Showing posts with label island fox radio collars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label island fox radio collars. Show all posts

Monday, August 18, 2025

New Technology for Monitoring Island Foxes


Monitoring island fox survival is vital to protecting the vulnerable and small populations on six separate Channel Islands. (Current island fox status)

 

Checking for the individual radio signals from 50–60 individual island foxes across an entire island every two weeks, can require many staff hours. Reducing staffing hours would make island-fox monitoring less expensive?

Enter a new technology referred to as "Digipeater." The collar pictured above is one of the 10 new Digipeater radio collars funded by FIF and fitted on Santa Cruz Island foxes this summer. While the collar size is similar to VHF radio-tracking collars, the new collars weigh slightly less and have an additional ability: they interact with stationary digital repeating antennae in the field. 

Multiple times a day, receivers on the antenna scan for fox-collar signals. When a signal is picked up, it's relayed from one antennae to another until it reaches a base station. The base station transmits information directly to biologists. A biologist doesn't have to be in the field to know that all collared island foxes are active and well.

If an island fox goes for a number of days without being picked up by the automated system, biologists can go into the field looking for the signal from that specific fox.

 

The U.S. Navy on San Clement Island has been using Digipeaters for several years. Last summer during a wildfire that burned across a third of the island, biologists were restricted from going into the field. As the low-burning wildfire spread, the Digipeaters continued to collect status information on island foxes. From a safe location biologists could detect island fox activity and survival. No collared island foxes died in the wildfire. 

 

This Santa Cruz Island fox was fitted with a "Digipeater" collar in July. Her new collar reports in daily and requires less in-person labor. It's a win-win for monitoring island foxes.

These collars are possible, because of donors like you

Digipeater collars are $350 each and are made locally in Southern California. 

Friday, July 12, 2019

Foxes on Santa Cruz Island are Wearing FIF Collars


This island fox was captured and counted this week on Santa Cruz Island. 

She received a health check and her radio-tracking collar was replaced with a newly refurbished collar. Her old collar will come off and be eligible for refurbishing. 



Earlier this year, 20 radio collars from Santa Cruz Island were sent in for refurbishing and funded by FIF.

In just a few minutes this little fox was released back into the wild. Her refurbished radio collar has a battery that will last 2-3 years.


Her microchip enables biologists to identify her as a specific individual. If she is caught again this summer, the microchip reader will quickly identify her so that she can be released immediately without being handled.

Your donation of $220 would recycle her used radio collar to be placed on another island fox.

Wednesday, July 03, 2019

Fox Foto Friday - Radio Collars Going On Island Foxes

photo courtesy of M. Navarro, CINP
Island foxes on Santa Cruz Island are receiving health checks and being fitted with newly refurbished radio tracking collars RIGHT NOW!

You refurbished these radio collars and today they are going on island foxes.

Tuesday, June 25, 2019

More Radio Collars for Island Foxes !


This island fox is smiling because it is wearing a newly refurbished radio collar. More about M152

Two things happened this week:
  • 7 newly refurbished radio collars arrived at Channel Islands National Park to be deployed on San Miguel and Santa Rosa Island foxes
  • FIF funded our 27th radio collar this year!

Twenty refurbished radio collars went to Santa Cruz Island in May to be fitted on island foxes this summer. 

You helped fund these radio collars to monitor island fox health and welfare

But we aren't done yet. 

Health checks and annual counting are starting across the islands. This is when old damaged radio collars are removed and replaced with new or refurbished radio collars. 

 


FIF is hoping to fund:

  • 5 more $350 new collar
  • 13 more $220 refurbished collars 

We know we can do this with YOUR HELP!


The time to radio collar island foxes is right NOW! 
Please DONATE TODAY 

Thursday, May 02, 2019

Fox Foto Friday - Urocyon littoralis

The island fox's scientific name is Urocyon littoralis which means "tailed dog of the seashore." 


Though the fox's tail isn't all that visible, this photo gives a true sense of the fox in it's seashore habitat. (More on each island habitat.) This image was taken by an automated wildlife camera on Santa Rosa Island during the early days of island fox recovery. Feeding stations were set-up for foxes with supplemental food until they eased back into finding their own natural diet.

island foxes in captive breeding 2000-2008
After the Santa Rosa Island fox population declined from approximately 1,800 animals to only 15 surviving individuals, their future was questionable. Island foxes born at a captive breeding facility on the island were gradually released into the wild from 2003–2008. Why did island foxes become endangered?

Today island foxes on Santa Rosa Island have recovered to pre-crisis numbers and Friends of the Island Fox supports island fox health investigations, research, and radio-tracking collars used to monitor the population. In 2019 wildlife cameras are being used in the field again to investigate relationships between island foxes and islands spotted skunks.