Silver fox (animal)

The silver fox is a melanistic form of the red fox (Vulpes vulpes). Silver foxes display a great deal of pelt variation. Some are completely glossy black except for a white colouration on the tip of the tail, giving them a somewhat silverly appearance. Some silver foxes are bluish-grey, and some may have a cinereous colour on the sides.

A silver fox.

Historically, silver foxes were among the most valued fur-bearer, and their pelts were frequently worn by nobles in Russia, Western Europe, and China.[1] Wild silver foxes do not naturally reproduce exclusively with members of the same coat morph and can be littermates with the common red variety,[2] though captive populations bred for their fur and as pets are almost exclusively mated with members of the same colour.[3]

Description

An adult silver fox.

The silver fox's long outer hair can extend as much as two inches (5 cm) beyond the shorter underfur on different parts of the fox's body, particularly under the throat, behind the shoulders, on the sides and the tail. The hair of the underfur is brown at the base, and silver-grey tipped with black further along the follicle. The hair is soft, glossy and was once reputed to be finer than that of the pine marten. The uniformly blackish brown or chocolate coloured underfur, which is unusually long and dense, measures in some places two inches and is exceedingly fine. It surrounds the whole body even to the tail, where it is a little coarser and woollier. The fur is shortest on the forehead and limbs, and is finer on the fox's underbelly. When viewed individually, the hairs composing the belly fur exhibit a wavy appearance. There are scarcely any long hairs on the ears, which are thickly clothed with fur. The soles of the feet are so thickly covered with woolly hair that no callous spots are visible.[4] Silver foxes tend to be more cautious than red foxes.[5]

When bred with another member of the same colour morph, silver foxes will produce silver-coated offspring, with little variation in this trend after the third generation. When mated to pure red foxes, the resulting cubs will be fiery red in overall coat colour, and will have blacker markings on the belly, neck and points than average red foxes. When one fiery red fox of such a pedigree is mated with a silver one, the litter is almost always 50% silver and 50% red, manifesting as a Mendelian incomplete dominant trait. Fiery red parents may occasionally produce a silver cub, the usual proportion being one in four. Occasionally, the colours of mixed foxes blend rather than segregate. The blended offspring of a silver and red fox is known as a cross fox.[3]

Dark colour in the Alaskan silver fox is caused by a mutation to MC1R, while in the standard silver fox the dark colour is caused by a recessive mutation to agouti.[6]

Range

Red foxes, including the silvery form, are one of the most widely distributed carnivorous species in the world, ranging over much of the northern hemisphere and Australia. Their abundance in a wide variety of habitats can be attributed to introduction by humans into new habitats for fox-hunting.

In North America, silver foxes occur mostly in the northwestern part of the continent. In the 19th century, silver foxes were sometimes collected from Labrador, the Magdalen Islands, and they were rarely taken from the mountainous regions of Pennsylvania and the wilder portions of New York. They were occasionally found in Nova Scotia. According to Sir John Richardson, it was uncommon for trappers to collect more than 4–5 silver foxes in any one season, in areas where silver foxes were present, despite the trappers’ tendency to prioritize them above all other fur-bearers once they were discovered.[1] Silver foxes comprise up to 8% of Canada's red fox population.[7]

In the former Soviet Union, silver foxes occur mostly in forest zones and forest–tundra belts, particularly in middle and eastern Siberia and the Caucasus mountains. They are very rare in steppes and deserts.[5]

History of fur use

In the richness and beauty of its splendid fur the silver-grey Fox surpasses the beaver or sea otter, and the skins are indeed so highly esteemed that the finest command extraordinary prices, and are always in demand.

John James Audubon, quoted from The Imperial Collection of Audubon Animals, 1967

Pelt standards

Silver-fox furs.
Captive silver-foxes being fed.

