No, but gray wolves may eat a red fox.
What is special about Antarctic wolves (canis vulpes australis) is that they are actually foxes not wolves.
Gray Foxes are smaller than red foxes and red foxes live further north than gray foxes.
there's a whole list of them but some are the red fox and the gray fox
yes. Gray wolves and Mexican red wolves both can life in the western America, though Mexican red wolves are also believed to be a sub species of the Gray wolf, caused by a cross breeding of Gray wolves and Coyotes.
Some species of wolves are the gray wolves, red wolves, antic wolves and the coyote-wolf hybrid.
There are only three species of wolves: gray wolf, Ethiopian wolf, and red wolf. Timber wolves are only a subspecies of gray wolves.
Red fox and the gray fox.
raccoons, owls, foxes
Yes, red wolves are an endangered species every since the started to be eaten by liger's.
No, the gray fox is in an entirely different genus from the red fox and would probably be incapable of producing offspring.
Yes, both red foxes and gray foxes mate but not with each other.
Yes and no. It depends on their personality and pack ranking.