Arctic Foxes do not kill their young.
because they can kill them if they think the fox will attack their young or if they feel threatened, they can kill them they dont have to eat them.
Probably not as an arctic fox lives in the arctic and a red fox lives in: The UK, USA and Ireland.
is it illegal
bears eat the Arctic fox and arctic fox eats mouse
An Arctic fox is a carnivore.
Both the red fox and the Arctic fox live in the Arctic.
It depends if the seal is alive or not. If the seal is already dead then the arctic fox may eat part of it but if the seal is alive then the arctic fox is too small to kill the seal
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.
The mother Arctic Fox stays with its young, protecting them from predator's while the father Arctic Fox goes out to find food for the cubs and the mother. They continue this until they cub is old enough to leave the den.
The Arctic fox is an omnivore.
Litters of the Arctic fox tend to average five to eight kits, but exceptionally contain as many as 25 (the largest litter size in the order Carnivora).
yes and no. Red foxes are not arctic. Arctic foxes, however are.