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If there is one thing I have learnt it is that people with a love of foxes are either the "get hands dirty" types who run rescues and try to help foxes (let's call them Type 1's) or the "I learnt everything from You Tube" and these can often cause more grief with bad feeding of foxes and habituation and if they set up a kitchen sink 'rescue' foxes are more at risk of harm than getting real help (these we'll call Type 2's).
The same applies to people who love badgers. There are the type 1's who are hindered by certain stupid regulations. For one; if a sow badger is dead next to a sett and there are starving pups in the sett they must be left there. You know the mother is dead and that means a slow death for the cubs but you must not under punishment of huge fines or prison sentence get the cubs out of the sett to save them. However much they squeal you have to wait for two things: the cubs to die or for them to leave the sett. Yes, once they leave the sett you can help them. Now here is where we have to remember that 300,000+ badgers, an alleged protected species, can be legally killed based on bad science and political corruption to a point where the population is on a speedy descent to extinction but you try to save cubs whose mother has been killed (usually by a car) and you are a criminal.
I was asked what I would do in that situation? I would break the law.
We can help fox cubs that are dying at an alarming rate while their parents are killed by 'sports shooters', farmers, killed by cars etc, etc., etc.. Even the British Trust for Ornithology after its mammal survey suggested now was the time to red list foxes (just as we did hedgehogs) because the population is on a very steep decline and like the badgers, that we must not, help are heading for extinction by the 2030s.
Humans are the greatest threat to the environment and wildlife and even with warning after warning about current species from mammals to birds heading for "The Big E" no one is listening. Back in the late 1700s and into the early 1800s 'sportsmen' and 'sportsmen-naturalists' were all reporting on the decline of the native British fox types and even stating that extinction seemed inevitable so what did they do? They carried on killing the foxes for the 'fun' of their 'sport' until...Old foxes gone. Not to worry as they did what they had done since at least the early 1700s and that was to import more so that the 'sport' might continue.
People are still badger baiting as well as shooting them on the quiet (often through the local "badger man") but snares and poison are still a staple of "getting rid of them" for no reason other than not liking wild animals on "my land". This is often organised and a crime but on the whole the police shrug and say "no proof" so perhaps they ought to do some policing?
Foxes are shot with no controls in place and although a land owner is supposedly only allowed to "deal with" a fox that threatens live stock foxes have proven to be no threat to sheep or lambs and even the 'great sportsmen' of the past who went out and studied this rejected the claim and their large reward for anyone bringing in evidence to prove this was not claimed by the early 1900s.
A fox walking along near a village or housing estate hunting rats or rabbits is not a threat under any description. In fact it is controlling the rodent population and reducing the need for all poisoning rodenticides. Even when it is cub season these people will kill a fox whether vixen lactating or not. It's their 'fun' and so what if foxes become extinct they can move on to other wildlife or even 'fun' shooting the odd wandering pet cat (which happens more frequently than you might want to think).
A wildlife looks very green and pleasant and so developers obviously want to build on that and local authorities (such as in Bristol) will twist and turn to try top push through developments and a blind eye is often turned towards fox dens and badger setts ("Oh, we had no ideas they were there"), In cities and towns the green spaces are vitally important not just for wildlife but also people -"little oases away from the concrete".
I was once offered an office at a college in the UK for my ongoing work on exotic species in the UK that attracted a lot of press and media attention. Then it was discovered that I was not a university graduate so "perhaps not a good idea" 😂
With foxes and diseases a great deal is being found out through the Bristol Fox Deaths Project and when any research on UK wildlife is published by researchers then the chances of getting a copy of the paper is never available to people who are not part of the "club" -I have a big folder full of papers on fox health, possible diseases, etc., and they are all from EU or American research which is distributed free online as part of "free to educate" policies which the UK sadly does not bother with. Anything our project discovers will be publicly as well as professionally available.
The Type 1 fox people need to be as informed as they can be because wildlife groups in general are not keen on foxes or badgers unless it is a photo opp or way to promote themselves. Large mammals such as foxes and badgers and even deer are seen as the "nasty types" that get in the way of the "pretty" butterflies, moths, birds and wild flowers. Type 1's in both fox and badger work often get threats, abuse and a whole lot more just because they are helping species no one cares about -300,000 badgers killed and heading for extinction and the "nation of animal lovers" is not up in arms (but a "lonely looking sheep" gets thousands of demands for it to be rescued?).
The UK is The Blood Red Island for a very obvious reason. Our wildlife protection laws and prosecutions against those breaking the 'laws' are a mess. When it comes to a land owner whether some rich business man or royal there should be no protection from prosecution over wildlife crimes.
