The Moose is a ruminant herbivore and not carnivorous.
Bears, hyenas, weasels, badgers, seals, walruses, sea lions, wolves, foxes, dogs, coyotes, raccoons, mongooses, fossas, and all sorts of small and big cats.
Yes. They come from different families, Family Canidae (foxes) and Family Hyaenidae (hyaenas), but both of these families are from the same mammal order, Order Carnivora which also includes dogs, cats, bears, mongooses, badgers, skunks, genets, pandas, coatis, fossas, seals, sea lions and walruses.
Foxes. Mongooses, Foosa's.
Arctic foxes may have litters of up to 25(!), the largest litter size in the order Carnivora.
They share an Order, Carnivora, but otherwise are unrelated.
I believe you're asking which animals are carnivorous? Carne vore would be carnivore. There are many carnivorous animals; animals who eat other animals. Some of them are: lions, tigers, coyotes, foxes, weasels, some bears, dogs, cats, otters, hyenas, raccoons, mongooses, sea lions, seals, and cheetahs.
Dogs are descendants from Canis lupus, the gray wolf.
The dingo is a member of the Canidae family, which includes dogs, wolves, and foxes. It is classified within the order Carnivora, making it a carnivorous mammal. Dingoes are considered a subspecies of the domestic dog and are often recognized as wild dogs native to Australia.
The fox is a canine and is a member of that family. Canines (Canidae) are carnivores (Carnivora), which are mammals (Mammalia).
Cat is to dog as snake is to large birds, wild boars, mongooses, raccoons, foxes, coyotes, other snakes and humans.
so the foxes can reduce animals
foxes live around wolves