Well, I don't reall y know, because you don't know where the fox lives. I depends. If your talking about the temperate deciduous forest then the fox would probably be a tertiary consumer. But if the fox lives in the artic it would also be a tertiary consumers. That's the best I could do. Sorry. :) :( :0 :l
yes because they do like stuff like that
Their diet is as diverse as their habitats. Examples include insects, beetles, crickets, caterpillars, grasshoppers, dung beetles, worms, clams, crabs, crayfish, fish, octopus, snails, and starfish.
Reptiles (such as snakes), scorpions and amphibians. All kinds of small animals, rodents, rabbits, birds, eggs, and and other small game.
As well as grasses, berries, and fruit.
A fox is a secondary consumer. They feed on primary consumers.
The red fox is an omnivore so it is both a primary consumer as well as a secondary consumer. It eats both plant matter as well as animals.
Foxes are omnivores so are secondary consumers as they feed mostly on primary consumers.
Yes, foxes are omnivores and secondary consumers.
yes,because it eats other organisms.
a fox is a cacacacacacacacaa consumer.
yes!
The gray fox is a secondary consumer,
it is
The gray fox is a secondary consumer in the Everglades.
The red fox is a secondary consumer and is both predator and prey.
The Arctic fox is a secondary consumer.
Gray wolves are secondary consumers and feed mostly on primary consumers - deer, moose and other such plant eaters.
The Arctic fox is a secondary consumer.
No, a swift fox is a secondary consumer.
No, the red fox is a secondary consumer and an omnivore.
The Arctic fox is a secondary consumer and an omnivore.
an arctic fox is a fast animal, it could out run any animal.. except dogs!
A fox?