We need a genuine wildlife crimes force that does not consist of local men who give a nod and wink to locals involved in crimes. A wildlife crimes force that is given full authorisation to enter private land when a wildlife crime is reported and suspected and whoever is involved should be prosecuted under new laws. Will this ever happen? Doubtful since most politicians tend to look at what is good for themselves rather than the environment and wildlife.
We are watching species vanishing and quite literally shrugging it off or just ignoring it as someone else's problem.
Local wildlife groups in the UK tend to have no interest in foxes or badgers unless there are photo opportunities. They will not come out and say it but badgers and foxes are seen as "not very pretty" mammals. Take a few fun facts by the Badger Trust put out on its Face Book page:
"Here are today's facts: Badgers are excellent ecosystem engineers. Badgers contribute to habitat heterogeneity*. Their setts create homes for other wildlife, such as foxes, mice, and rabbits."
The only comments after this -why were these people on a badger group??- were wholly negative with this being typical:
"I'm sure the local hedgehogs and ground nesting birds are pleased about that ."
Not one, not two but four similar comments and one can only assume these people are very uneducated of deliberately trolling wildlife pages. Both are highly likely. I did, however, as the Badger Trust is far too polite, respond:
"Just to the posters above: over 300,000 badgers have been 'legally' killed based on nonsense science. We lose up to 100,000 a year on roads (I keep the local badger death register) and if the cull and traffic losses continue by the 2030s badgers will be rare or gone altogether.
"The fox population is in steep decline (I keep the fox deaths register also and run the Fox Deaths Project) and so far in Bristol a;lone (and REPORTED) we have gone over 109 foxes and cubs. And this year's cub losses are concerning."
" When it comes to hedgehog, fox, badger or any other species decline stop scapegoating other animals.
"I have observed foxes and hedgehogs eating together and well fed badgers rarely chase around hedgehogs (after 50 years a field naturalist I've studied wildlife interactions as well as wildlife-pet interactions).
The biggest threat to any wildlife is simply humans.
I am guessing by the above comments that we have a contingent of fox and badger haters? Research the subject and understand what is going on -unless you prefer even more UK wildlife extinctions?"
I ought to point out that bounties were paid for killing hedgehogs into the 20th century and after that cars, slug pellets, rodenticides and all manner of other human created problems are the factors that drove the hedgehog to be listed as endangered. They survived larger populations of foxes and badgers for many thousands of years and survived until humans.
You can try to educate but sheer ignorance as well as a very strange and illogical hatred -similar to that from anti pet cat, anti dog, anti fox and anti badgers and even anti muntjac deer- exists. More than once I was told by bird watchers that they would prefer any threat to birds to become extinct as that was far more preferable to losing some birds each year; it is one reason why red squirrels are still killed in areas; as a threat to nesting birds.
I sometimes think people in the UK cannot be educated on wildlife.
1. There is the need to listen and learn. You may have read books or watched TV shows but this is reality.
2. You will NOT make any money out of wildlife work and in fact you will find it can suck every last penny out of you.
3. Always keep hard copy files. PCs and Laptops crash and lose all your data.
4. There are some good moments when you get to help wildlife but.....
5. It can be gut-wrenching, heart breaking and make you want to give up more often than you think possible.
Took me 50 years to learn those lessons.
Excluding the jaundice/seizure deaths the number of cubs being reported dead this year is beyond what I would expect. This may be down to better reporting but the thing that has staggered me is that rescues tell me that they get dead cubs reported every year but don't submit them for post mortems.
Fox Angels have submitted two Scottish cubs but a third was turned away today so was disposed of.
We have a fox population that is already in sharp decline and even the British Trust for Ornithology declared that it may be time to Red List foxes. What I am seeing nationally is far more losses of cubs than expected and some may be dying because their mothers were shot by 'fun' shooters who do not care so long as they kill something. Others may be dying from over burden of worms, verminous pneumonia (lung worm) or other causes. What we are seeing in Bristol is far from normal.
If a death is suspicious then the Animal Plant Health Advisory can carry out a post mortem at one of its centres. When I am being told that a cub looks healthy but it died and when I see photos showing the same then those cubs should be submitted because it is far better to find a cause of death and possible disease early and be prepared.
We know so little about foxes and where studies do take place it is for a specific reason. What we are doing in Bristol is looking at the dead foxes and from various angles such as disease, infection, etc., etc. That should be standard across the country.
There is one rescue that goes out and collects dead foxes reported and...bury them on their property. Others simply will not submit a dead fox "to be chopped up" and I try to explain but... One recently had a jaundiced, seizure cub that they put into an incubator. I politely asked that if the cub did not make it to submit it for PM. They just are not talking.
What can we do?
Rescues need to understand that unusual deaths of foxes in particular need to be investigated and I have seen one unusual case after another around the country and in every single case the fox was "put to rest" in a garden or on the grounds. We are dealing with a crisis across the board with wildlife and foxes are a good indicator of environmental health and so far the indicator is pointing to the Red for Danger.