In order for the pelt to be considered of suitable quality, certain criteria must be met. First, there must be a section of glossy black fur on the neck with a bluish cast. The silvery hairs must contain pure bands that are neither white nor prominent. The most valued furs had an even distribution of silvery hair, as patches of silvery hair gave the coat a flaky appearance, which was considered undesirable. Second, the fur must have "silkiness", which refers to the softness of the fur, and was judged by a client running his hand over the pelt. Third, the coat must have a sheen, which reflects the health of the coat and the animal from which it came, as well as the finesse of the hairs. Finally, the fur must weigh at least one pound, with value increasing along with size. Heavy fur is considered to be more durable and handsome.[8]

In North America

The fur of a silver fox was once considered by the natives of New England to be worth more than 40 American beaver skins. A chieftain accepting a gift of silver-fox furs was seen as an act of reconciliation.[9] The records of the Hudson's Bay Company indicate that 19–25% of fox skins traded in British Columbia in the years 1825–1850 were silver, as were 16% of those traded in Labrador.[2] The fur was almost always sold to Russian and Chinese traders.[10] The silver fur of this fox was the most sough-after pelt due to its colour and style. In 1830, the allele frequency for a silver pelt was at 15% but due to over-hunting, this number had fallen to 5% in 1930. Today, the silver pelt is still hunted for and the population of foxes with this silver pelt continues to fall[11] Before the practice of fur-farming was eventually refined on Prince Edward Island, it was standard practice to release free ranging silver foxes into small islands, where they quickly starved to death.

Fur-farmers on Prince Edward Island gained success by breeding and caring for their foxes in captivity. Charles Dalton and Robert Oulton began crossbreeding experiments in 1894.[12] The farmers recognized the foxes' monogamous habits and permitted their studs to mate for life with a single female, contributing to their success. The fur of captive bred foxes was of a better quality than that of free ranging ones (worth $500–1,000 rather than $20–30) because of improved care and diet. These silver foxes were bred strictly with members of their own colour morph, and by the third generation, all residual traces of red or cross ancestry disappeared. The silver fox price boom in North America ended in 1914,[12] but by the 1921, there were 300 farms throughout the USA.[13]

A well-known silver fox ranch of North America was that of Fred Colpitts from Salisbury, New Brunswick. Known as the “Colpitts Brothers”, Fred and James raised silver foxes in the early 1920s and used selective breeding to refine the fox colour. Fred developed the Platinum fox (a colour variation of the silver fox) that was recognized for its unique colour and markings worldwide. These Platinum foxes brought top dollar from sales in Montreal, New York and London, with one pair of foxes selling for $5000, and winning major awards at shows across Canada, the two brothers sold foxes for breeding stock throughout North America.[14]

In the 1930s, scientific advances led to increases in fox health. The Fromm brothers funded the development of the distemper vaccine and vitamin D tablets to prevent the foxes from getting rickets. They also allowed the foxes to roam relatively free as they would otherwise damage their pelts and they were fed daily. The largest silver fox the Fromms' had was over 20 lbs.[3]

In Eurasia

Silver foxes in Russian fur-farms are of North American stock, and are selectively bred in order to remove as much brown from the fur as possible, as the presence of brown fur lowers the pelt's value.[5] Estonia began farming silver foxes in 1924, after receiving 2,500 foundation specimens from Norway to Mustajõe farm. The numbers of Estonian silver fox farms steadily increased in the following decades. During the Soviet period, the silver fox industry boomed due to government subsidies and a focus on selectively breeding foxes for greater fertility than quality of fur.[15]

Behaviour

The silver fox morph is very behaviourally similar to the red morph. One common behaviour is scent marking. This behaviour is used as a display of dominance, but may also be used to communicate the absence of food from foraging areas as well as social records.[16]

Mating behaviour

Silver foxes exist in seasonally monogamous pairs for the breeding months of December to April, and most matings occur in January and February. Female silver foxes are monestrous (having 1 estrus cycle per year) with estrus lasting 1–6 days and parturition occurring after about 52 days of gestation.[16] During or approaching estrus, the vulva of silver foxes increases in size and tumescence, indicating the sexual readiness or condition of the fox.[17]

Female silver foxes generally breed during their first autumn, but a number of factors that contribute to their breeding success. Age, food, population density, and mating system (polygyny or monogamy) all affect impregnation success rates and litter size. Higher population density leads to a higher incidence of failure in producing pups. Silver foxes have litters that typically range from 1 to 14 pups, with the average being 3 to 6 pups. Litter size generally increases with age and abundance of food.[16] Scientists have observed an increase in reproductive success with age in silver fox morphs, which may be attributable to yearlings breeding an average of nine days after adults.[17] Success in larger litters depends highly on the availability of extra-parental care via the assistance of unmated females. This is particularly notable in higher density populations, where some females fail to produce pups.[16]

