Foxes eating people's waste food are likely to be keeping their population artificially high in the New Forest, a study has found. Scientists analysed the contents of 447 foxes' stomachs and found 14% ...
A Bournemouth University and GWCT study found 65 per cent of New Forest foxes rely on human food waste, suggesting better refuse management ...
Foxes might have less joy with rubbish when wheelie bins are rolled out in the New Forest later this year Foxes eating ... of wild birds, which are hunted by foxes. New Forest food waste keeping ...
After a couple trips to Bodega Bay, I’ve learned exactly where to eat and what to skip. From fresh-off-the-boat seafood to ...
One of the great joys of having a garden is to get winged visitors dropping by. Birds are not only pleasant company, but also ...
These birds [crows] are a nuisance … the only benefit they have is to eat rubbish ... to improve solid waste management in large urban areas, which would minimize food availability for ...
Fish-eating ... by food supply shortages in these locations but instead by other stressors such as environmental contaminants," the study found. A test of immune functions in young birds found ...
Some kites showed evidence of eating entirely human-sourced food—a diet very ... in human settlements, where waste was abundant. Analysis showed medieval birds had similar chemical signatures ...
Fish-eating gulls and terns ... not likely to be caused by food supply shortages in these locations but instead by other stressors such as environmental contaminants," the study found. A test of ...
"It might be a really good central location for the food source that they're going after." Gast said these birds know where to ... what are they eating? They're eating the dead stuff all around ...
The birds would wake to a New Year’s feast. I thought of it as the avian equivalent of the black-eyed peas and greens that the humans in the house would be eating ... natural food in our yard ...