We all need to take responsibility and act responsibly.
above Wolf V076 last winter. Her age was starting to show. (c)2024 Voyageurs Wolf Project
The breeding female of the Wiyapka Lake Pack was forcibly removed from her own pack last fall and has since wandered around as a lone wolf. What her future entails is unknown.
In late 2018, a pair of wolves ousted the Moose River Pack and took over the Moose River Pack territory. That pack was the Wiyapka Lake Pack.
In Spring 2019, the breeding female of this new pack, Wolf V076, had her first litter of pups. She remained the breeding female until late last year and gave birth to at least 21 pups (and likely more) in 5 different litters (a litter of pups each year since 2019) during her tenure.
Of those pups, 8 survived to adulthood.
But she was getting older and times they were a changing. During late summer of 2023, a new pair of wolves, one of which was a collared female originally from the Bluebird Lake Pack to the south, started trespassing into the Wiyapka Lake territory.
We thought this pair was taking over, or at least trying to take over the territory at that time (and was going to boot the Wiyapka wolves). But as fall turned into winter, it seemed evident that Wiyapka had staved off the invasion and this new pair settled down in a territory just south of the Wiyapka Lake Pack.
above Wolf V076 and a pup in 2020. (c) 2024Voyageurs Wold Project
However, during that same period, another female wolf trespassed. And somehow, this new female ousted Wolf V076 and joined the pack.
How that all played out is unknown but we have several videos from late fall and early winter of V076 by herself a good distance outside the pack’s territory, and then several videos of the Wiyapka Pack with the same breeding male and a different leading female.
This new female now leads the pack with V076’s former mate. Although this new female appeared to have usurped V076, she did continue to rear V076’s adolescent pups—2 of which were were alive as of late fall (we need to get through camera footage from winter to see if either or both survived).
What will come of V076 now is unknown. She is likely 8 or so years old currently. She might yet find another pack to join, or she might remain a lone wolf for the rest of her life.
However, the fact that she remained the breeding female of a pack for 5 years is better than most breeding animals—heck, most wolves don’t even make it to 5 years old.
Either way, the story of V076 is a good illustration of wolf pack dynamics and how packs can change quickly.
Today, 28th June the 'Green Party' finally decided to fob me off with a 'response':
Hello.
I am quite honestly shocked the the Green Party has adopted Labours "no budget for it" response. A pity the UK Greens are not as wildlife and environmentally aware as the German Greens. This issue would have been one of importance.
Do you know how many deer are killed on roads in and around Bristol? How manty are badly injured so that they have to be shot in or at the side of roads in front of motorists?
The Bristol Fox Deaths Register currently lists 128 (reported) adult as well as cubs so far for 2024 and that number will likely increase to 300 this year.
The Bristol Badgers Death Register currently lists (reported) 43 adults/cubs.
The badger population is currently (after 300,000 killed in the cull) heading for extinction and the fox is likewise declining to such an extent that even the British Trust for Ornithology believes they should be Red Listed. And otters are not fairing much better and Bristol's otter death rate is not good.
Who in your Green Party is actually actively looking at wildlife issues?
Another fox was added to the list this morning. I will keep adding to the lists and as far as I am concerned Green Bristol City Council is acting the same as Labour City Council did.
Terry Hooper
***************************************************************
Well, it seems that I was right. Following the council election win by the Green Party at the start of May all of its councillors have gone back to being invisible and uncontactable.
Having given up I sent this email to the Green Party Head and Deputy Head of Bristol City Council:
"I have
now tried getting in touch with your Green Party over local wildlife and
environment issues since the 8th May. Absolutely no responses.
A
large group of people concerned with these issues changed from a Labour vote to
help elect a Green run council under the foolish assumption you actually cared
about these issues. After much discussion I can inform you that we have
collectively decided to not vote Green Party in any future or national
elections.
I
cannot express just how disappointed I am in the Green Bristol City Council.
Terry
Hooper"
I find that with wildlife death mounting up all over the area leaves me far less happy with very slow or no responses from those in authority.
The following was sent to Councillor Carla Denyer head of the Green party which is now in cntrol of Bristol City Council. Attached were copies of the 2023 and 2024 Fox and VBadger Death Registers:
Hello.
I submitted this to the former Mayor on three occasions but only just before the council elections did he respond to say "nothing we can do". My family going back to my grandparents voted Labour all of their lives as have I but along with a lot of other voters who were concerned about Labour's relentless disregard for the environment and wildlife issues decided that a Green vote would be the only choice. We are all hoping, whether people campaigning to save the Western Slopes or other green areas, or involved in wildlife work that the Green Party will step up and meet the challenges and stand with the people of Bristol to make the City a true example of environment and habitat protection.
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...