. And injured fox being given meds -such as mange treatment- I see no problem with but I then read "Foxy had five young to feed -more mouths for me to feed too!" the cubs arethen taught by the vixen where to go for food.

Several times I have read of people doing this for years then: "We have to move. I hope foxy will be fed by the neighbours" or "I'm going away for a few months and I'm worried what thefpox I am feeding will do" or "I am on a months holiday soon and I have no idea how the fox will get food". The typical response is: "Ask a neighbour to feed them for you" which is fluffy minded at best.

Foxes eat rats, mice as well as other things and that is how it fits into the ecology of the UK; it is a wild canid and they have survived for many thousands of years without 1-2 daily feeds from humans. Would you have a dog and go on holiday or move house and leave it alone with no food? No, but it is a domestic canid and relies onhumans. A fox is a wild canid and will, hopefully, go back tpo its usual ways once human feeding stops.

It does not matter whetheryou have lived in the housefor 10 years and been happily feeding foxes and the neighbour has been there less than a year; if he asks you to stop feeding foxes because they are urinating on his door (and fox urine wreaks) then you had better stop because "tell him to **** off. You were there first!" does not cut it. Hecan report the "fox problem" to the local authority and pest controllers will be more than happy to kill it/them because you habituated them to humans when they should run from humans.

You move and so one day a neighbour screams when she finds a pair of foxes walking into her kitchen and house. She contacts the council. Pest controllers. Bang. Bang. Foxes dead BECAUSE of human habituation.

I suggested that fruit and veg be put in with all the chicken, ham, sausages and eggs. It did not go down well.

There are legitimate reasons to give foxes some food but I am seeing too many overweight foxes and that is going to seriously impact on their health and the future health of the species.

are wild canids -leave them as wild canids and buy yourself a dog

The SomersetLive post:

Restaurants are closed, as are takeaways, and rubbish collections seem to now be picking up.

For an urban fox, it's become harder to source some of its regular food supplies.

And this can often mean that they are braving food sources from further afield and encroaching on human territory.

In Somerset especially, foxes face a love-hate relationship with humans - some people get pleasure from hunting them, while others will do all they can to try and protect them.

So what should you do if you begin to notice a hungry fox or two in your neck of the woods, and are they really the pests they're made out to be?

To answer this question, Somerset Live spoke with 'The Fox Man', a non-for-profit organisation based up north in Greater Manchester, but whose Facebook presence and quick response time for any fox lover looking for advice, has stretched across the country.

Urban foxes can find food among household waste and leftovers 

The goal of 'The Fox Man' is to rescue foxes who may be sick or injured and provide advice and support to anyone who may have a sick or injured fox visiting them at home.

Recently they have treated a number of foxes for mange - a common skin disease caused by mites - and have also taken in a number of foxes with injuries to limbs and even teeth. They currently have a small collection of rescued fox cubs, too.

The Fox Man also tries to dispel some of the negative views of foxes by members of the public.

The team give educational talks for schools and other groups and, though they are based in the North West, they will be there to help anyone across the country with a fox query.

What are your thoughts on foxes? Have you seen more of them while in lockdown and would you feed them? Get in touch by emailing ellie.kendall@reachplc.com

So when it comes to feeding a fox, what should we consider?

Foxes are usually fearful of humans

The Fox Man says: "The main issue with regards to feeding foxes is them becoming dependent on you for food.

"If for whatever reason you have to stop – i.e. you move house, or go on holiday, the fox which has until then been used to being fed daily, suddenly has its regular food supply cut short and can therefore struggle.

"It may then need to search further afield to find food, which can sometimes result in them encroaching on other foxes territories, leading to territorial battles in worst cases.

"The best advice is to give them small amounts of food such as peanuts or a small helping of dog food."

Are foxes really as bad as some people believe them to be?

From killing pets, to chasing humans, some people really have a thing against foxes - and that's even before we take into account the amount of people who still venture out on fox hunting trips in this modern day and age, despite the Hunting Act 2004, which made it illegal to hunt wild animals with a pack of dogs.

