No. Arctic foxes live in the Arctic, not the Antarctic.
There's no such thing. Arctic foxes live in the Arctic.
yes they do because they hang around in antartica which has snow so they must hang around in cities.
No fox lives in Antarctica. Antarctica is too cold to support animal life of any kind, and there is no land-based food chain there.
There is no food chain on Antarctica to support any animal.
No, only penguins live there.
No, there are no wolves in Antarctica.
No, they only live in the Arctic.
There are no foxes in Antarctica.
No. It's too cold there to support any kind of food chain to support any kind of animal.
No animal lives in Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain. The Arctic Fox, as its name implies, lives in the Arctic.
I think you mean Fennec fox.
Foxes are found on all continents except Antarctica.
There is no animal life in Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain. There are no polar bears in Antarctica.
No bird lives in Antarctica. Several types of sea birds breed on Antarctica's beaches, but these animals live at sea. Whales are sea mammals and do not live on Antarctica, which is a continent.
There are no animals on Antarctica; there is no food chain there: it's too cold.
No one lives permanently in Antarctica.
there's a whole list of them but some are the red fox and the gray fox
Only the red fox lives in Australia and it is not a native. It was brought in by Europeans in the 19th century and is now a noxious invasive species that is causing harm to native Australian wildlife.
it lives in Antarctica and cold places