Foxes are omnivores. The diet of foxes is largely made up of invertebrates. However, it also includes rodents, rabbits and other.
Black foxes eat a varied diet of worms, small rodents and berries. They eat a variety of things found in the wild.
The diet of foxes is largely made up of invertebrates such as insects, and small vertebrates such as reptiles, rodents, rabbits and birds, and can include eggs and plants.
Foxes are omnivores and not strictly carnivores. They eat plants as well as animals. During some seasons their diet may consist of only plants, such as berries.
They eat a mixed diet (in the wild) of raw meat, fruits, berries, and vegetables.
Usually, they don't. Foxes are not a big part of a polar bear's diet.
a rabbit is a prey it eats grass and leaves ( a vegetarion)
The fox is not a part of the diet of grizzly bears. Bears subsist mainly on berries, roots, and fish.
Foxes are omnivores. In the wild, they eat a diet of raw meat and some berries/ fruits/ vegetables.
Because of their varied diet, red foxes are hard to be classified within a trophic level.
If given a chance, black bears will eat foxes along with other small mammals. The bulk of their diet consists of vegetation. They love honey and will eat hives, insects and all, despite getting stings on their paws.
Kangaroos as a species are not endangered. There are several species of rock wallaby (smaller members of the kangaroo family) which are endangered, but this is due to the introduction of red foxes and feral cats rather than their diet.