Rl. Harrison, A COMPARISON OF GRAY FOX ECOLOGY BETWEEN RESIDENTIAL AND UNDEVELOPED RURAL LANDSCAPES, The Journal of wildlife management, 61(1), 1997, pp. 112-122
I compared the ecology of gray foxes (Urocyon cinereoargenteus) betwee
n a rural residential area and an undeveloped area of similar natural
habitat. Seat collected in the residential area contained higher frequ
encies of mammal remains (P = 0.02) and lower frequencies of plant rem
ains (P < 0.001) than seat collected in the undeveloped area. Anthropo
genic food exceeded 10% of volume of seats in the residential area. In
the residential area, nighttime activity correlated negatively with p
ercent of woodland cleared (P = 0.039) and density of residences (P =
0.003). Body weight was greater (P = 0,059) in the residential area. G
ray foxes used housing developments less than expected during daytime
(P < 0.001), but more than expected during nighttime (P < 0.001). Comp
lexity of home range structure was greater in the residential area (P
= 0.087). Home range use was less uniform in the residential area, bas
ed on spatial frequency distributions of locations (P < 0.001) and num
ber of locations required for home range size estimates to stabilize (
P = 0.004). Foxes avoided high-density residential subdivisions (>125
residences/km(2)).