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Consumers Energy Employees Save Red Foxes From Probable Death

consumers foxes
photo: Consumers Energy

SHELBY TOWNSHIP (WWJ) - A group of Consumers Energy employees are being credited with saving two red foxes while working on a pipeline project in metro Detroit.

Red foxes were frequent curious visitors during 2019 construction along the South Oakland Macomb Network, a $200 million pipeline enhancement project in Oakland and Macomb counties. A full-time environmental consultant, Adam Fisher, and other pipeline employees took continual care to help protect foxes and other animals they encountered, including preserving critical red fox winter denning habitats during construction and restoration work.


"They accepted the red foxes as mascots on this project. Any time someone saw one they let me know. The foxes were curious and often checked up on us, our equipment and even the pipeline itself before it was installed," Fisher said in a statement.  

The team became concerned when they noticed two foxes appeared to be suffering from mange, a skin disease caused by mites that results in fur loss and eventual starvation. It causes eyes to crust over and constant itching which prevents foxes from hunting. The disease is widespread among Michigan red foxes and typically kills them within two to four months of infection.

The team took action to start a mange treatment program recommended by a Michigan Department of Natural Resources-licensed wildlife rehabilitator, which required continuous direct monitoring during feeding attempts to ensure only the foxes received the medication. The treatment efforts resulted in regrowth of fur coats and fluffy tails for two of the project's favorite foxes.

"We were happy to play a role in helping ensure that at least two of these beautiful animals are healthy and warm going into the cold winter months," Fisher said. 

Other efforts undertaken by Consumers Energy project employees included relocating garter snakes, installing a "turtle fence" to prevent protected reptiles from entering work areas, scheduling tree-cutting in winter to avoid harm to bats, and protecting an active woodcock nesting area within the pipeline path until the babies fledged. 

The project also plans to create 1.5 acres of butterfly and honeybee habitat reserve in the spring on the pipeline right-of-way south of 23 Mile Road near an existing Consumers Energy pipeline valve site. It will surround a wetland complex that was seeded separately with a Michigan native wetland seed mix.