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Breeding Effort Yields 11 Island Fox Pups

Environment: Activists want the species, whose numbers have sharply declined because of hunting by golden eagles, classified as endangered.

VENTURA COUNTY NEWS

June 02, 2000|AARON SANDERFORD, TIMES STAFF WRITER

An innovative breeding program to increase the number of island foxes on two of the Channel Islands has had modest success, park officials announced Thursday, as animal activists petitioned the federal government to classify the species as endangered.

Eleven island fox pups have been produced in captivity on San Miguel and Santa Rosa islands, the result of a yearlong effort by National Park Service biologists to save the dwindling species, which is native to the islands off the Ventura County coast.


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"No one had ever bred island foxes before," said Tim Coonan, a park service biologist. "It means two things: It can be done, but it's going to take a very long time."

To help revive the fox population, biologists removed 13 golden eagles from nearby Santa Cruz Island and relocated the foxes' predators to distant, mainland sites.

But the limited Park Service revitalization efforts need help, says an animal protection group in Tucson, Ariz., that filed a petition Thursday with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to designate four of six island fox subspecies as endangered.

Federal law prohibits the killing of endangered mammals on both public and private lands. Coonan said designating the island fox as endangered will likely encourage public donations to assist the breeding efforts.

The island fox is the lone carnivore unique to California, according to a written statement by the Park Service. The fox's value to the ecosystem is immeasurable, because it is the islands' largest native land mammal, said Kieran Suckling, science and policy director of the Center for Biological Diversity, the organization that made the petition.

"The Park Service and some wildlife groups are operating on a shoestring budget to barely keep this critter alive, and they are not getting nearly enough resources to do the job right," Suckling said. "We need a much bigger, dramatic federal effort to save this thing."

The birth of almost a dozen pups in one year is a positive sign for the captive breeding program, Coonan said. But with only one free-roaming fox on San Miguel, 50 to 75 on Santa Rosa, and slightly more than 100 on Santa Cruz, "we still have one foot in the grave," he said.

Suckling said the pesticide DDT was indirectly part of what put the fox so close to extinction. The banned chemical decimated the bald eagle population in the Channel Islands, which made way for more golden eagles to inhabit the area.

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