No, they are mammals therefore they are warm-blooded. They stay warm in harsh climates because of their fur.
Arctic foxes are mammals, which means they are warm blooded.
Arctic foxes are warm-blooded because they are mammals.
A fox is a mammal, so it is warm-blooded. Any cold-blooded animal in the Arctic would be unable to move.
Yes, Arctic foxes do.
No, foxes, as are all mammals, are endothermic - warm blooded.
Arctic foxes are able to survive the extreme cold of the Arctic so you be the judge.
An Arctic fox is a mammal and is warm-blooded.
Yes... animals in the Arctic are warm blooded (except for the fish in the Arctic waters).
No, the Antarctic has a very cold climate and has no terrestrial food chain to support Arctic foxes.
They are mammals. All mammals are warm blooded.
The arctic fox is warmblooded because it is a mammal. The difference between a cold-blooded animals and warmblooded animals is that cold-blooded animals' body temperatures are that of their environment, ex. if the temperature is 54 degrees, the animal will have a body temperature of 54 degrees. Warm-blooded animals, like the fox, maintain a constant body temperature. Humans, for example, maintain a body temperature of 98.6 degrees F., regardless of the temperature of the environment.
Yes they are.