Total KNOWN dead foxes and badgers up to 10 04 2026
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Saturday, 11 April 2026
Monday, 6 April 2026
Staphylococcus pseudintermedius infection
In the paper Staphylococcus pseudintermedius infection Pyometra bij een vos (Vulpes vulpes) veroorzaakt door een infectie met Staphylococcus pseudintermedius; Dierengezondheidszorg Vlaan in Red Foxesderen (DGZ), Industrielaan 29, B-8820 Torhout Stefan.Roels@sciensano.be, submitted by N. Caliskan, A. Vandekerckhove, E. Rolly, E. Forrez, S. Roels, it is noted that:
"An adult female fox found dead in a field in Flanders (Belgium) was brought in for autopsy. The uterus was remarkably enlarged with dilation of the right horn tip and dilations of the myometrium of the left horn. The lumen of the uterus was filled with greenish-yellow pasty contents. Bacteriological examination of these contents resulted in a pure culture of Staphylococcus pseudintermedius.
"The diagnosis of pyometra caused by S. pseudintermedius was made. Pyometra in wild canids has rarely been described. It is assumed that the cause of death is similar to that in dogs, namely septic shock. According to the authors, this is the first described case of closed pyometra with isolation of S. pseudointermedius in an adult fox".
Before it was officially suppressed, the Bristol Fox Deaths Project founas d a number of never before noted health issues with foxes. Pyometra was not one of them although I suspected a case in the Midlands in 2021 may have been. Others we can only look back on and wonder whether they were pyometra cases. No study similar to that in Bristol had ever been undertaken in the UK -a dead fox was a dead fox and held no interest for vets as it was after all a wild animal with no one footing the bill for a necropsy.
Looking back at my notes it is possible that there were other cases but not sub mitted for necropsy as no one was available to collect.
It now appears, if the vet is correct, that we have such a case from Bristol. Fox health and welfare is still in early stages but there is hope!
Wednesday, 25 March 2026
Wildwood Trust, Kent Slaughters Wolf Pack
Another establishment which is so badly run that it decides to slaughter an entire wolf pack. How long will this go on/
Wildwood in Kent should be banned from keeping any wolves in future.
The statement:
Monday, 23 March 2026
Bristol Council Digging Near Badger Setts
Regarding the previous post I received this from Natural England this morning:
"Good morning Terry, thank you for your email.
"I have checked our licence database and cannot find any licences associated with (deleted -TH) Cemetery.
"The safeguarding of any protected species is the landowner’s responsibility, and if they commence any activity which may potentially endanger the protected species habitat (e.g. site clearance, demolition), or harm or kill a protected species, a wildlife crime may be committed. In this instance the police are the enforcement body for wildlife crime, as opposed to Natural England. We, unfortunately, have limited enforcement powers with regards to wildlife, until such time as a licence is breached (further information concerning our Enforcement position can be found here - Enforcement laws: advice on protecting the natural environment in England - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)).
"If you have reasonable grounds to suspect any works led to the damage or destruction of any protected species habitat, or the harming or killing of a protected species, you can contact your local police force (either online or by dialling 101), to report this matter to them for further investigation as a potential wildlife crime. To assist them with investigating your concerns, please provide them with as much information as possible regarding the nature of the works, dates and times, the protected species you believe to be present within the site, and any evidence you can produce to this effect. Tell the Force Operator that you wish to report a wildlife crime and ask for a Wildlife Crime Officer to be allocated the incident if possible. Ask for and retain a police incident number to allow you to make and follow up enquiries with the police.
"Kind regards
Sarah"
Following this and confirmation that the work (taking place near a sett entrance) was taking place on Bristol City Council land and on their instructions I sent the following email to Councillor Tony Dyer, Head of the Green led Bristol City Council:
Above photo of the foundation work dug up at BCCs orders.
"On Friday I and Bristol Badger Group were informed that a digger was at work on the Ridgeway Park Cemetery site area. The driver of the digger told locals that Bristol City Council had ordered the digging of foundations (see attached photo). This is well within the 30 metre distance from an active badger sett -the badger sett in question is active and appears to be occupied by a pregnant sow -of which we have video footage.
Saturday, 21 March 2026
Bristol City Council Want To Dig In A Badger Sett Area UPDATE
APHA and Natural England will take up to 8 days to respond. Bristol City councillors named and holding cabinet positions are all using the old "We cannot reply if you are not in our ward" trick. They all know and have been informed by email and their responses show they have been made aware of the facts so no ducking the issue.
The leader of BCC is also aware so if people in this area are concerned they need to get in touch with him asap Monday morning.
Councillor Tony Dyer is the Leader of Bristol City Council as of May 2024, representing the Southville ward. You can contact him via email at Cllr.Tony.Dyer@bristol.gov.uk. For general council enquiries, call 0117 922 2000 or email customer.services@bristol.gov.uk.
Despite last year's battle to stop a £400K land sell off by Bristol City Council which resulted in the sale being cancelled I was informed yesterday that a digger was now on site. Bristol City Council tends to ignore notifications and phone calls are never responded to.
In this case I have suggested that any digging starts it should be reported as a wildlife crime since we have no idea how far spread underground setts are and this is cub season. I have removed the exact location for wildlife safety but here are the emails sent out.
- Exclusion Zones: As a general rule, a 30-metre buffer zone should be established around active badger setts, where no heavy machinery or excavation work should take place.
- Work Distances:
- < 10m: Only hand tools/light work.
- < 20m: Light machinery/digging.
- < 30m: Very heavy machinery.
The Figures Never Decrease
Total KNOWN dead foxes and badgers up to 10 04 2026 Foxes 93 Badgers 30
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We know that foxhunting was still an elite 'sport' in the early 19th century. In fact, from the late 1830s -into the 1840s there w...
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It appears that no one reads the old pre-20th century literature or books published shortly thereafter pertaining to wildlife. Although al...
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Bristol is the only city in the UK to maintain a fox deaths register and via reported deaths can give a rough indication of how many f...
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