>>56027573Even these domesticated strains have a strong instinct to escape, which is why they are kept in cages.
The same thing happens with the domesticated foxes in the breeding program.
There are exceptions, but in general these species seek to isolate themselves from humans, I am a zoo veterinarian and externally I have received too many cases where we trap savannah cats, pet foxes, or deer from some ranch that escaped.
An easy example of this phenomenon, visit a farm with goats and sheep and generally observe how many feet away a sheep and a goat tolerate you, the goat will soon seek to investigate you, while the sheep will maintain a distance, even to at interactive farms we select the calmest sheep to withstand the treatment of children, but as a species they have a very wide ratio "escape distance" unlike goats, In short, if you cross that perimeter, the animal will activate its fight or flight instinct, the size of that perimeter varies in each species.