A kit fox is an omnivore, meaning they eat both meat and plants. They will sometimes eat grass to settle their stomachs like dogs do - and while they eat meat when it's available they will also eat fruits and berries when it's not.
the kit fox eats just about anything including kangaroo rats desert mice or any other rodent they are classified carnivores but are optimistic omnivores they eat just about any vegetation
To answer your question, a Kit Fox is an omnivore.
No, kit foxes are secondary consumers. They eat mostly small animals and some vegetative matter.
A kit fox is an omnivore as it eats both plants as well as animals.
Yes
yes
A fox is already a vertebrate as it has a spine.
The gray fox is a vertebrate.
A fox is a vertebrate in the mammal classification.
The red fox is a vertebrate as are all mammals.
Vertebrate.
A fox is a vertebrate. Any animal with bones is a vertebrate, i.e., the fox. An invertabrate, for example, would be the starfish.
A young fox is correctly called a cub, not a kit.
a kit fox
Any fox is a vertebrate. So the answer to your question is vertebrate. In order for an animal to be a vertabrate it has to have vertebrae, and vertabrae are pretty much back bones.
Yes a fox kit is a mammal.
A speckled flying fox is most defiantly a vertebrate. All mammals are vertebrates being a part of the phylum chordata.
A kit fox looks similar to a gray fox. See the image above.