Those in charge of their own farm, keeping chicken coops and the like, may also be wary of foxes eating all their chickens and even the eggs they lay.

It's worth remembering, though, that foxes aren't animals that kill for fun but rather for food.

They will often bury a lot of the food they acquire, for another day.

The Fox Man says: "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

"You either love them or hate them, and to some people they are beautiful animals who can provide hours of entertainment as they play in your garden, and to others they are considered a pest as they can dig up gardens, kill unprotected pets and make some annoying noises (particularly in the early hours, during mating season).

"Our goal here is to do what we can for the sick and injured ones, and to advise those who do have an issue with foxes on ways to solve their problems humanely.

"Lethal forms of 'fox control' are completely pointless with foxes being territorial, so the removal of one leads to another taking its place - so we always recommend ways to deter foxes from gardens/ensure small pets are protected properly, and then there will be no issue long term."

The Fox Man added: "There's a lot of misunderstanding and fear mongering in the press with regards to foxes, and we are always amazed when someone says they are 'too scared to go into their garden' if they have a fox there, dealing with these animals close up on a daily basis.

"They want nothing more than to avoid contact with humans and will run off if you even start to approach them.

"We need to get very hands on with some of the foxes that come in, and they are completely non-aggressive, just fearful.

"Unfortunately, some people who read certain newspapers with a pro-hunt agenda believe foxes are the 'big bad wolf' that will eat your children the first chance they get, due to dubious stories about 'fox attacks'.

"This is not typical of foxes at all and they just want to avoid humans.

"Unfortunately, in this day and age we are encroaching more and more on natural environments that would have once been home to an array of wildlife including foxes, who are now forced to adapt to urban environments and cope with humans - who are the cause of approximately 80% of fox deaths, with the bulk of those being road traffic collisions.

"Love them or hate them, there is no denying that foxes are truly beautiful animals and we are lucky to have such a characteristic wild animal frequenting our gardens."

Wednesday, 21 April 2021

Careless Lips Kill Foxes

 


Wildcat Survival and the need to Protect and Maintain An Environmental Balance



 I mention the Scottish Wild Cat Haven and its enclosure but what is more important is what their stance is regarding the shooting, snaring and even poisoning by landowners and farmers of feral cats to "keep the wildcat pure".

Between 1977-2013 (and on and off since) I was a wildlife consultant to UK police forces abd regularly spoke to land owners, game keepers and farmers from all around the UK but what I heard back from some in Scotland concerned me. I was being told that feral and wild cats were seen as "vermin" or "pests" (same thing). People were quite open in telling me that both were shot on site or that they were snared.

Firstly, I was in the position that I could do nothing much. I reported back to PWO (Police Wildlife Officers) who could only note what I was saying because, without solid evidence, it was "your word against theirs" and they were not going to say to police that they used poison. Shooting and snaring on private land is also not illegal. I came across several incidents over the years in which animals or birds that were supposedly protected by law, were killed. "Oh, that's on private land" I was told. End of story.

Just as these people told me about the number of red squirrels they had killed or how they had "disposed of" reintroduced birds of prey so the police kept informing me that private land was private land.

You might assume that with complaints of so many wild rabbits running around a wild or feral (feral is just a former domestic cat living wild) cat would be welcome -they kill and eat rabbits...and rats and mice. Despite all of the laws the practice that has gone on for centuries continues -the 'fun' and 'joy' of killing a specific animal -including buzzards and hawks that kill the rabbits, mice and rats. 

We know that Di Francis in her "ill judged" Kellas cat quest -to prove that it was a formerly unknown British cat species- paid for any such cat killed. Her incompetence at breeding these cats led to their suffering and death until she was "advised" (you could not tell her anything) that feeding a "natural diet" like they would get in the wild might help. It did.  However, when I spoke to her by phone in the late 1990s I was told that she had up to 20 dead Kellas cats in her freezers -all evidence of the new species. We know that the "Kellas" cat is a feral-wildcat hybrid -that is evolution not a reason to carry on killing a species. 

