Fox-hunting — conflicting attitudes between urban dwellers and farmers
A seven-week-old vixen fox cub. Foxes are not a protected species here so they can be legally shot and trapped — though it is illegal to poison them. Picture: Chris Radburn/PA Wire
Moves to ban fox-hunting in Ireland are showing up sharply conflicting attitudes between urban dwellers and farmers.
Some city and town folk feed wild foxes, in effect inviting them to their backyards and virtually treating them like visiting 'pets', while their farmer cousins see foxes as a pest.
![<p> The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that “an ecosystem is collapsed when it is virtually certain that its defining biotic [living] or abiotic [non-living] features are lost from all occurrences, and the characteristic native biota are no longer sustained”.</p> <p> The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that “an ecosystem is collapsed when it is virtually certain that its defining biotic [living] or abiotic [non-living] features are lost from all occurrences, and the characteristic native biota are no longer sustained”.</p>](/cms_media/module_img/9930/4965053_12_augmentedSearch_iStock-1405109268.jpg)