Yes, they do. They also eat several other rodents, birds, eggs, other small mammals, and berries or leaves if they must.
Yes.
Yes. Mice are a part of the fox's main diet, especially that of the Red Fox here in North America.
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In general, foxes are unlikely to approach or attack dogs. However, conflicts can occur if a dog approaches or provokes a fox, especially during breeding season when foxes may be more protective. It's important to supervise interactions and keep pets safe in areas where foxes are present.
They could scratch him deeply but no. Dogs can get very aggressive to defend themselves. The only animal you really have to worry about hurting your dog is a raccoon. They can drown animals in a heart beat.
=Yes foxes can and will kill dogs if they are threatened. just like dogs foxes are able to kill al sorts of animals and have been known to killl all sorts that start from.... Humans all the way till snakes. they are traned hunters and dont think when they acttak. But they will only acttak if they are hubngry or threatened=
Well in a way no, they did branch off the same ancestor millions of years ago but they are different in traits that keep them from breeding with each other.
That all depends on if the dog is raised with the fox, if not then no, the fox is affraid of dogs.
No, unless we are speaking in evolutionarily historical terms.Both domestic cats (Felis catus), and species of foxes (in the family Canidae) are in the Mammalian order Carnivora. They are in different suborders and families, so while they no doubt share some percentage of their genome, there is no useful relationship to speak of beyond the evolutionary context.
A group of dogs is called a pack. There may be a different name for a group of hunting fox hounds, but I don't know it.
Male foxes can have a few names. They can be referred to as tods, reynards, or dogs. Female foxes are vixens and baby foxes are known as kits or pups.
Quokkas are small and completely defenceless members of the kangaroo family, so they are vulnerable to a number of native and introduced species. They are most vulnerable to predation by feral cats, dogs and foxes.
It will not hurt them but it is not a natural food for a dog.