Origin of Data from:
                        The Official World Wildlife Fund Guide to Endangered Species of North America
                        Volume I – Plants & Mammals
                        Beacham Publishing Inc. © 1990


 
Northern Swift Fox
Vulpes velox hebes

Status            Endangered in Canada 
Listed            June 2, 1970 
Family           Canidae (Dog) 
Description    Small fox with large ears 
Habitat           Woods, desert, plains, foothills. 
Food               Small animals, insect, plant matter. 
Reproduction Litter size 3 to 5. 
Threats          Loss of habitat, diminishing prey, poisoning. 

Description

    The northern swift fox, the smallest of the foxes, has a slender body that ranges from 40 to 80 centimeters (16 to 32 in) in length.  Coloration is gray to yellowish brown with white underparts.  The snout is marked by a dark spot on either side.  The ears are long and pointed. 
    In recent years the validity of the subspecies designation for the northern swift fox has been questioned.  Some mammalogists believe that the historic division of the swift fox into a southern race (Vulpes velox velox) and a northern race (V. v. hebes) is in error.  In 1986 a taxonomic study concluded that the northern swift fox was not a valid subspecies.  However, it went on to note that the swift fox showed significant geographic variation and suggested that there may be genetic uniqueness in some geographic populations. 

Behavior

    The swift fox is nocturnal and spends the day in underground burrows.  It feeds mostly on small mammals, particularly mice and voles, seasonally supplementing its diet with insects and plant matter.  It is very vocal, yapping excitedly when fighting and yowling long and loudly during the mid-winter rutting season.  After a gestation period of about 52 days, a litter of three to five pups is born.  Pups nurse for three or four weeks.  After weaning, the female first regurgitates food for her young, then brings solid food to the den, and finally supplies pups with live prey. 

Habitat

    The northern swift fox can use a great variety of habitat types.  It prefers to dig its den in woods and sometimes enlarges abandoned badger or rabbit dens.  It is found in grasslands, plains, and foothills, 

Historic Range

    The swift fox (V. v. velox) ranges from the Staked Plains of northwestern Texas northward over the Great Plains to South Dakota.  The northern race (V. v. hebes) was once common from North Dakota and Montana to the Saskatchewan River in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, Canada.  The last native swift fox was sighted in Canada in 1938. 

Current Distribution

    Swift foxes, presumably of the northern race, survive in very low numbers in the northern plains of the U.S-Montana, North Dakota, and portions of South Dakota.  Since 1983, captive-bred swift foxes have been released yearly in Canada by the Canadian Wildlife Service.  These foxes are descended from wild foxes captured in Colorado, Wyoming, and South Dakota-within the range of the southern race (V. v. velox). 

Conservation and Recovery

    The main reason for the decline of the northern swift fox was the loss of habitat due to increasing settlement, agriculture, recrea tion, and other human activities.  As prairie was converted for agricultural use, the fox's natural prey diminished.  Poisons and traps set for coyotes and wolves often killed swift foxes. 
    In 1978 the Canadian Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife declared that wild swift foxes no longer survived in Canada.  In 1983 the Canadian Wildlife Service began releasing captive-bred foxes derived from southern race breeding stock.  So far about 250 foxes have been released at various sites in southeastern Alberta and southwestern Saskatchewan.  As of January 1989, it is believed that about 50 swift foxes survived in the Canadian wild. 
    This leaves the northern swift fox, if it exists as a valid subspecies, in an unusual position for an Endangered species.  The only remaining northern swift foxes exist in the U.S. where they are not currently protected under the Endangered Species Act.  Instead, the law protects the subspecies in Canada, where it no longer occurs.  The more common southern race (V. v. velox) is currently under study by the Fish and Wildlife Service to determine whether it should be federally listed as Threatened or Endangered. 

Bibliography

Carbyn, L. N. 1989.  "Swift Foxes in Canada." 
Recovery (An Endangered Species Newsletter) 
Canadian Wildlife Service 1:8-9. 

Herrero, S., C. Schroeder, and M. Scott-Brown. 1986.  "Are Canadian Foxes Swift Enough?" Biological Conservation 36:159- 167. 

Stromberg, M. R., and M. S. Boyce. 1986.  "Systematics and Conservation of the Swift fox, Vulpes velox in North America." Biological Conservation 35:97-1 1 0. 

Contact

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 
Regional Office of Endangered Species 
P.O. Box 25486 
Denver Federal Center 
Denver, Colorado 80225 

Canadian Wildlife Service 
351 St. Joseph Boulevard 
Ottawa, Ontario KIAOH3

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