polar bears.
Predators of the Arctic fox include tundra wolves and sometimes polar bears.
Young pups can be snatched away by snowy owls and golden eagles.
polar bears
Polar Bears and Humans.
The arctic fox's biggest enemy is a red fox. The red fox has taken away a lot of the arctic foxes habitat.
The arctic fox is a carnivore animal from the canine family. As a predator itself, it hasn't many natural predators. Their biggest enemy are polar bears and humans, and when they are little, they also need to be careful with the snowy owl, which can hunt baby foxes if they are not being supervised.
polar bears and human. the baby's enemy is the snowy owl
With the exception of humans, arctic wolves have very few predators. Grizzlies would be the only natural predator that I can think of and most of the time disputes between grizzlies and wolves are a result of wanting the same prey, not wanting to prey on each other.
The Arctic fox usually finds lemming buried beneath the snow, or even tundra voles.
Polar bears, wolves and red foxes prey occasionally on Arctic foxes.
arctic fox
it predidtor is a wolves and polar bears
Arctic fox, Polar Bears and Orcas
well, an artic fox has a camofloge in with the snow so no predators can attack.
arctic foxes and skuas
The main predator of the Arctic fox is man followed by the red fox which is making inroads in the territory formerly dominated by the Arctic fox. Before they were hunted almost to extinction, the gray wolf was the top predator.
Arctic foxes generally live in white, snowy environments. The white fur of the arctic fox easily blends in with such a background, effectively rendering them invisible to predators and prey.
Polar bears, wolf packs, red foxes and humans are only real predators of the adult Arctic fox, along with large birds of prey such as snowy owls, that primarily prey on the smaller and more vulnerable Arctic fox cubs.
No. Both are apex predators and neither are from the same area of the world.
The other owls.
predation This answer is not true. The arctic fox is too small to hunt a caribou. Their relationship is commensalism. The caribou digs for food in the snow and when it leaves, the arctic fox will come in and eat the animals that live below the snow. The caribou is unaffected while the arctic fox benefits.
In the winter the Arctic Fox's coat turns white or blue-grey. This is to help the fox blend in with it's environment. The fox can then hide from predators and hunt prey without being detected.