Tag Archive | Independent Evolution

Playing with Channel Island Foxes!

DSC01115
Oh my! Somedays are just OH my days. I have seen about five foxes in my life, in Alaska, Canada, Wyoming and The Holler. I was on Santa Cruz Island before and saw the Channel Island foxes, a very unusual species that live only on the Channel Islands, no where else in the world, but I wasn’t really taking photos then. So back I went to see them again and try and get their photos. We hiked all over stunning Santa Cruz Island, and I firmly believe that since I was seeking, I didn’t find. It was an hour until the boat left and I had already been waiting in the place I had seen them before for about an hour. Silent, still, waiting. When, at last, the first fox came out. She scuttled along this open but submerged ditch that I am guessing she built that led from her den. She was surreptitious at first, but quickly got braver.
DSC01046
This is the second fox. This one was bigger and I assume (with no knowledge to back me up that this was a male).
DSC01071
The friendly first one again.
DSC01036
This is the third smaller one. She (or he) got very close as long as I didn’t move a titch.
DSC01106
I have so many more photos of this unique species. They are 1/3 smaller than the North American Grey fox. Channel Island foxes live on 6 of the 8 Channel Islands. Each island has a separate endemic fox species.
DSC01112
Current thinking seems to be that these island foxes rafted over during the last ice age about 10,000- 16,000 years ago.
DSC01134
They are very protected here. I am speechless. They are remarkbale.
DSC01009
I forget to mention. Santa Cruz Island is ethereal.
DSC01016
Cheers to you from the rare Channel Island foxes~
.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.