Changes in the Distribution of Red Foxes

Urbanization is one of the major forms of habitat alteration occurring at the present time. Although this is typically deleterious to biodiversity, some species flourish within these human-modified landscapes, potentially leading to negative and/or positive interactions between people and wildlife....

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2014-06, Vol.9 (6)
Hauptverfasser: Scott, Dawn M, Berg, Maureen J, Tolhurst, Bryony A, Chauvenet, Alienor L. M, Smith, Graham C, Neaves, Kelly, Lochhead, Jamie, Baker, Philip J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Urbanization is one of the major forms of habitat alteration occurring at the present time. Although this is typically deleterious to biodiversity, some species flourish within these human-modified landscapes, potentially leading to negative and/or positive interactions between people and wildlife. Hence, up-to-date assessment of urban wildlife populations is important for developing appropriate management strategies. Surveying urban wildlife is limited by land partition and private ownership, rendering many common survey techniques difficult. Garnering public involvement is one solution, but this method is constrained by the inherent biases of non-standardised survey effort associated with voluntary participation. We used a television-led media approach to solicit national participation in an online sightings survey to investigate changes in the distribution of urban foxes in Great Britain and to explore relationships between urban features and fox occurrence and sightings density. Our results show that media-based approaches can generate a large national database on the current distribution of a recognisable species. Fox distribution in England and Wales has changed markedly within the last 25 years, with sightings submitted from 91% of urban areas previously predicted to support few or no foxes. Data were highly skewed with 90% of urban areas having
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0099059