because the water that is begging brought to the desert, farms are being built and the Kit fox is forced out of it's home underground. Also the crops that are being planted so they have to leave and be eaten by other animals. Or even when they set up wolf traps than they get into them and they die because they are so Hungary.
No one knows historic population numbers for the San Joaquin kit fox. However, kit foxes were relatively common until the 1930s when people began to convert grasslands to farms, orchards and cities. Currently, there are fewer than 7,000 San Joaquin kit foxes.
No, the kit fox, as a whole, is not endangered. However, one subspecies is. The endangered San Joaquin kit fox (Vulpes macrotis mutica) was formerly very common in the San Joaquin Valley and through much of Central California. Its 1990 population was estimated to be 7,000. This subspecies is still endangered, after nearly 50 years of being on the Endangered Species List.
I guess their grasslands are changed to buildings...
The kit fox is one of the most endangered animals in the world. There are only around 7,000 left in the wild.
The only fox listed at this time as endangered is Darwin's fox of Chile. Some local populations of the kit fox are considered endangered.
There are several species..Gray, red, kit, and swift..None are considered endangered except for the race San Joaquim kit fox.
A young fox is correctly called a cub, not a kit.
There is no Antarctic fox. The Arctic fox is not endangered.
a kit fox
the grey fox is endangered because IT IS
Yes a fox kit is a mammal.
The Arctic fox isn't endangered.
A kit fox looks similar to a gray fox. See the image above.
No, the kit fox is an American fox and does not live in the Middle East.
it depends on the fox some do and some dont / like the red fox or the kit fox
A young fox is called a Kit