COULD this be the pup-erazzi at work? Two curious
young foxes looked as if they were vixen up an extraordinary outdoor
photo shoot.
By
Robert Kellaway
The cute younglings discover the camera. CATERS
Wildlife photographer Julian Ghahreman Rad, 24, from Vienna, Austria captured the pair at play in the city's National Park.
After
spotting foxes living in woodland he set up a camera, long lens and
tripod - plus some tasty morsels as bait - and lay in wait concealed in a
hide.
After four hours his patience was rewarded as the pair emerged to investigate both sides of the camera.
Say cheese! The adorable creatures were fascinated by the camera. CATERS
Even
after snaffling the bait, the foxes seemed intrigued by the digital
equipment staring down the lens and at the display on the back of the
camera body.
Julian said: "I did have to wait
for some hours hiding away in my tent, but suddenly, they just appeared
and I could take the photos.
"I call myself lucky to get both in one photo. It was definitely worth the four plus hour wait."
LOOKING straight down the lens, this is the moment a black fox was caught on camera.
By
John Ingham
RobertFuller/BNPS
'It had a beautiful white tip to its tail just like that of a red fox'Artist
and photographer Robert Fuller was shocked when friend Robert Burns
told him he had spotted one of the rarest animals in Britain outside his
flat.
The sighting prompted the pair to embark on a three-month mission to study the fox and its habits.
The red fox is much more common in the UK. Getty Images
There have only been five confirmed sightings in Britain in as many years
Martin Hemmington, National Fox Welfare Society
And earlier this month Mr Fuller finally set up his professional photography equipment.
After a tense wait, the fox appeared shortly after 11pm to eat food left out by Mr Burns.
Black foxes get their unusual colouring from a rare genetic defect, and are practically unheard of in Britain.Mr Fuller, 43, from Thixendale, North Yorks, filmed the fox in a nearby town but doesn’t want to name it.
He
said: “I was expecting the fox to be dark, but this one was as black as
a labrador, with just the hint of silver highlights along its body.
“It had a beautiful white tip to its tail, just like that of a red fox.
“After a short while it just melted into the night. I felt so privileged.”
Martin
Hemmington, of the National Fox Welfare Society, said: “There have only
been five confirmed sightings in Britain in as many years.”
Getty Images
Getty Images
Urban foxes are now so prevalent that they are considered pests in some areas.
At a mere five pounds and not much larger than a housecat, the swift fox(Vulpes velox)
is the smallest member of the dog family in North America. They were
once common throughout the western grasslands. The Blackfeet Tribe of
northern Montana was one of many native tribes that shared the landscape
with them, and the animal was so important to the Tribe’s culture that
their killing was forbidden. Sadly, like many grassland species of the
time, swift foxes were eradicated from Montana and much of the Great
Plains by the mid-1950s. Habitat loss and other threats certainly
plagued the species, but the biggest threat came from the widespread use
of poisons used to kill predators such as wolves and coyotes and ground squirrels such as prairie dogs
and pocket gophers. Many of these poisons were so powerful they could
kill not once, but twice: both the animals that ate it and any animals
that preyed upon them. Compound 1080 was one such substance – a lethal
poison that killed not only the animals targeted, but also many
unfortunate bystanders like the swift fox, who either took poisoned bait
or scavenged animals that had eaten the poison. Despite its importance
to the landscape and the Blackfeet Tribe, the swift fox suddenly
vanished.
Just
across the international border from the Blackfeet nation, the
disappearance of swift foxes from Canada had already led the Canadian
government to begin reintroductions. The population began to take hold
in southern Alberta and Saskatchewan, but few foxes strayed south of the
border to reoccupy Montana. It was clear that they could use some help.
Urged on by the Canadian reintroduction success, Defenders of Wildlife,
the Blackfeet Tribe and the Cochrane Ecological Institute
– home of the Canadian swift fox captive breeding program – began
working together to plan a reintroduction on Blackfeet tribal land.
About 17 years ago, we started the first of several years of
reintroductions of captive-bred swift foxes from Canada into Blackfeet
Indian tribal lands, starting with 15 animals. By 2006, the
reintroduction was deemed a success – the foxes had established the
grasslands of the Blackfeet Reservation as their new home, and the
population was growing. Fast forward to today, and we are still curious about the swift foxes
of the Blackfeet Reservation –have they continued to thrive? The swift
fox is an indicator species – it can tell us a lot about the health of
its grassland ecosystem. Swift foxes need large, unbroken expanses of
short-grass prairie and healthy populations of prey to survive. Fewer
swift foxes can mean something is damaging the ecosystem or impacting
the many small mammal species the foxes depend on for food. By keeping
track of them, we can get an idea of how the prairies are holding up. So
we joined with biologists from the Blackfeet Nation, Oregon State University
and World Wildlife Fund in a regional survey for the swift fox, lending
our field expertise and motion-sensitive wildlife cameras to the cause.
A few weeks ago, I headed out to an area east of Glacier National Park
in Browning, Montana to help set up the camera survey stations on the
Blackfeet Reservation. The area is lovely swift fox habitat – they
prefer flat short-grass prairie, so they do well where there is
significant grazing (initially by bison,
but nowadays by cows and horses instead) to keep the grass low. Our
plan was to set up 35 camera stations on the Blackfeet Reservation. Our
efforts here are part of a larger state-wide survey of potential swift
fox habitat in Montana, with a goal of placing almost 2,000 camera
stations to find swift foxes! Each station was set to attract a swift
fox using deliciously gross-smelling bait. As the fox sniffs around the
site, a motion-sensitive camera takes its photo. That’s just part of the
data we hoped to collect. If we were really lucky, the fox would poop
at the site so that DNA could be collected to determine the animal’s sex
and lineage. Yes, wildlife field work is oft filled with such glamorous
ways of gathering data! The cameras were left out for about a week, and the results are IN!
Our initial review found swift foxes at eight of the sites! A couple of
photos showed more than one fox, so it’s likely that we “caught” more
than eight different swift foxes on camera. Other curious species drawn
to the stations were:
Coyotes (the primary predator of swift foxes)
Grizzly bears, a more common occurrence these days on the plains, though still quite a surprise to see one caught on film!
And badgers, another common hunter of the plains.
Wolverine Watchers
Check out a recent project where Defenders’ staff and
volunteers trekked into the mountains of Montana to catch another
charismatic critter on camera.
We were thrilled to see such fantastic
results from this survey. Determining where this rare carnivore lives
today is critical for its conservation, and the information will help
experts develop a plan to restore more swift foxes to the landscape
where possible. It is very exciting to be a part of a large group of
partners working together to complete a survey of this magnitude, and
our combined efforts will inform swift fox conservation efforts well
into the future.
This fox’s tale is a legacy of
decades of conservation work. If it were not for groups like Defenders
fighting for a ban on poisons like Compound 1080 in the 1980s, swift
foxes could not survive today. And without the direct action of the
Blackfeet Nation and Defenders bringing these animals home, swift foxes
would still be missing from this landscape. Decades later, this species
is once again fulfilling its role on at least a portion of the Montana
prairie, helping make the grasslands of the Blackfeet Nation flourish
for decades to come.
Kylie works primarily to protect and restore wolverines,
lynx and fishers in the Rockies. This involves incorporating ecology,
public lands and wildlife management policy, field research, outreach
and education, and law into Defenders’ mesocarnivore programs, and
working within partnerships to help protect these species and their
habitats in the Rockies.