Mongabay-India

Dumpster diving red foxes and fast food eating macaques

Where there were no human settlements, red foxes depended on wild rodents for food. Photo By Abhijit Das.

  • Red foxes in the Trans-Himalaya have taken to ‘dumpster diving’ around villages, where humans are inadvertently providing a substantial amount of food — discarded meat bones, fruits, dead livestock, cereals and inedible things like plastic, paper or rubber.
  • Such ‘human derived materials’ can appear beneficial in the short term. However, food items like plastics and medicines are harmful to the animal. Congregating at dumpsters also attracts competitors like the domestic dog, predators and facilitates disease spread.
  • At Buxa Tiger Reserve in North Bengal, researchers have found that a shift in feeding habits of rhesus macaques from forest-based foods to tourist-derived food is affecting forest dynamics, especially seed dispersal.
  • To deal with the problem of wildlife provisioning, scientists recommend strengthening prey base and making easily available food material inaccessible.

Spiti Valley, located in the remote Trans-Himalayas is one of the least populated places in India and home to several rare and endangered wild animals. Here, to see wild herbivores like the ibex you may have trek up to mountain pastures sometimes 5000 metres high. If you want to see a snow leopard, you may have to track herds of blue sheep and hope to run into a snow leopard doing the same thing. If it is a wolf you want, well, good luck to you.

But for a red fox, just go back to the village and take a quiet walk after dinner. You are likely to see one rummaging through the kitchen middens – small heaps of food scraps usually discarded in the backyard.

Even in this landscape of vast open spaces, people and wildlife can’t help rubbing shoulders, according to researchers from the Wildlife Institute of India. In a study published in January this year, researchers analysed the diet of red foxes from five locations in three states across the trans-Himalayas and one location in the Dachigam National Park, Kashmir. In locations close to human habitation, such as Spiti Valley, Ladakh and Chiktan village in Kargil, between 30-55% of the food red foxes ate came from human sources.

Human provisioning comprised one third of the red fox diet in Leh town, Ladakh. Photo by Hussain S. Reshamwalaa.

Humans in the Himalayas are inadvertently providing a substantial amount of food to these animals, including discarded meat bones, fruits, dead livestock, cereals and inedible things like plastic, paper or rubber, which the researchers euphemistically termed Human Derived Materials (HDM).

This is not a new phenomenon, nor is it restricted to red foxes.

Cosmopolitan eaters

Scientists have pointed out that humans have been subsidising the diet of wild animals since we were hunter gatherers discarding remains of kills. Indeed, the domestic dog is believed to have evolved from an ancestor who was attracted to the prehistoric man’s rubbish dumps.

The options have only increased with time. Today, wild animals can access human subsidised food from kitchen middens in villages, garbage dumps and landfills in big cities, discarded fish catch in coastal areas and even directly when people fed animals like monkeys.

Thomas Newsome, an ecologist and lecturer from the University of Sydney who has been studying the consequences of food subsidies to wild carnivores like dingoes, explains that most species that consume food waste are generalists, who don’t depend on specific foods.

Red foxes are particularly cosmopolitan in their eating habits. This species which is found across the Northern Hemisphere, eats rodents, small birds, eggs, lizards, insects, fruits, berries and scavenges on other animals’ kills.

Red foxes scavenging from kitchen waste or garbage is a common sight in villages in the Trans-Himalayas and makes up between 30-55% of their diet. This red fox was seen in Gete village, in the Spiti Valley. Photo by Abhishek Ghoshal.

Quick and easy meals

So, the transition from this versatile diet to dumpster diving in the Himalayas seems unsurprising. But what is the motivation? What were the animals thinking?

“I am getting food, without expending too much energy,” said Bilal Habib, a scientist from WII and one of the lead researchers of the study, speaking for red foxes.

Such a diet can be beneficial for animals like red foxes in the short term. Studies show that provisioning increases the animals’ body weight, increases fertility and improves chances of mating and having offspring.

One of the reasons for this is that provisioned food is typically, “predictable, calorie-rich and [an] easily digestible source of food,” points out Asmita Sengupta, an ecologist from the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and Environment (ATREE), who studies the effect of food provisioning in rhesus macaques in the Buxa Tiger Reserve in North Bengal.

Newsome adds that a shortage in the natural food supply could also drive wild animals towards human subsidies.

But the costs of such behaviour far outweigh the benefits, say all three researchers.

The dangers of quick meals

Even in the remote Trans-Himalayas, the waste humans generate nowadays includes plastic and medicines that are very likely to be harmful for red foxes, Habib points out.

Such dumpster diving, also brings to fore a bigger and more powerful carnivore competitor, the domestic dog. In 2015 researchers from Nature Conservation Foundation and the Snow Leopard Trust, reported that red foxes and dogs were often attracted to the same villages and garbage dumps in Spiti. The presence of dogs didn’t seem to convince the smaller, usually solitary fox to stay away. These stray or feral dogs moving in packs can attack foxes and spread diseases like canine distemper in the wild animals.

