Gray Foxes have to move to find food, shelter, mates...basically they have to move to survive. They may change the location of their den if they feel threatened or if they feel their kits (babies) are threatened. It may also just simply be time for a new den. Wild animals move around quite a bit, especially females with young. Larger predators who could potentially kill the young have a harder time finding the mother and her little ones that way.
no
Yes, but only because humans have forced them into it.
No, gray foxes do not migrate, hibernate or estivate.
No, the gray fox does not hibernate, estivate or migrate.
no it stays in the desert.
Foxes neither hibernate nor migrate.
No foxes, including the gray fox, hibernate, estivate or migrate.
Gray foxes have their kits in the spring, usually April or May.
From where to where do foxes migrate
Gray foxes reproduce sexually, as do all mammals.
Gray foxes have their young in the spring, usually April or May.
Gray foxes are omnivores. They eat plant matter as well as animals.
Gray foxes live in a variety of habitats, including grasslands.
foxes are the enemies of foxes
Yes, the gray fox lives in the Midwest.
Gray foxes will have one litter of kits each spring.
Gray foxes are quite plentiful throughout their range and in no danger of being extinct.
Arctic foxes do not migrate, hibernate or estivate.