Some do, as they like to eat out of garbage cans and things like that for easier food. Most foxes however, try and stay away from cities because of the noise. Also some foxes can be trained to live in cities like a pet, but that's much harder to do because it requires a license to own a fox as a pet.
"Urban" foxes, "City" foxes or "Urbanised" foxes.
No. As animals with fur, foxes are obviously mammals.
Human expansion is continuously pushing into areas once populated by foxes, coyotes and their prey. Because of lack of food foxes and coyotes will push into human settled environments, even urban areas, in search of food.
Stephen Harris has written: 'Urban foxes' -- subject(s): Mammals, Red fox, Urban animals
Foxes don't really live in bogs, but urban areas and grassland.
There are many differences. Dogs are domestic. Foxes are wild. Dogs bark, howl and whine. Foxes make totally different sounds. Dogs are in the genus "Canis" like wolves, coyotes and jackals. Foxes are "Vulpes" These are some.
Foxes are wild animals that live in the countryside and hunt rabbits and other small mammals for their food. They are known as "rural foxes". Some foxes have strayed nearer to housing developments and actually ransack dustbins etc and set up their homes nearby. They are known as "urban foxes"
Red foxes are found in almost any habitat - tundra, grasslands, forests, savannas, deserts, etc. and are even found in urban areas.
Foxes live in almost every biome, including the Arctic tundra, deciduous forests, conifer forests, mixed forests, mountains, grasslands and deserts. They, also, may be found wandering in urban areas.
Red foxes live in grasslands, mountain areas, deserts, thick forests, and even urban areas!
Coyotes are quite adaptable and live in nearly every habitat - tundra, taiga, deciduous forests, grasslands, deserts and even in rainforests. They have even adapted to survive in major urban areas.
Foxes in the wild live 2-3 years but ones in urban or zoo environments can live up to 12 years