San Joaquin Kit Foxes Return to Kern National Wildlife Refuge

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A San Joaquin Kit Fox was recently captured on a trail camera at Kern National Wildlife Refuge. Credit: Kathryn Jimenez/USbet365下载ios
Kern National Wildlife Refuge Biologist Katie Jimenez uses wildlife camera traps as a way to detect foxes on the refuge. Credit: USbet365下载ios

Kern National Wildlife Refuge (Kern NWR) is known for its incredible birding opportunities, but visitors may someday soon be able to get a glimpse of a San Joaquin kit fox. For the first time since 2007, a kit fox has been seen on the refuge, and what鈥檚 more, there are signs the fox may be denning there.

鈥淜it foxes are known in areas south and north of the refuge, so we鈥檝e suspected that they may use the refuge as a corridor,鈥 said Katie Jimenez, wildlife biologist for the Kern National Wildlife Refuge Complex. 鈥淲e started doing quarterly surveys with cameras in 2015, and this is the first time we鈥檝e had a camera capture an image of one.鈥

The fox was seen in an area that has been undergoing restoration after 2019鈥檚 Refuge Fire burned 336 of Kern NWR鈥檚 3,040 acres. The fire occurred in an area that has been challenged by noxious invasive plants such as salt cedar (tamarisk), which made a home in the refuge鈥檚 uplands after a flood in the 1980s created its preferred conditions. Since the fire, Kern NWR has been working together with the Bureau of Reclamation to clear out the rest of the salt cedar and other invasive plants.

鈥淜it foxes live in open areas without too many shrubs or tall grasses,鈥 said Jimenez. 鈥淭hey really need that open space to see predators like coyotes. By clearing out what鈥檚 left of the salt cedar after the fire, we鈥檝e opened the landscape up, and the kit fox we caught on camera seems to approve.鈥

After the initial camera sighting, Jimenez鈥檚 team went out to look for potential underground den sites the foxes might use in the area. After setting up cameras on two potential sites, Jimenez was ecstatic to capture an image of the fox in front of the possible den. Kit foxes haven鈥檛 had any known denning activities on the refuge since the 1980s.

鈥淪ince the initial sighting, we鈥檝e caught foxes on our cameras on nine out of eleven nights,鈥 said Jimenez. 鈥淲e鈥檙e planning on installing 10 artificial burrows in this restored habitat to help support a potential kit fox family on the refuge.鈥

Jimenez hopes to connect these southern dens with the artificial dens that were installed in recent years in the northern part of the refuge so the foxes can safely travel across the corridor.

鈥淲hen we restore habitat, the animals notice,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 hopeful that this is just the first of many success stories of native species returning as a result of this restoration project.鈥

Story Tags

Biologists (USbet365下载ios)
Endangered and/or Threatened species
Habitat restoration
Surveying
Wildlife refuges