Read the books by the great and good naturalists and zoologists and they explain all of this (turning a convenient blind eye when they should be very vocal); if a species is under stress, hunted and they are few in number then they will breed with the most convenient and compatible species. A female wild cat will mate with a feral if there are no male wild cats and vice versa. Again: that is evolution.

We like to think that our knowledge of wild cats in the UK is complete and you will read:

Now confined to the Scottish highlands, wild cats disappeared from southern England in the 16th century, with the last one recorded in northern England being shot in 1849. ... The Wildlife and Countryside Act gives strict legal protection to wild cats and their dens.

But the truth is that wild cats in England and even the Welsh border area were still known in the 1930s and these were not releases but still existing at that time but under threat -even well klnown and respected zoologiosts wrote about this.

In 2019 it was reported that there were plans to reintroduce the wild cat (Felis silvestris) back into England. It cannot be possible, if any research had been done what-so-ever by those involved, that they were unaware that this had already happened. As I noted in my Wildcats and Ferals paper (2000) while looking at large non native cat reports I was contacted by a couple who saw a pair of large cats in their garden (location confidential) and as they described what they saw I was puzzled. Eventually it was established that what they had observed were two F silvestris.

Then another report from a different location. I then heard from a forester on the English-Welsh borders. Suddenly, other reports were beginning to make sense. I contacted the Wildcat Survival Trust and was told that they knew a group had been releasing pairs of wild cats around England to try to reintroduce them. No idea who the group was but this was all taking place throughout the 1990s. I welcome an official reintroduction but only if protection is strictly enforced including on private property. Tagging and tracking may help to a degree.

As it happens I was wondering why I had not heard more of these cats pover recent years though people have reported "BIG tabby cats with striped/ringed tails" and thanks to Hayley de Ronde of Black Foxes UK I heard of a recent sighting in Northern England (location confidential) and have been in contact with the observer who is keeping his eyes open from now on.

Rather as the non stop killing of foxes and their cubs -snaring, poisoning, shooting and live cubs thrown to fox hounds to "give them a taste of their prey" it is barbaric and totally out of keeping with the natural balance of the eco system. Prey -rabbits, mice, rats etc require Predators -foxes, badgers (another protected species killed at whim officially) and wild/feral cats. The Prey-Predator balance is no longer in sync.

Protect and help existing populations of Felis silvestris is welcome but not at the cost of killing every feral cat seen which are filling a niche. We also need to make sure that protecyted species are protected without the "its private land" gety-out-of-gaol clause. And let's not forget that many pets are also injured and killed because of these actions.

Wild Cat Enclosure

 This was posted earlier by the Scottish Wildcat Haven -thanks to Hayley de Ronde for forwarding.



FINLAY’S REHABILITATION ENCLOSURE COMPLETED
We are delighted to announce that our wildcat rehabilitation enclosure is now complete and Finlay is now happily living in it, in preparation for a return to the wild.
A lot of thought went into this before we started, as this facility will last at least 25 years and will not just help Finlay, but any future cats rescued. We therefore wanted to get it right.
It has a number of crucial features:
Contains natural vegetation to allow natural behaviours.
Is permeable to birds and small mammals which can freely move through it, allowing Finlay an opportunity to develop crucial hunting skills.
Contains multiple dens sites as wildcats use more than one den in the wild.
Has different areas of cover and zones to give the opportunity for maximum behavioural enrichment.
Built using a galvanised tubular steel system which allows flexibility. It can be added to or split up, if we get multiple animals at short notice.
The fencing is dug 2 feet into the ground to prevent cats digging out and animals like foxes and badgers digging in.
Is in a remote location to prevent exposure to people.
It is not on public view
It is away from roads and so prevents habituation to vehicles.
It has been a huge amount of work and we have had tractors, diggers, and up to 6 people working on site at any one time, but we are delighted with the end result and hope you are too.
Most importantly, Finlay seems to approve too and is thoroughly enjoying himself. He is now living in the enclosure full time, which is a crucial step on his journey back to the wild. We will put up some recent pictures and footage of him in the coming days, so keep watching.
Here are some picture of the construction process and finished enclosure on the news section of our website:
Massive thanks to all of you who contributed to our crowd funder and follow our work. As usual this couldn’t have happened without your support.
Thanks again.
The Wildcat Haven team and Finlay

