A comparison of the diets of feral cats Felis catus and red foxes Vulpes vulpes on Phillip Island, Victoria.
R Kirkwood , P Dann and M Belvedere
Australian Mammalogy
27(1) 89 - 93
Published: 2005
Abstract
THE introduction of feral cats (Felis catus) and red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) to Australia in the 1800s had a profound impact on resident ecosystems. Both predators colonised successfully and now are distributed across most of mainland Australia (Saunders et al. 1995; Abbott 2002). They consume mainly ground-dwelling mammals (Coman 1973; Croft and Hone 1978; Jones and Coman 1981; Lapidge and Henshall 2002; Hutchings 2003), but where these are scarce, birds, reptiles, insects and human refuse may become important dietary components (e.g., Bubela et al. 1998; Paltridge 2002). Although they prey on similar species, when compared at the same location differences in diet between the predators are evident (Triggs et al. 1984; Catling 1988; Risbey et al. 1999).https://doi.org/10.1071/AM05089
© Australian Mammal Society 2005