Red foxes live around the world in many diverse habitats including
forests, grasslands, mountains, and deserts. They also adapt well to
human environments such as farms, suburban areas, and even large
communities. The red fox's resourcefulness has earned it a legendary
reputation for intelligence and cunning.
Red foxes are solitary
hunters who feed on rodents, rabbits, birds, and other small game but
their diet can be as flexible as their home habitat. Foxes will eat
fruit and vegetables, fish, frogs, and even worms. If living among
humans, foxes will opportunistically dine on garbage and pet food.
Like
a cat's, the fox's thick tail aids its balance, but it has other uses
as well. A fox uses its tail (or "brush") as a warm cover in cold
weather and as a signal flag to communicate with other foxes.
Foxes also signal each other by making scent posts—urinating on trees or rocks to announce their presence.
In
winter, foxes meet to mate. The vixen (female) typically gives birth to
a litter of 2 to 12 pups. At birth, red foxes are actually brown or
gray. A new red coat usually grows in by the end of the first month, but
some red foxes are golden, reddish-brown, silver, or even black. Both
parents care for their young through the summer before they are able to
strike out on their own in the fall.
Red foxes are hunted for
sport, though not extensively, and are sometimes killed as destructive
pests or frequent carriers of rabies.
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