Silver foxes engage in a system of bi-parental care, which is associated with their seasonal monogamous mating scheme. For a given litter, males contribute a large investment in the offspring by both feeding and protecting the den. While the pups are early in development, the male secures food for the nursing vixen. Whereas males are more vigilant in defending the den, females also defend their offspring aggressively.[17]

Competition capacity

In captivity, differential reproductive success can be attributed to variation in the competition capacity among individual females. Competition capacity is defined as the ability of individuals to dominate resources such as food or nesting sites. The competition capacity of the mother directly influences the fitness of her offspring. In one experiment where vixens, whose competition capacities were categorized as high, medium, or low, were bred under standard farming conditions, competition capacity was positively associated with the number of healthy offspring raised to weaning. This study has led to the use of competition capacity as a more encompassing measure of reproductive fitness for the silver fox. Some vixens have also been noted to engage in infanticide. These vixens generated more weaned cubs during their next reproductive cycle than those who did not engage in infanticide. This may suggest the conservation of efforts or investment to increase future reproductive success. Infanticidal vixens infrequently adopt and help to raise the young of neighboring vixens after eating their own.[18]

Feeding

While silver foxes are opportunistic feeders and will consume any food presented to them, they prefer a more carnivorous diet when meat is available. When meat is scarce, they rely more heavily on plant material.[19] Like the red morph, the silver fox adapts different strategies when hunting different prey. When hunting smaller mammals, the foxes adapt a "mousing position" from which they can locate prey based on sound. Subsequently, the foxes launch themselves, pin prey to the ground using their forepaws, and kill it by biting. Quicker terrestrial prey requires more practiced behaviour, often involving stalking and rapid pursuit. When prey escapes to hidden caches or burrows, foxes are known to occasionally nap beside the entrances and lie in wait for prey to reemerge.[16]

Domestication

The domestication of the red fox has produced the silver fox, oftentimes referred to as the Siberian fox. This domestication is due to selective breeding, resulting in tamer and more dog-like foxes.

The domestication began in the Soviet Union and Russia in 1959, and has occurred over 50 years of experimentation. The lead scientist involved with this project was Dmitry Belyayev, and remains a project to this day, under Lyudmila Trut with The Institute of Cytology and Genetics in Novosibirsk. The original domestication was intended to show how selection can work with aggression and behavioural traits,[20] and be further extrapolated to demonstrate that the dog could be domesticated from wolves.[20] Some observed behavioural traits include: tail-wagging when happy, barking and vocalization, and ear floppiness (typically a character observed in domesticated dogs).

Initial experimentation

Research regarding Mendelian genetics was prohibited by Joseph Stalin under the Soviet regime. This prohibition and resulting Lysenkoism, along with his 1948 loss of job as the head of the Department of Fur-Animal Breeding at Moscow's Central Research Laboratory of Fur-Breeding,[21] led Belyayev to conceal his work on domestication under the veil of animal physiology research. Belyayev was interested in dog diversity, and wanted to know more about how genes change throughout time. He believed that behaviour has strong biological and physiological roots, with strong relations to hormones and neurochemicals. Thus, he decided to study the silver fox and to observe how the fox responds to selective pressures for tame behaviour.[20]

Belyayev started the Institute of Cytology and Genetics, still under the guise of research regarding animal physiology. Lyudmila Trut, a graduate student working under Belyayev, collected the calmest foxes available on fur-farms. Throughout many generations of selectively mating the tamest foxes, Belyayev and Trut began to notice promising signs of tamer behaviour, such as when the dogs would lick the researchers' faces or less-aggressive floppy ears. She came up with a categorization system for these generations: Class III were animals that fled from experimenters, or were aggressive towards humans; Class II foxes were those that allowed themselves be handled, but developed no emotional response to the experimenters. Class I foxes were those that were friendly, acting almost dog-like with their whining and tail-wagging. There was also a Class IE for sixth generation foxes, called the "domesticated elite", which displayed the behaviours such as whimpering for attention, sniffing and licking the experimenters, and eagerness for human contact.[20] By the tenth generation, almost one out of five foxes fell into the Class IE category. With more generations they discovered a higher proportion of domesticated foxes. These results led the scientists at the Institute to research domestication of other animals, such as rats in 1972, mink, and river otters.[21]

