Posted on 07/10/2025 12:53:05 PM PDT by Red Badger
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This will make fox hunts very confusing.
I for one am panicking.
So a feral dog mated with a fox. The horror. Island of Dr. Morons!
I’ve met women whom I thought at first were foxes who turned out to be dogs.
Some male dog or fox got too horny. What are you going to do?
Since I can remember there have been cases of dogs and coyotes cross breeding out here in the southwest. Usually a male coyote with a female dog. We had one that was a Shepard mix. The appearance was Shepard but it was smaller and lighter of frame with a bushier tail and behaved like a Coyote. Extremely intelligent animal, one of the smartest dogs we ever owned but a bit unpredictable and would switch to wild in an instant when in certain situations.
They should release the full name and address of this strange creature. Yes, I think they should dox the Dogxim.
Maybe it will be like a mule, and able to reproduce only very rarely, if at all.
If one should ever hook up with a chupacabra, who knows what could happen?
This syllogism of "pristine environments" as supposedly never having had people present is an ignorant crock. There is no habitable part of this planet that hasn't had people at one time or another. Just because they aren't there now, doesn't mean there never were, nor does it mean that if people were to go there it would therefore be destructive.
There is no such thing as "pristine" just because it is unoccupied.
Hybrids like mules, etc., are sterile and cannot sexually reproduce; if that is concerning the people involved in South America.
Dox the Fox in Box with socks.......................
To quote Dr Ian Malcolm from the Jurassic Park series: “Life will find a way”
Best to have them leave before you sober up...
What unscientific global warming mankind bad we're all gonna die BS is this?
Indians have been living in South America for at least 13,000 years and accompanied by domestic dogs. In fact, prior to Columbus, the human population in some parts of South America rivals what it is today.
6.7 million years is a blink of the eye. Of course related "species" can interbreed -- but if they can, I suppose they should still be classified as "subspecies." In populations of any size, it would take a loooong time to completely separate.
A somewhat related question: many years ago, when I was in school, the change in coloration of the wings of moths in Manchester, England was offered up as a textbook example of natural selection and evolution as observed in real time, not hypothesized from surviving bone fragments and the fossil record. You may recall the story. The wings of such and such species of moth had been mostly white. As the industrial revolution pumped vast increases of coal soot into the air, it darkened the bark of trees (as well as producing noticeable respiratory and other problems for humans). Moths with white wings stood out as easy prey. Very rapidly, local naturalists -- and in high Victorian England, half the people with an education fancied themselves as naturalists -- noticed that the coloration had changed. Most moths now had dark wings, presumably because that gave them a bit of camouflage. The moths with white wings were spotted and eaten relatively rapidly, and white coloration became a rare variant.
The genes for white coloration, however, would remain in the population, though they might become increasingly rare. It would take a long time to breed them out entirely via natural selection.
So the question: England has imposed environmental controls on coal emissions. The soot darkening the bark of trees is presumably a think of the past. What has happened to the moths' wings? I don't recall ever seeing a followup report.
The cleanup is still of relatively short duration -- but so was the massive increase in coal soot from the early industrial revolution in the late 18th and early nineteenth centuries until the effect on moths was spotted in the Victorian era. The cleanup would date largely from the 1960's and 70's; that, at least, is when the U.S. began to crack down. I'm guessing that the time period on the downslope might be comparable to the timeframe of the cleanup era.
You win the internet for the day!
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