Tuesday, 20 April 2021

My Pet Fox: A Short Documentary Film

WHY You Should Leave Fox Cubs Alone

 Just counter the seeming crazy rush to want to feed fox cubs sausages and any other type of human food to hand, Hayley de Ronde of Black Foxes UK posted this:



If the animal is in its den with its littermates and is not in any obvious distress, it is no indication the animals are in need. It is a blessing to witness wildlife in their natural environment alongside us. It is not an invitation to get involved.
Do not interfere with fox cubs and their dens without evidence it is necessary. Do not feed cubs unless you have determined a need.
To get evidence the animals need your help and are in fact in need, and that it isn't an incorrect assessment on your part, you must wait down wind, a safe distance from the den and check the area over a period of 24 hours. Take footage or pictures if you can. Don't bring your dogs, kids, etc. along.
The wildlife rescues can not attend to foxes if they have no evidence of them needing help, legally. Don't expect them to use their precious time and resources to go down there, just so they can put your mind at rest for you. It is spring time amidst a pandemic, if you expect wildlife rescues to assist on a whim, consider a donation to them in the process.
Well meaning members of the public and FB groups are all to quick to interfere and assume the worst, to decide fox parents don't know best, and to send cubs to wildlife rescues before assessing there is in fact any need. DONT.
I am having more and more distain for the toxic help seen more and more on social media. Wild foxes are not our pets (we have pet foxes already) and they do not need us to survive, if they do, there is a problem.
Get evidence of the animal you think is in distress and then seek professional advice, before you interfere. Do not encourage anyone to interfere with fox cubs, unless there is evidence there is a need. Contact the rescues directly, if you are unsure how to do this.

Monday, 19 April 2021

Explosive British Wildlife History


 It was said that The Red Paper was "explosive" with what it revealed about foxes, jackals, coyotes and wolves in the UK.

The follow-up, in which case, is going to be described as "Bloody Hell! We hit an ammo dump!"

There has been one major revellation after another and all are accidental discoveries. Today I received a brief email from a certain establishment. Very casual, however. (lets keep with the military metaphors) I was handed a hand grenade with the pin missing.

Everything is coming together but as there is no funding it will take a while. There appears to be no interest in funding the work from any source and so, as usual, that means plodding on slowly.

This evening, unless I get another email, I am going to sit back and let my head stop spinning. This is British wildlife history but who cares?

LEAVE Fox Cubs Alone!!

 


Almost everyone seeing a fox cub(s) seems to want to grab and 'save' them!

Offer advice and you'll be told to get stuffed. "Oh must contact the Fox Man!" "Must contact wildlife charity!"
My question: how many of these people actually donate to the continued work?
Wild canids are wild canids and unless you watch and see that a vixen does not return you are cub snatching and making young dependent on you. If vixen does not return then if you do not have somewhere outdoor to keep the cubs and feed until they are old enough to go hunt LEAVE THEM ALONE!!

Saturday, 17 April 2021

For The Sake Of The Fox -The British Fox Study



I cannot say that I am surprised and nor can I say that I am not disappointed regarding the feedback for the study.