The collapse of the Soviet Union resulted in declining funds towards scientific research, complicating Belyayev's and Trut's research continuation. They had difficulties even keeping the foxes alive. Belyayev died in 1985 before he could salvage the Institute, so Trut fought to maintain the fox research. Throughout this struggle, Anna Kukekova, a postdoc at Cornell for molecular genetics, became interested in the topic of fox-farm research. She, along with Trut, worked to complete Belyayev's fox domestication research after she received a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).[21]

Belyayev's and Trut's original interest in fox domestication was based in the belief that selection for behaviour, such as tameness, mimicked past natural selection with ancestral dogs. This quality was thought to be the most significant indicator of how well adaptation would occur amongst dogs and humans.

The project has caused changes in the domesticated foxes in comparison to the wild silver foxes in regards to morphology and temperament. For example, the domesticated silver foxes have been seen to have molted or spotted coloured fur and they have become tamer. The changes in temperament are believed to be a result of a lower production of adrenaline, and the selection for tameness has cause the expression of dog-like behaviours, such as raised tail and coming into heat every six months rather than annually.[20]

Current project status

Since the initiation of fox domestication, more research and experimentation has been performed. DNA microarrays were utilized to find the differences in genetic expression between domesticated, non-domesticated (farm-raised), and wild foxes. It was found that there was a difference of forty gene expressions between the domesticated and non-domesticated foxes. Although there was a difference in the genes of the three groups, the experimenters did not look into the behavioural and functional consequences of these differences.[22] However, in 2007, a study was performed that explored the genetic basis of tame and aggressive behaviour in the foxes using QTL mapping.[23]

In culture

The silver fox appears in the stories of many cultures. The Achomawi people of Northern California tell a myth about two creators: the wise silver fox stemming from fog and the amoral trickster coyote from the clouds. The myth reveals that while the coyote slept, the silver fox used its hair combings to create landmasses. It then thought of trees, rocks, fruits, and other resources, and created those too. However, the coyote could not employ self-control and ate everything up at will after it awoke. The story tells a moral lesson, portraying the silver fox as a wise being and creator of sorts while suggesting the coyote as a lazy, greedy and impulsive animal. Similarly, the silver fox has often been represented on totem poles.[24]

The silver fox also appears as a symbol on the Prince Edward Island coat of arms. In the late 1800s, the rare silver fox was native to the region, and its pelt was highly valued around the world. It was on the island that the art and science of breeding fur-bearing animals was developed and refined. Consequently, fur-farming became an important part of the 20th century economy of the province and Wisconsin. The Fromm brothers started their fur-trading company in Central Wisconsin in the 1930s, which led to the development of the distemper vaccine. The silver fox has come to symbolize the wit and wisdom of the islanders. In regards to its fur-breeding history, it has come to symbolize the ingenuity and perseverance involved in industry.[25]

In addition, the silver fox has been represented in different forms of media. On television, in films, and in comic books, Silver Fox is a character in the Wolverine superhero series.[26] In literature, the characters Scarface and Lady Blue from The Animals of Farthing Wood are silver foxes.[27]

The term 'silver fox' is used to describe an attractive older man, specifically one who has (or is beginning to show) grey hair.

The name “Silver Fox” was used on LNER A4 steam locomotive no 2512 (later BR no 60017) designed by Sir Nigel Gresley.

gollark: In the sense of "number of works" or "scale of the setting"?
gollark: 🏋️‍♂️ 🏋️ 🏋️‍♀️
gollark: ✴️ = unstar
gollark: We must recalibrate star counts.
gollark: If we build cities on the Moon, stuff can go POSSIBLY SIX TIMES as high because of no gravity!

