For those who wonder these are not "fringe" books. I set up the British Fox Study (renamed in 2022 as the British Fox and Wild Canid Study) in 1977. I was a UK police forces wildlife consultant from 1977 to 2015 and still occasionally. Along with Bristol University Post Mortem Services, the Animal Plant Health Agency and Wildlife Network for Disease Surveillance I set up the Bristol Fox Deaths Project in which certain criteria of fox deaths are investigated by post mortem examination. I have also cooperated with non UK organisations on wild canid health as well as tracking the history of European "Island cats" .
All of the books are extensively researched and fully referenced so that, if anyone chooses to, they may be peer reviewed. Nothing is "claimed" but stated as facts based on contemporary records and books/publications from the 18th century to 21st. To back up the facts there are also photographs of very rare taxidermy from the early 19th century as well as of later hybrid wild cats -similar for Old fox types.
As someone who was introduced to natural history and wildlife by learned people some of the discoveries I made were more than a shock as they went against everything I learnt but the facts were undeniable.
The Canids book is the culmination o0f work from 1977-2022 and the Felids book 1980-2022.
The Red Paper 2022 Volume I: Foxes, Jackals, Wolves, Coyotes and Wild Dogs of the United Kingdom and Ireland
361 ppPaperbackInterior Color & Black and whiteDimensions A4 (8.27 x 11.69 in / 210 x 297 mm£25.00https://www.lulu.com/shop/terry-hooper/the-red-paper-2022-volume-1-canids/paperback/product-r97ywj.html? When the Doggerland bridge flooded the British Isles became separated from
Continental Europe and its wildlife developed uniquely. The British Isles, for the purpose of this work includes Ireland, and isolated the wolves on both became what would be island species not affected by the usual island dwarfism. These wolves, after millennia. Became “unwanted” and forests and woodland was burnt down or cut down for the specific purpose of lupicide; the killing of every and any wolf –and there was a bounty for “a job well done”.
At the same time there also developed three unique island species of Old fox from the coyote-like Mountain or Greyhound fox, the slightly smaller but robustly built Mastiff or Bulldog fox and the smaller Common or Cur fox –the latter like today’s red foxes had a symbiotic relationship with humans.
These canids were mainly ignored until it was decided that they could provide fur and meat and those things earn money. From that point onward, especially after all other game had been killed off, the fox faced what writers over the centuries referred to as vulpicide –extermination through bounties paid, trapping or hunting and despite all the hunters noting that the Old foxes were nearing extinction they continued to hunt until by the late 1880s the Old were gone and replaced by the New –foxes imported by the thousands every year for the ‘sport’ of fox hunting and this importation also led the the UK seeing the appearance of mange (unknown before the importations).
The travelling British sportsmen went coyote, wolf and jackal hunting and on returning to England wanted to bring a taste of this to “the good old country”. Wolves, jackals and coyotes were set up in hunting territories from where they could learn the lay of the land and provide good sport later. Some hunts even attempted to cross-breed foxes, jackals and Coyotes.
Then there were the legendary –almost mythical– “beasts”; the black beast of Edale, the killer canids of Cavan and the “girt dog” of Ennerdale.
In more recent times raccoon dogs and arctic foxes have appeared in the UK; some released for ‘sport’ while others are exotic escapees long since established in the countryside.
The Red Paper 2022 Volume II: Wild Cats, Feral and New Native Species
226 ppPaperbackInterior Color and Black and whiteDimensions A4 (8.27 x 11.69 in / 210 x 297 mm)https://www.lulu.com/shop/terry-hooper/the-red-paper-2022-volume-2-felids/paperback/product-n48529.html?
£25.00In 1896 Scottish naturalists and zoologists declared that the true Scottish wild cat had become extinct by the 1860s. What we see today is nothing more than a wild tabby cat. In this work the true history and destruction of wild cats from England, Wales (where hybrids clung on into the 1940s) and Scotland is explored and after decades of research the true look of the wild cat is revealed.
The "English Tiger" and "Highland Tiger" truly lived up to that name.
Dogma is finally thrown out.
There is also a look at the "New Native Cats" ranging from Asian Golden Cats, Lynx, Puma and others and the evidence leading to their being so designated.
No silly press or media stories just solid facts backed up by evidence.
The author acted as an exotic species wildlife consultant to UK police forces from 1977-2015 as well as cooperated with university projects on the subject.
Island cats as well as feral cats their lifestyles and problems mare also covered .
Fully referenced and including maps, illustrations and very rare photographs -some never before seen in print- make this a book for amateur naturalists and zoologists.
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