It would screw up the ecoystem. Usually if any animal disaperes it affects the whole food chain. If the acrtic fox preys on a certain species, and the fox disaperes then suddently there is nothing hunting the smaller prey so they will over populate. And if something hunts the acrtic fox than they would have no more to hunt. So it is important to protect all animals :)
The animals they prey on could have a population explosion, but, this subspecies of the gray wolf is in no danger at this time.
arctic wolves would not be able to eat arctic seal and the arctic seal would grow and more fish would be gone Then all the fish would be gone then the seal would die of starvashion
if the Arctic fox became extinct, all of these animals would overpopulate, and have trouble finding enough food. It will affect the food web because the arctic fox’s predators will have less prey and the arctic fox’s prey will have less predators.
lemmings population will grow
No. The arctic fox is a species of least concern, meaning there is no notable threat to them.
The arctic fox became endangered around 2002 to 2003. The arctic fox has an estimated 20 percent chance of becoming extinct.
Arctic Foxes are not nearing extinction. The International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies the Arctic fox as a "Least Concern" species, which means that its population is not threatened. Though Arctic Foxes are not endangered as a whole, they are endangered in Scandinavia.
Arctic Foxes are not nearing extinction. The International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies the Arctic fox as a "Least Concern" species, which means that its population is not threatened. Though Arctic Foxes are not endangered as a whole, they are endangered in Scandinavia.
No, Arctic foxes do not have horns.
Arctic foxes are soooo cute!
do arctic foxes live in packs- no
Arctic foxes are canines - dogs.
They live in the high Arctic regions and they are foxes.
Red foxes do live in the Arctic and compete there with the Arctic fox.
There are no Antarctic foxes. There are, however, Arctic foxes.