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Harmful and Beneficial Mammals of the Arid Interior
Austin Bradstreet Fletcher
Bernard Hazelius Rawl
Clarence Elias Quinn
David Arthur Brodie
David Ernest Lantz
Gifford Pinchot
Henry Prentiss Armsby
J. M. Westgate
Lawrence Green Dodge
Lore Alford Rogers
Marion Dorset
Myer Edward Jaffa
Richard West Hickman
Vernon Bailey
Walter David Hunter
Wilfred Hudson Osgood
William Allen Orton
William Fairchild Hubbard
William Henry Scherffius
William Renwick Beattie
Duncan Stuart
H. (Henry C.) Woosley
C. A. Mahan
George Mason Whitaker
其他書名
With Special Reference to the Carson and Humboldt Valleys, Nevada
出版
U.S. Department of Agriculture
, 1909
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=pRt1EWePU2oC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
FULL_PUBLIC_DOMAIN
註釋
From the foregoing it is evident that silver foxes can be and in fact, are being propagated in confinement. Like most new enterprises, fox raising is a business regarding which opinions vary. The favorable facts are that silver foxes are easily and securely kept in simple wire inclosures; that suitable food for them is cheap and easily obtainable; that they are not subject to serious diseases and that their disposition and quality of their fur can be improved by selective breeding. Opposed to these are the unfavorable facts that they are by nature suspicious, nervous, and not inclined to repose confidence in man; and that, largely for these reasons, they do not breed regularly and successfully, except when cared for by experienced persons more or less gifted in handling them. The number of persons now engaged in the business is relatively small, and the work is still experimental, yet many of the initial difficulties already have been overcome. Numerous minor failures seem explainable in large measure, and are offset by several conspicuous successes. It is therefore probable that under proper management fox raising will be developed into a profitable industry, and it is perhaps not too much to expect that a domestic breed of foxes will be produced. Only time can show how far such expectations will be realized, but present indications must be regarded as very encouraging.