See also

References

  1. Audubon, John James (1967). The Imperial Collection of Audubon Animals. pp. 307. ASIN B000M2FOFM.
  2. Macdonald, David (1987). Running with the Fox. Unwin Hyman. p. 224. ISBN 0-04-440199-X.
  3. Laut, Agnes C. The Fur Trade of America, Kessinger Publishing, 2004. ISBN 0-7661-9616-X
  4. The quadrupeds of North America, Volume 3 by John James Audubon and John Bachman, by illustrated by John Woodhouse Audubon, published by V.G. Audubon, 1854
  5. Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol.II Part 1a, Sirenia and Carnivora (Sea cows; Wolves and Bears), V.G Heptner and N.P Naumov editors, Science Publishers, Inc. USA. 1998. ISBN 1-886106-81-9
  6. Våge, Dag Inge; Lu, Dongsi; Klungland, Helge; Lien, Sigbjørn; Adalsteinsson, Stefan; Cone, Roger D. (1997). "A non-epistatic interaction of agouti and extension in the fox, Vulpes vulpes". Nature Genetics. 15 (3): 311–315. doi:10.1038/ng0397-311. PMID 9054949.
  7. Red Fox, New York's Wildlife Resources, Number 11, 1982
  8. Laut, Agnes (1921). The fur trade of America. New York: Macmillan.
  9. Morton, Thomas (1972). New English Canaan: Or, New Canaan (Research Library of Colonial Americana). New York: Arno Press. p. 188. ISBN 0-405-03309-5.
  10. Robinson, H. M. The Great Fur Land; Or, Sketches of Life in the Hudson's Bay Territory, BiblioBazaar, LLC, 2009. ISBN 1-115-73924-7
  11. Palumbi, S. R. (2001). "Humans as the World's Greatest Evolutionary Force". Science. 293 (5536): 1786–1790. doi:10.1126/science.293.5536.1786. PMID 11546863.
  12. Ashbrook, Frank G. (1937). "The Breeding of Fur Animals". Bureau of Biological Survey Yearbook 1937 (USDA): 1383–1384. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.77373. S2CID 37329610.
  13. Ashbrook, Frank G. (November 1921). "The Merits of Silver Fox Farming". American Fox and Fur Farmer. 7: 5–6. Retrieved November 16, 2019 via Google Books.
  14. "Fred Colpitts". Dalhousie University. Retrieved 2018-11-26.
  15. Saveli, Olev. "Fur Farming in Estonia" (PDF). Estonian University of Life Sciences. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 March 2012. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
  16. Larivière, Serge; Maria Pasitschniak-Arts (27 December 1996). "Vulpes vulpes". Mammalian Species. 537 (537): 1–11. doi:10.2307/3504236. JSTOR 3504236.
  17. Sheldon, William G. (August 1949). "Reproductive Behaviour of Foxes in New York State". Journal of Mammalogy. 30 (3): 236–246. doi:10.2307/1375313. JSTOR 1375313.
  18. Jour, Bakken M. (1993). "Reproduction in farmed Silver fox vixens, Vulpes vulpes, in relation to own competition capacity and that of neighbouring vixens". Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics. 110 (1–6): 305–311. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0388.1993.tb00742.x. PMID 21395729.
  19. Hockman, Gregory J.; Joseph A. Chapman (October 1983). "Comparative Feeding Habits of Red Foxes (Vulpes vulpes) and Gray Foxes (Urocyon cinereoargenteus) in Maryland". American Midland Naturalist. 110 (2): 276–285. doi:10.2307/2425269. JSTOR 2425269.
  20. Trut, Lyudmila N. (1999). "Early Canid Domestication: The Farm-Fox Experiment". American Scientist. 87 (2): 160–169. doi:10.1511/1999.2.160.
  21. Ratliff, Evan. "Animal Domestication: Taming the Wild", "National Geographic", March 2011.
  22. Lindberg, Julia; Björnerfeldt, Susanne; Saetre, Peter; Svartberg, Kenth; Seehuus, Birgitte; Bakken, Morten; Vilà, Carles; Jazin, Elena (2005). "Selection for tameness has changed brain gene expression in silver foxes". Current Biology. 15 (22): R915–6. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2005.11.009. PMID 16303546.
  23. Kukekova, Anna V.; Trut, L. N.; Chase, K.; Shepeleva, D. V.; Vladimirova, A. V.; Kharlamova, A. V.; Oskina, I. N.; Stepika, A.; et al. (2007). "Measurement of Segregating Behaviors in Experimental Silver Fox Pedigrees". Behavior Genetics. 38 (2): 185–94. doi:10.1007/s10519-007-9180-1. PMC 2374754. PMID 18030612.
  24. Adams Leeming, David. Creation Myths of the World: An Encyclopedia, Volume 1. pp. 31–32.
  25. "Island Information: Armorial Bearings".
  26. "Silver Fox".
  27. Dann, Colin. The Animals of Farthing Wood. Mammoth.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.