Monday, May 16, 2011

Dead Badgers

I was out walking the other day enjoying an early morning stretch of the legs along the river; I was taking in the sounds of the woodland as the dawn chorus was filling the canopy, sandpipers shrieked from the river gravels and dippers bobbed and caught caddis larvae for their young.



The smell of ransoms filled my head with thoughts of food, it always does, its heady garlic aroma makes me think of all manner of wonderful cuisine. Anyway my thoughts were rudely interrupted by the excited yips of my dogs as they came across a large dead creature on the path just a few metres in front by the river Wansbeck.



Restraining the hounds of Cerberus I looked upon what was clearly a very recently deceased badger, so fresh indeed that rigor mortis had not yet fully set in. I have only occasionally come across dead badgers or other creatures for that matter that have died of ‘near’ natural causes, as they usually find somewhere out of sight to pass away. This one was lying right across the footpath.



I looked around for signs of a struggle, anything that could explain Brocks demise but nothing was obvious so I looked over the body. A male in good condition save for severe puncture and laceration marks around the neck and shoulder region, similar injuries, all very fresh, were around the nether regions. My suspicions were confirmed when I looked in his mouth and at his feet. Stiff badger hairs were lodged in his teeth and between his claws.



This badger had obviously fell foul to the rigours of badger society and paid the ultimate price, with his life. It is unusual but not unheard of but given the rigours of this dry spring he may have fell foul of food shortages, as the mainly eat earthworms, or purely the need for more space within a growing family. Whatever it was it was it was still strange to find it in such a situation but not as I say unusually to find predators attacked by their own kind or by others.

Dead as a door nail
Badgers are fiercely territorial creatures so this happens fairly regularly, if not so severely. However, other predators are less clear cut as to why they clash, it does however, invariably revolve around either one or two things all relating to competition; either for access to females or food and shelter. Sometimes though, it is just out of sheer might of authority. It happens very frequently throughout the animal kingdom (and I include humans within that kingdom) between the same species (intraspecific) or between different species (interspecific).



A few years ago I witnessed an otter kill and dismember a mink on the Isle of Mull, the first time it had ever been recorded, since then I have seen it several times and so have others such that we are safe in the knowledge that there is a great deal of antagonism between these two species and that this is reflected in the current distribution and population structure of the two species. Only last year I new of a mink family on the river Blyth who made the fatal mistake of birthing within the range of a female otter, she too gave birth but not before she had systematically hunted down and killed every mink from that family.



Nature can be a cruel spectacle but it is all done within reason and as I continued my walk, pondering the fate of poor old Bill Brock my attention was drawn by shrill whistles and flash of azure brilliance. Mrs kingfisher or Mr for that matter was bashing the hell out of a small fish to feed to his nearby brood clearly audible above the noise of the tumbling river. Another flash of colour and it disappeared into a hole in an exposed bank then in seconds it was back out to its perch above a trapped minnow shoal, the process was repeated over and over again and I watched till I was bored, or the dogs were and moved off comfortable that this was life, and death in nature. What a wonderful morning.

2 comments:

  1. hi do you mind asking where these kingfishers are - so so keen to get an image of one locally
    Cheers
    Will

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  2. Hi Will they were along the river Wansbeck just downstream from Mitford

    ReplyDelete