I know people want to protect the fox they watch/feed.  That is only natural since there are still many threats to them in the town and city including snares laid down for them and stealing cubs. However, the secrecy is creating a big problem,

We know foxes are not a danger or threat to humans or pet cats. That is just pro hunt fake story telling to demonize the animal. We know that foxes are being poisoned in some areas –along with cats, hedgehogs and other animals. The secrecy is is allowing this type of thing to go on. If people are not educated about foxes and the dirty tricks being used by fur snarers and hunts then how can they act and help protect them? Someone sees two men hanging around near a neighbours home are more likely to think “possible house breakers” –their knowing a fox goes into that garden just does not fit into their equation because they wouldn’t be there for the fox, right? But if they know of the dangers to a fox a warning about those two men may save a fox.

There are hundreds of people out there around the UK who watch local foxes and some feed them. Most take photographs of them. Those photographs are valuable to a naturalist when looking at foxes in 2021. After months of scouring hundreds of photos from around the UK I have distinguished two prominent types of fox and fox morphology (colouration). Only ten (10) sets of photographs have come from fox watchers the rest I had to scour FB group photos then see which photos were taken where.

In fact, that scouring of photographs has achieved something (excluding the eye strain); it has helped me find what we might have considered at one time very rare fox colourations and some were eye-popping. Some were firsts for me after decades of work.

I started The Fox Study in 1977 and since that time, as with my work running the Exotic Animals Register (EAR), one thing has been paramount and that is the safety of the animal(s) in question. There was a motto: “By no word of mouth or deed to put any animal in danger” –when DEFRA insisted that I needed to turn over my exotics data to continue as part of the Partners Against Wild Life Crimes I refused and in the end they kicked me out. I could have stayed on the list of experts and made some money but not at the risk of exposing animals to DEFRAs “eradication protocol”.

At a time when I really needed money I was offered substantial amounts by two British newspapers who wanted to get maps and locations from what they called “Britain’s Big Cat Detective”. I refused. I knew why they wanted it and that was so they could pay a hunter to go out and “snag” a ‘big cat’. I decided poor was better.

Since 1977 I have never disclosed the name of any reportee wishing to remain anonymous, nor their location. The current look at foxes required this information:

1)      Photographs of the foxes watched/fed

2)      Name of the photographer (confidential but needed to prevent hoax/fraud)

3)      Location non-specific. In other words say, for Bristol the BS number so BS3, BS4 or BS16 etc which gives me a city area but no exact location (that is contained in the last three digits so I NEVER ask for those). In other areas just “London”, “Hove”, “Dartmouth”,”Glasgow” and so on because that gives me a geographic area NOT the exact location.

4)      How long have the foxes visited your garden and (if years) have you noticed any changes in their fur colour such as darkening, spotting or even black fur?

 

That is it. That information allows me to see whether foxes in different parts of the country have varied coat colours, whether they are smaller in one area compared to another. It helps us understand foxes in 2021 and that can ultimately help protect any at risk from hunters.

The Study is private and certainly not funded by any government department (such as DEFRA which hates me) or institution because, honestly, they do not care about foxes and fox studies do not bring in big donations for universities. This is NOT some type of tracking program in case rabies hits the UK. Firstly, it is very unlikely that rabies will hit the UK mainland and, secondly, no one has access to my data most of which is not kept on computer so hacking would be no good.

If you submit information you can either PM me on Face Book or email me at blacktowercg@hotmail.com and that’s it. Unless you have a very unusual or rare colour morph in which case I would like to learn more I do not pester with follow-ups. The four items listed above are all I am interested in.

 There are foxes out there that have survived mange, serious injuries and more but are alive today because people have helped them and given them the chance to survive. Taking part in this study will hopefully do something towards protecting foxes and that is as important as the fight to protect badgers and the endangered hedgehog –both of whom feed alongside or near foxes with little or no conflict.


PLEASE if you can help –do.

 

Thank You

Saturday, 3 April 2021

Discoveries are still being made

 Just a quick update. I have to say that, looking at the numbers who have been reading the posts, I am very disappointed that absolutely no one has been in touch or contributed information or photographs.  Were it not for local Face Book wildlife groups in certain areas and some foxers from these contributing the fox study would be nowhere.

