Sunday, 22 February 2026

On Extinctions, Dogma and What we DO Know

 



Here are the facts.   What we know about badgers today is through modern badger watchers. My old hero Ernest Neal have found quoted dogma.  Every zoologist and naturalist reads Neal and his quotes (even if paraphrased) are everywhere.  

I was still surprised reading a piece by a zoologist just last week that stated "we have no idea how foxes and badgers interact if they meet at night" -which is a quote often used but never attributed to anyone.  In fact, field naturalists, badger watchers and fox watchers have known how they do/don't interact since at least the 1980s (likely further back than that just never recorded in (published) print).   Badgers setts can be found in gardens alongside fox dens. Two people who have observed the badgers and foxes on their property for more than three decades note the two species sharing a sett -probably the fox using a now no longer badger used section.  

There is even a report noting how a fox hunted in the 19th century ran into a badger sett where the badger "backed up" the fox until both were killed. The account is almost written as though this was a "known thing".

The question Neal and others since, basically because it seems that they preferred dogma to actual reading and historical research, have never answered is how wild cats never survived felicide campaigns; the Old foxes never survived vulpicide campaigns and neither did otters, polecats, hares, red squirrels and other species -the modern day extinction of the 1860s was fueled by hunting for 'fun' and profit. Luckily, these animals were all importable from Europe in their thousands (hence why the species tested all tend to have European species DNA).

But as badgers were subject to continuous melecide that wiped them out in large areas and I can find no information on badger imports how did they survive?

That answer is simple to come by and one I may feature in a post at some point.

All we know about foxes and badgers first appeared in Thomas Pennants 1771 book British Zoology. Some of this was reprinted in Thomas Bewick's History of Quadrupeds, 1790; Bingley's History of British Quadrupeds, 1809 and etc. etc. etc.  This 'borrowing' from Pennant and Bewick continued on into the late 19th century after which, species being extinct which meant no one could see or hunt them, it was easier to jump to modern (1900 onward) dogma. 

The Old fox types never existed despite the volumes of records of them as well as taxidermies because someone in 1970 had never seen one because by that time they had been extinct 100 years. When was the last time a naturalist/zoologist saw a living Dodo? They have not therefore the bird did not exist.  Oh, they have the taxidermies, written descriptions and accounts ?  Exactly my point.  We have the same for the Old type foxes -so why is all of that ignored? No money in it likely and people who can quote dogma as fact rather than get their backside off a chair or away from a free lunch.

All we know about British wildlife, its extinction, re-introduction, re-extinction and reintroduction comes from hunting literature. The noble naturalist gathered information because that was useful in their hunting for 'sport' and specimen collecting. The every day, all year round life cycle was basically: where are the foxes; protect them until cubbing season then kill the cubs with hounds for 'fun' (you got a special invite to the 'fun'); after that leave the foxes left to roam free because that meant when hunting season started the foxes could give longer chases and how long a chase lasted was as important, if not more so, than being in at the kill.

That was it. 

And now we see hedgehogs, badgers and other species, including the fox, heading for man made extinction once more. "A nation of animal lovers" is a chocolate box myth.

Monday, 16 February 2026

2025 -2026 Fox Death Totals Comparison

 


By this time in 2025 I had recorded 69 dead foxes on Bristol roads.

I have just recorded the 44th fox death this year.
So fox deaths are falling? No. People are still not bothering to report dead foxes and there were different factors in last6 year's high total.
Last year's fox count included the Blaise Castle dog attack and some illnesses.
This year's seem more car related so it works out more if we get rid of "natural causes". The one thing that is guaranteed is that Friday-Sunday night the kill rate rises. Even in "quiet little roads" with bends and turns that mean the drivers would not be able to stop in time if they saw a dog walker crossing the road.
During daylight on Ashton Drive I have observed not one or two but up to four drivers at a time speed as family groups or couples are crossing the road. No attempt to slow down. At night the sound of speeding cars and screeching brakes are clearly heard (foxes have been killed). The problem is that this road once had speed bumps along its full length but the council removed them and said it would be too expensive to replace them. Long winding track is perfect for speeder 'fun'.
We KNOW the danger points for wildlife on Bristol roads but neither the Labour or the Green party run council could care less.
Last year we had a high number of pregnant vixens killed and when you start having a breeding population wiped out it means fewer foxes and I think that we have hit that point in Bristol. The population is dropping drastically on a national level and the same can be said locally.

Sunday, 1 February 2026

Never Ever Trust information on the internet

 


Regarding the previous posting about bounties on the Isle of Mull including for foxes and badgers I asked Google AI for information on foxes on Mull:

"There are no foxes on the Isle of Mull, a notable absence among Scottish islands, though they were reportedly hunted to extinction centuries ago, with pine martens filling a similar ecological niche today, often mistaken for foxes due to similar droppings. While you won't find native foxes, Mull boasts abundant wildlife like otters, deer, sea eagles, and various seabirds, making it a prime destination for nature lovers. "

"Centuries ago" so why were there bounties in the 19th century?

According to the Isle of Mull "wildlife on Mull"

"There are no foxes on Ulva and although the Vikings may have seen wolves (naming the island ‘Ullfur’ or ‘Wolf Island’) there have been none around lately."

They do not mention badgers and otters are a rare sight.  So it looks as though those bounties made foxes and badgers extinct on the island [if you read The Red Paper you will find that this may not be quite true].

What does this all prove? NEVER EVER trust an internet search as the AI is far from reliable  on even whether Thursday follows Wednesday and literally picks up bad info from online sources.  It also shows that whoever put the website together for Mull had no knowledge of the wildlife driven to extinction by islanders but then, not good publicity for an island.

Archive research whether newspapers, magazines and journals or books cannot be replace by very poor information on the internet that is copied and pasted  endlessly.

Bounties on Wildlife played their part in UK Extinctions

 



 Although hunts play a major part in wildlife extinctions it is very unpopular to correct dogma. As I am not looking for popularity let me correct major dogma. 

"It was the rich and upper classes that hunted and killed for fun and wiped out a lot of wildlife

Well, to an extent but along with all the well to do men and women were the normal every day folk who may well have killed for 'fun' but the main intention was to earn "easy money".  In The Red Papers I noted the various bounties paid for killing  foxes, badgers, otters and so on and these were bounties paid out all over the country. In The Scottish Annals of Natural History (1895) Vol 15 page 193:


Yes, everything could be killed including house (pet) cats and before anyone thinks that would be a rarity well 6d back then bought a lot and if you didn't like next door's moggy and you saw it walking about...easy pickings. Game keepers, of course, relished shooting anything but pet cats and pet dogs were included (there is a black joke, albeit factual, that gamekeepers always had great fruit and vegetable crops because of the "fertilizer" -cats and dogs they had shot).

So do not just blame organised and casual hunting for 'fun' but remember everyday ordinary folk killed off wildlife for fun and profit, too (motorists today kill off thousands of foxes, badgers,m otters, cats, dogs, deer and other species without even giving it a second thought so not much changes).

What Is A NARF?

    Back in the 1950s the "big money earner" was going to be fox fur farms. In fact they were being set up back in the 19th centur...