A number of cats in a captive population were fed 50 mg of Rhodamine B in
non-toxic kangaroo meat baits. Samples of whiskers (mystacial vibrissae) taken
10 days later were examined for fluorescent marking. Examination of hairs for
marking was carried out by means of a ‘single blind’ trial, with
the investigator having no prior knowledge of which of 36 cats had received
the dye. All of the cats that had ingested baits containing the dye were
marked. Examining hair samples under ambient light or under a hand-held
ultraviolet (UV) light without magnification was not as reliable as examining
hair samples under a fluorescence microscope. These results indicate that
Rhodamine B acts as a reliable systemic marker of bait consumption in feral
cats and has potential application in field studies to assess bait uptake by
feral cats.
Intensive destructive sampling of a population of red foxes
(Vulpes vulpes) was undertaken over an area of 200
km2. A total of 204 foxes, estimated to be 94% of
the total population on the site, was collected. Population density was
0.46–0.52 adult foxes km–2. Sampling was
carried out in December, when young of the year were present and when data on
female productivity could be obtained from counts of placental scars.
Life-table analysis for vixens revealed that mortality was greatest for those
aged 0–16 months and those older than 3 years. Average mortality of
adult vixens was 39%. Adult vixens (n =
47) had an average (s.e.) of 3.7 0.3 placental scars; 8.5% of vixens
failed to breed. The number of placental scars did not vary significantly with
age. Various hypothetical scenarios were used to identify which social
system(s) may have been operating in the area. Predictions of vixen
productivity and cub mortality were compared with observed reproductive data
and the actual number of cubs collected. The scenario that best matched the
observations was a simple mated pair system. Pure dominance hierarchies were
unlikely to have occurred. The implications of the findings are discussed in
relation to the ability of foxes to overcome natural or artificially-imposed
population reduction. It was estimated that under a fertility control regime,
>45% of vixens would need to be sterilised before the fox population
would begin to decline.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.