They change color to camouflage in the trees and plants. This way they can hide from predators.
It sheds its white coat. The undercoat is brownish-grey.
Yes, arctic foxes are white in winter. However, their fur will turn grey or brown in the summer.
Gray wolves range from gray, to brown. They can be gray, white, black, brown, two different tones of multicolor, and even a faint reddish-orange.The Grey Wolf's coat is originally gray in the Summer. In Winter, the Grey Wolf sheds his/hers grey Summer coat. Underneath, their coat is white. This makes a Grey wolf's coat turn white. Grey wolves can also be black, brown, or red.Actually for what may seem to be obvious the GRAY wolf does not only come in gray. There are subspecies of Canis Lupus that are in fact not grey. They come usually in three colors White, Gray (of course), and Brown. Though there is a rare black that can be found from time to time. Each has its on variations though, so the Grey wolf has no REAL color.
grey moth
grey, or black or brown
Grey is a very funny gene. If a horse is Gg for the grey gene, OR GG for the grey gene, they WILL grey out in time. A lot of horses appear one color when they are born, but are actually grey, and WILL grey out. :)
You can't so you better start dying it.
In the summer a trees leaves are green... they don't turn colors until autumn
probably grey bc u know he said "all the colors upon leaving i will turn to grey"
Around here it happens every summer.
when their born they are black and brown, but as they grow older majority of them turn grey/silver where they used to be black.
yes e.g. if you have black hair it will turn brown , blonde and then grey