More

    Darwin’s Fox: One of the Most Elusive Creatures on Earth

     

    Back at the end of 1832, while Charles Darwin was doing his thing aboard the HMS Beagle, he came face to face with a small gray fox on the coast of Chile’s Chiloé Island.

    While we know that “Darwin’s finches” famously helped Darwin clinch his ideas on natural selection, this small fox also nudged him toward his theory of evolution.

    Darwin created a scientific record that could be used both to “confirm its status as a distinct species and to better understand the process of evolution.”

     

     

    The sweet shy fox was described as a new species in 1837 by Darwin’s colleague William Charles Linnaeus Martin. Officially called Lycalopex fulvipes, it is now commonly known as Darwin’s fox. Almost two centuries later, very little is known about these vulpine beauties, much in part because there are so few of them.

    Endemic to Chile, they roam through several forested regions on the mainland as well as Chiloé. Scientists estimate that in total, their population numbers around a mere 1,000 individuals. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) classifies the species as Endangered with a decreasing population trend. Which makes them a perfect candidate for the lens of photographer Kevin Schafer.

    Schafer specializes in telling the stories of little-known and endangered species around the globe, as well as being a Founding Fellow of the International League of Conservation Photographers.
    The hardest part about making this photo was actually finding one of the evasive creatures in the first place.

    With the help of Jaime Jiménez, a Chilean scientist at Universidad de Los Lagos and an expert in L. fulvipes, he was pointed in the right direction. He finally found this beauty on the edge of a dense rainforest on Chiloé Island. “The fox allowed him to take just a few frames before darting into the impenetrable understory,” writes bioGraphic, “living up to its reputation as one of the most elusive carnivores on Earth.”