No, the gray fox is quite common and in no danger of extinction.
The Gray wolves first started to become endangered around the 1900's when people hunted them down because the wolves would often eat live stock and small children, which angered the human to try to kill them to protect their towns and familes.
No, as a matter of fact they have very high populations.The grey fox is not an endangered species. Still fairly common over its range.---While the Grey Fox is not endangered in the US, it is considered a threatened species (and in some areas endangered) in Canada. In Ontario, it was placed on the protection list (Ontario's Endangered Species Act, 2007).The decline of the Grey Fox, in Ontario, is not fully understood. Researchers are puzzling over this.
There are several species..Gray, red, kit, and swift..None are considered endangered except for the race San Joaquim kit fox.
There is no Antarctic fox. The Arctic fox is not endangered.
the gray fox is primarily noctrnal
the grey fox is endangered because IT IS
i know for sure that in Morocco it is illegal to hunt the Fennec fox! that's all i have :/
The Arctic fox isn't endangered.
The gray fox is a vertebrate.
a red fox is related to a gray fox
Neither. The gray wolf is listed as a species of least concern.
The gray fox is a secondary consumer,