No. As animals with fur, foxes are obviously mammals.
"Urban" foxes, "City" foxes or "Urbanised" foxes.
Owls, hawks, cats, dogs, foxes, etc.
Mammals, reptiles, beetles, inverterbrates, fruits, berries and birds.
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.
The diet of foxes is largely made up of invertebrates such as insects, and small vertebrates such as reptiles, rodents, rabbits and birds, and can include eggs and plants.
Stephen Harris has written: 'Urban foxes' -- subject(s): Mammals, Red fox, Urban animals
Yes, foxes do eat insects. They eat other mammals include reptiles, amphibians, berries, fruits, fish, birds, eggs, beetles, grasses, and scorpion's.
No. Snakes are reptiles. Coyotes are mammals of the canine family, much like dogs, wolves and foxes.
All vertebrates - mammals, reptiles, birds, fish and amphibians, animals with backbones - have ribs.
Depending on the size of the prey, hawks, owls, snakes, roadrunners, tarantulas, foxes, coyotes, skunks, raccoons, ringtails and a number of other predators will feed on reptiles.
Foxes don't really live in bogs, but urban areas and grassland.
Deer, bobcat, alligator, bear, rodent species, birds, reptiles and amphibians, raccoons, foxes.