There you go! 100% Gray Fox! The gray fox is the only species of fox that I know can climb trees. What you are looking at above is a Gray Foxes Summer pelt, until winter arrives it become much more fluffy.
Maybe you might contact your local zoo and ask about it, do some research on Google, real-life, or ask wildlife directories. I'll maybe update this answer later...
The silver fox is a color variant of the red fox (Vulpes vulpes). Soviet/Russian scientists tamed the silver morph of the red fox by breeding it with modern day domesticated dogs. In the 1950's, Dmitri Belyaev started a project to tame the silver fox, after 50 years of work, he was successful and the dogs were sold for a very high price.
its gray and looks like a fox
it looks like a fox but gray
Just ask yourself, is silver the same color of gray, i mean really.
The silver fox is a color morph of the red fox which is an entirely different species from a gray fox.
The image above is a gray fox.
See the image above of a gray fox.
any colour
There is no such thing as an Italian gray fox.
the gray fox is primarily noctrnal
The silver fox and red fox come from the same family of breeds. The only exception is that a silver fox has a form of melanism which is a development of dark colored pigmentation of the skin.
The gray fox is a vertebrate.
a red fox is related to a gray fox
No, the gray fox is a placental mammal and not a mursupial.
The gray fox is a secondary consumer,
FX stands for Fox Extended
There are four types of flying foxes that are native to Australia. They are the black flying fox, the gray headed flying fox, the little red flying fox, and the spectacled flying fox. Their scientific names, in the same order, are Pteropus alecto, Pteropus poliocephalus, Pteropus scapulatus, and Pteropus conspicillatus.
No, the gray fox is quite common and in no danger of extinction.
The gray fox is a secondary consumer in the Everglades.
Yes, the gray fox lives in Idaho.