Since baby meat is quickly becoming a staple of foxes' diet, I am a liitle surprised the RSPCA isn't advising people to leave out babies along with the cheese, boiled potatoes, raw chicken pieces, bread and table scraps. Rolleyes indeed.Obviously they prefer foxes to babies![]()
Ah... The Torygraph! <sound of penny dropping>
Hey, some of my best friends are Tories!Lol, everybody hates a Tory.
Sorry I wasn't clear - I meant how has food provision by people affected fox numbers in cities. Has this been studied? I can see that putting food out is likely to increase numbers by improving cub survival, as you say, but this will be offset by mortality due to road accidents, pressure on territories (they have to get smaller in order to accommodate the greater numbers, but there are limits in a territorial species), and the fact that greater population density leads to less breeding and smaller litters. How much difference does feeding actually make, and do changes in bin collection frequency have a noticeable effect on the population?Fburton, if there is ample food then more fox cubs survive, more adults to breed, more litters per year.
Surely the sensible thing for anybody to do, before believing more biased and edited drivel from the likes of the press, is to actually READ the factsheet they are referring to
Since baby meat is quickly becoming a staple of foxes' diet, I am a liitle surprised the RSPCA isn't advising people to leave out babies along with the cheese, boiled potatoes, raw chicken pieces, bread and table scraps. Rolleyes indeed.![]()
The article is actually quite balanced if you read it through to the end. The RSPCA have had opportunity to respond and put across that they are not advocating feeding foxes.
With regard to the fact sheet which is about 1/3 information and 2/3 Q&A's, you are quite right in that more space is given to deterring foxes than encouraging them.
However they could have been more responsible by starting their response to the question "How can I help foxes in the area?" with "We do not recommend feeding foxes as they do carry diseases that are transferrable to both humans and pets, also putting down food can attract other animals such as rats, however if you .........." and then carry on with the rest of their advice.