There’s competition even for garbage in the Trans-Himalayas. Feral dogs often scavenge in the same garbage dumps as red foxes, leading to conflict between the two species. Dogs which are bigger and move in packs can cause serious harm to the smaller, solitary red foxes. Photo by htsh_kkch via https://www.flickr.com/photos/htsh_kkch/3536112300/(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

Even if no stray dogs were present, Habib points out that there were other problems with wild animals accessing food waste. “I expect two red foxes to occur naturally around the village, but this garbage sustains five or six. A wildlife lover may think this is a good thing, [but] in the long run this may bring the species in conflict.”

Newsome agrees, explaining that provisioning increases chances of conflicts with human beings. “Food waste also acts as a magnet for wildlife activity, so it can potentially draw animals in close proximity to humans,” says Newsome leading to attacks on livestock or even people in case of large predators.

“Even communities who are tolerant of wild animals right now can develop a negative attitude in such a case,” adds Habib.

A disproportionate increase in wild animals like red foxes could also affect other animals in nature, through a phenomenon called hyper-predation, where a boost to carnivore numbers because of the garbage would lead to a simultaneous increase in attacks on natural prey species like pikas in the case of red foxes. But the prey species wouldn’t be able to keep up with the predator numbers and eventually would die out. With no natural prey, the carnivores would be even more reliant on waste.

Rhesus macaques eating junk affects forest dynamics

Reliance on provisioning also disrupts larger ecological processes like regeneration of forests, found Sengupta. In the Buxa Tiger Reserve in North Bengal, the researcher studied two troops of rhesus macaques. Macaques are of course a particularly familiar sight in human-dominated areas, especially in India where people often directly and deliberately feed these animals.

Rhesus macaques play an important role in forest regeneration, by eating wild fruits and disperse seeds. In the Buxa Tiger Reserve in North Bengal, one troop of rhesus macaques dispersed seeds of 41 species of trees. Photo by Charlesjsharp / Wikimedia Commons.

In Buxa however, Sengupta found one troop that lived entirely inside forests and ate mostly wild fruits (around 79% of their diet) and had no contact with human beings or their food. Sengupta found that this wild troop dispersed seeds of a whopping 84% of the fruits they ate and at least 50% of these seeds germinated, helping plants spread and grow.

The other troop, lived on the fringes of the forest, next to a state and national highway and a tea shop. For seven months of the year, this troop spent most of their time at the tea shop in turns, begging or chasing tourists for food and returned to forage in the forest when the reserve was closed for tourists.

Fruits were only 46% of their diet and the macaques dispersed 24% of the seeds on the highway where they wouldn’t grow, as opposed to the wild troop that dispersed all seeds in the forest. During the peak tourist months, the provisioned troop ate no fruits and dispersed no seeds.

“I would expect any region in northern and northeastern India, where forests are relatively undisturbed and where there are fruiting tree species, to be places where rhesus macaques can act as important seed dispersers,” says Sengupta.

While humans feeding the macaques was disruptive to this important process, Sengupta reminds us that as long as human beings encroached on forests, animals would continue depending on anthropogenic food.  She is hopeful though that the non-provisioned troop in Buxa would for now at least continue staying in forests, “if there are preferred food species in the forests.”

In the same Buxa Tiger Reserve, another troop of Rhesus macaques that are being fed by tourists, venture less into the forest and eat fewer fruits. disperse fewer seeds. Photo by Asmita Sengupta.

To deal with the problem, Newsome asserts that “people must ask why the wildlife are consuming food waste or other forms of food provided by humans. If they are just eating it because it is accessible, then this food source should be removed or made inaccessible to wildlife.” But if the wildlife are turning to eat food provided by humans because there are no alternatives, then steps should be put in place to restore prey availability and viable habitat.”

Citations:

Reshamwala, H. S., Shrotriya, S., Bora, B., Lyngdoh, S., Dirzo, R., & Habib, B. (2018). Anthropogenic food subsidies change the pattern of red fox diet and occurrence across Trans-Himalayas, India. Journal of Arid Environments.

Newsome, T. M., & van Eeden, L. M. (2017). The effects of food waste on wildlife and humans. Sustainability, 9(7), 1269.

Ghoshal, A., Bhatnagar, Y. V., Mishra, C., & Suryawanshi, K. (2016). Response of the red fox to expansion of human habitation in the Trans-Himalayan mountains. European journal of wildlife research, 62(1), 131-136.

Sengupta, A., & Radhakrishna, S. (2016). Influence of fruit availability on fruit consumption in a generalist primate, the rhesus macaque Macaca mulatta. International Journal of Primatology, 37(6), 703-717.

Newsome, T. M., Dellinger, J. A., Pavey, C. R., Ripple, W. J., Shores, C. R., Wirsing, A. J., & Dickman, C. R. (2015). The ecological effects of providing resource subsidies to predators. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 24(1), 1-11.

Sengupta, A., McConkey, K. R., & Radhakrishna, S. (2015). Primates, provisioning and plants: Impacts of human cultural behaviours on primate ecological functions. PloS one, 10(11), e0140961.

Banner image: Where there were no human settlements, red foxes depended on wild rodents for food. Photo By Abhijit Das.

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