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

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

The Legacy of Island Fox M152


Island fox M152 became known to all of us in 2018.

We watched this male fox on Santa Rosa Island get a radio collar. His health check was profiled and compared to his health history. Over the summer he avoided capture for 2019 health checks, but through September his radio collar tracked his normal activity.

Recently we received notification from the National Park biologists: "We are sad to report that M152's mortality was confirmed...on October 12."

M152 appeared to have died right after the biologists left Santa Rosa to do health checks on San Miguel in late September/early October. Though he appeared to have died from natural causes, his body had gone undetected too long in the warm weather for a necropsy to determine exact cause of death.

But because M152's radio collar signaled his death, and biologists were able to find his body. That means his story continues:

M152 was found quite a way from the location where he had been captured in 2014 and 2018. It may be that the reason he was not consistently captured was because his territory only tickled the area where foxes are counted.

Despite his death, a whisker sample was taken from M152. This will add to the cumulative story of his diet through the stable isotope study (supported by FIF). Researchers will be able to chronicle his diet through the drought and back into a rainy 2019. His whisker will also provide information on what he was eating or how his diet changed as he neared the end of his life.


Biologist Juliann Schamel says, "M152 was one of the few collared foxes on Rosa whose exact age-in-years we don't know..." When he was first captured in 2014, it was estimated that he was 1–2 years old, by looking at the wear on his teeth. 

His canine teeth have been preserved. A FIF funded research project in progress is evaluating if structures in the canine tooth can be used to verify island fox age at death. If this research is fruitful, we may be able to determine M152's age when he died. Was he the 6–7 years old that was estimated or was he older?

M152's radio collar still had two years of battery life, so it was cleaned up, disinfected and deployed on a male fox born in 2019. Male pup M164 was collared in November in the Cherry Canyon area. Cherry Canyon is frequently visited by day hikers on Santa Rosa. Because young males under a year old tend to disperse to find their own territory, M164 may take this story into a completely different part of the island.

M152 was the fox face that encouraged donations in 2019 and helped fund a record 40 radio collars for island foxes across the Channel Islands. We are sad to say "farewell" to him, but his legacy lives on.


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.

Friday, June 22, 2018

What Has Arrived at Channel Islands National Park?

 Radio collars!


Five new radio collars
still in the wrapper
and 
Six refurbished radio collars
all rebuilt and ready to go back on island foxes!
...have arrived at Channel Islands National Park. These radio-telemetry collars will be fitted on island foxes in the next few months as biological technicians count island foxes and check their health.

Your donations funded these radio collars!


Look closely, this island fox is wearing a radio collar
Foxes with worn collars will be giving them up for refurbishing or new batteries. You have funded fourteen more of these collars to go from the field to the workshop for refitting. More on Refurbished Radio Collars

Radio collars offer a frontline of defense for monitoring and protecting island foxes.