No it is to small, but if there were more than one it could.
The primary predators of moose are gray wolves. Bears occasionally hunt moose. Humans, however, frequently and easily hunt moose with guns.
arctic foxes do not eat moose. they are much too large for the foxes to digest themselves. instead, they eat rodents,fish,lemmings and leftovers of larger predators
In Northern Ashia were people hunt them.:):(:)
We are the treats.We hunt them trap them, plow down their homes, pollute the waters.Some of the wolves' prey can kill a wolf, such as the large moose, or an elk, but they don't "hunt" the wolves, they just fight for their lives.Humans hunting or threatning them.
In Manitoba, they hunt white - tailed deer, caribou, moose, wild turkey, black bear, coyotes, and gray wolves.
They hunt in packs and they eat mammals such as elk, moose, deer, etc.
Arctic wolves, also known as Gray wolves, sometimes hunt alone for mice, rabbits, beaver, and domesticated animals. They also form packs of up to about twenty-four to go after large prey such as deer, caribou, and moose.
Moose don't hunt, they are hermivorous. They might chase you though.
The gray wolf generally hunts large prey animals. Its diet will consist of moose, white-tailed deer, elk, mule deer, bighorn sheep,bison, muskox and caribou.
No, foxes typically hunt alone or in pairs, not in packs.
large birds,foxes,rats,weasels,some snakes,and people
Birds rodents snowshoe hare and large animals.HUMANS