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      • Care must be taken to avoid the badgers becoming dependent on handouts – small regular quantities of badger food can dissuade the badgers from causing damage to fruit and vegetable crops whilst not encouraging the social group to become larger than the territory would naturally support.
      www.arkwildlife.co.uk/blogs/wildlife-guides/badger-identification-habitat-and-food
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  2. www.badgerland.co.uk › help › encouragementFeeding - Badgerland

    Wildlife species - including badgers will come to rely on food handouts; so you should be careful to plan your feeding regime in advance. Make sure if you feed large amounts that you can always do this, so you will need to be sure of reliable holiday "cover" for when you are away.

  3. Common name: European badger. Scientific name: Meles meles. Main signs: Scraped out bits of lawn or snuffle holes, latrines, partially eaten bulbs, vegetables and fruit, digging under fences or broken fence. Plants affected: Lawn, flower beds, fruits, vegetables. Most active: Badgers are nocturnal.

  4. Aug 27, 2019 · Badgers are omnivores and eat almost anything. Here are out top badger facts, feeding advice for your garden, and info about setts and where they live.

    • Do badgers eat handouts?1
    • Do badgers eat handouts?2
    • Do badgers eat handouts?3
    • Do badgers eat handouts?4
    • Do badgers eat handouts?5
  5. Badgers mainly eat earthworms, but they'll also take other invertebrates, rodents, rabbits, cereals, fruit and bulbs. They're highly territorial - fights between badgers for territory are fierce and can result in serious injury.

  6. Diet. The diet of a badger is extremely varied, with badgers being described by expert Professor Tim Roper as "opportunistic omnivores". Earthworms are the core of the badger's diet, often by as much as 60 per cent. In a single night, an adult badger may eat well over 200 worms!

  7. In some areas, badgers may dig out and eat the contents of wasp and bee nests, including the larvae, pupae, honey and honeycomb. They will eat carrion and those in urban areas are known to scavenge food from bins and gardens and may occasionally break into poultry houses or take other small domestic animals, but such instances are considered rare.

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