Foxes, especially red foxes, live in a variety of habitats, including wetlands and deserts.
any type but mostly red
bogs
red foxes
The red foxes natural habitat ranges from Alaska to Florida, the smallest population of the red fox can be found in the Southwest where it is now quite rare to see one. These foxes like open woodland areas, wetlands, and suburban neighborhoods.
There is no such species as a "cross fox." However, foxes do live in wetlands. The gray fox is a fairly common animal in the Everglades of Florida.
forests mountains and temperate biomes
No. Rainforests can grow around wetlands, but on the whole, wetlands are not characterised by the thick vegetation of a rainforest. Different types of wetlands are more likely to be characterised by river red gums, or grasses and reeds, or mangroves (saltwater wetlands).
Foxes live in a variety of habitats, from tundra and taiga, through deciduous forests, grasslands, wetlands, mountains, deserts and even in urban environments.
Red Foxes come from Asia.
Gray Foxes are smaller than red foxes and red foxes live further north than gray foxes.
no