At the moment the discoveries of the last three months has quite honestly been mind-blowing at times. Hopefully by the end of the year I will have some more data -enough to produce a paper on the subject.

Far more could be done with funding but there is none so I plod on.

Yes, the wolverine and wildcat work is also continuing and in both new discoveries are being made and evidence of wildcats (F. silvestris) still being around in England in the 1930s.

Bear with me -one man, no funding and giving as much time to this as I can.



Thursday, 1 April 2021

British Fox Study and Scope and NARFs

 



Above: The North American Red Fox

 If you have not read The Red Paper: Canids then it is very unlikely that you know the true story of British foxes. What we see today can easily be categorised as New Foxes as opposed to Old Fox types. The Red Paper: Canids was described as "explosive" and "totally rewrites the history of the fox in the UK".

The follow up will certainly carry on that tradition. Bit-by-bit I have pieced together that really should shake natural history in the UK to the core. 

We have irrefutable evidence that coyotes, wolves and jackals were released by British fox hunts.  This along with the importation of foxes from Europe as well as breeding foxes for future hunts is something it has taken a good few years to unearth and the information comes directly from the hunts.

I have clearly identified two fox types that seem typical of those found around the country. One of these is quite obviously of North American Red Fox (NARF) or Vulpes fulvus. 

In recent years wehave seen an extraordinary number of cases of escapes of Silver foxes as well as other exotic pet foxes. In fact the evidence leads to the suspicion that hunt groups are releasing NARF as something larger and more spectacular to hunt. It is also possible that the intention in some areas (such as Wales) is to breed something bigger with a "better fur" that can be caught in snares for the hiome grown British fur trade. The evidence speaks for itself.

Hayley de Ronde notes that in some areas the NARF has hybridised with or overtaken the number of British Red foxes.  This raises the concern that they will eventually replace the current British fox. She believes that the NARF were released following WW 2 and the eventual end of fur farming.

The Fox Study which I began in 1977 was able to make significant breakthroughs in tracing the history of UK foxes. The current work is designed to try to identify fox types in the UK and note how far and wide certain types are.

There are important points to make.

1. This work is not going to be completed quickly. There is absolutely no funding so things can take a while as everything comes out of my pocket.

2. This is a private research project aimed at giving us a better understanding of UK foxes. There is no governmental involvement, funding and there is no private access to core data given to any government department or agency working with one. People deal with me and no one else. 

3. From 1977-2013 I was an exotic animals advisor to UK police forces and it that time absolutely no witness identification or location data was ever given out. Confidential is confidential and protection of the animals involved is paramount.

4. What I ask for from people who want to help out is simple; 

(a)how long have the foxes been coming to your garden/area? 

(b)Have the foxes always looked the same -no stranger colourations to coats? 

(c)Basic location info.  In Bristol I simply ask for the post code area such as BS2 or BS 11. Outside of the City & County of Bristol I simply ask for the town, city or village. This is to help me see what types are in what areas.

(d) Photographs. People may love their foxy visitors but they take them to be "just foxes". With a photograph or series of photos I can see a lot more and that information helps greatly.

(e) If you have a name for the fox(es) that visit please note that with photos because if there is something unique spotted at least I can say which fox I'm talking about.  All photos/videoes are logged with the photographers Name and Town or area. I do not claim any rights to the photographs or video clips received so please do not be concerned that these will be used widely or without your permission.

From all of this I can hopefully produce something useful to people interested in foxes.

If you can help then please email me at:  blacktowercg@hotmail.com

If you see a black fox it may well be an escaped pet and those have been killed in road accidents, shot and even snared in the past as they are domesticated pets and not capable of living in the wild. The best people to contact (if you can get a photo it helps) are Black Foxes UK and their contact info can be found here: 

https://www.blackfoxes.co.uk/contact-us.php

THANK YOU

DNA Study of Foxes -Why Context Is Important

I think that this quote from Science Open is very relevent when it comes to the paper I am about to comment on  https://blog.scienceopen.com...