According to French zoologists who have made a study of it, the Red Fox (Fr. Renard roux) is crucial to the control of Lyme Disease in France. They note that the increase in cases of Lyme Disease coincides with the decrease in Red Fox numbers. In France they are very often viewed as pests and hunted mercilessly. Up to a million are killed by hunters every year. Since cases of Lyme Disease continue to rise, and farmers struggle with rodents ravaging their crops, it seems high time to give Reynard the respect he deserves for his significant role in the regulation of our ecosystems.
Lyme Disease is a degenerative zoonotic disease, which can be treated if it is diagnosed in time. Unfortunately due to lack of recognition in the past, it has often been left to turn into a chronic disease in France. It is transmitted via a tick infected with the bacteria complex Borrelia burgdoferi.
The bacteria requires a damp habitat and so is most often found in or near woodland. Using as hosts wild vertebrates such as rodents or domesticated animals, the bacteria transfers from the host to the tick when the tick requires a blood meal. The tick may then pass it on in the same fashion to humans.
That said though, just because we are bitten by an infected tick does not mean we will contract the disease. It all depends on the life stage of the tick. Fewer than 1% of people bitten by a tick will be infected, and it requires a tick nymph to have been attached for at least 17 hours. The main season of risk is April to June, and sometimes in the autumn. Numbers of cases peaked in 2018 with a couple of hundred thousand incidences, but even now with better public education, there are around 60 000 new cases every year.
The principal cause for the increase in Lyme Disease is climate change. In addition, and all the current science is in agreement about this, the other significant factor is a lack of Red Foxes in rural areas and/or domestic cats in urban settings to control the rodent carriers of the bacteria. It has been demonstrated by several studies that a reduction over time of the Red Fox population in an area correlates to an increase in cases of Lyme Disease.
The rodents most likely to be carrying the bacteria are the Bank Vole (Fr. Campagnol roussatre) and the Wood Mouse (Fr. Mulot sylvestre). Their main predators are the Red Fox and the Beech Marten (Fr. Fouine), and the numbers of rodents go down when the activities of these two predators go up. The Red Fox does not itself play a role in infecting the ticks. Rather it is the population density of the rodents which directly affects the numbers of ticks, infected or not. The fewer rodents, the fewer ticks and the more Red Foxes. When the balance between rodents and foxes is optimal, there are four times fewer infected ticks.
So why has the Red Fox been considered a pest for so long and so persistently? Like the crow, it has partly to do with how the fox is represented in fairytales and fables. The fox is a cunning and crafty character in these stories. The red colour of the fox's pelt is associated with the Devil or Evil. Despite this, it was hunted for its fur. But bit by bit it became hunted because of being a vector for diseases transmissable to humans. The best known of these diseases is rabies, which was eradicated in France by 2001.Red Foxes in good health and free from rabies were able to defend their territories from foxes coming in from elsewhere. But the next thing you know is that they were accused of spreading alveolar echinoccosis (Fox Tapeworm). However, this disease seems to be restricted to the east of France, and globally only 15% of new cases annually are in France. There are on average 2 human deaths a year from this disease in France.
Red Foxes are a very adaptable species and can be found everywhere from the seaside to high up in the mountains. It has been estimated that they each eat about 6000 rodents a year, thus keeping disease transmission low and protecting crops and young trees from damage by rabbits and voles. Rather than poison the food chain and the environment by laying baits for rodents it makes more sense to simply let foxes do their thing.


























