Chickens 'gang up' to kill intruder fox on French farm
- Published
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According to the farming school, hens will easily confront an animal that lacks vigour (File photo)
Chickens in a school farm in north-western France are believed to have grouped and killed a juvenile fox.
The unusual incident in Brittany took place after the fox entered the coop with 3,000 hens through an automatic hatch door which closed immediately.
"There was a herd instinct and they attacked him with their beaks," said Pascal Daniel, head of farming at the agricultural school Gros-Chêne.
The body of the small fox was found the following day in a corner of the coop.
"It had blows to its neck, blows from beaks," Mr Daniel told AFP news agency.
The farm is home to up to 6,000 free-range chickens who are kept in a five-acre site.
The coop is kept open during day and most of the hens spend the daytime outside, AFP adds.
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When the automatic door closed, the fox - thought to be around five or six months old - became trapped inside.
"A whole mass of hens can arrive together and the fox may have panicked in the face of such a big number", external, Mr Daniel told the regional newspaper Ouest France (in French).
"They can be quite tenacious when they are in a pack".
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