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
arctic fox arctic wolf polar bear birds and foxes
Wolves, polar bears, wolverines, lynx and even red foxes will kill and eat an Arctic fox if the opportunity presents itself.
Wolverines are mammals related to weasels and badgers, but are larger and appear more bear-like than most genera of the Mustelidae family
Arctic foxes generally eat any small animal they can find, including lemmings, voles, other rodents, hares, birds, eggs, fish, and carrion. They scavenge on carcasses left by larger predators such as wolves and polar bears, and in times of scarcity even eat their feces. They also eat some plant matter, including seaweed.
arctic foxes, polar bears, wolverines, narwhal's, walrus's and and snowy owl
Wolverines don't eat giraffes. Wrong size and wrong continent.
Artic Lowlands have Lots of "Man eating Wolverines."
Because the wolverines would eat the hare!
Any animal in the Arctic is a good decomposer as long as they eat things that are dead. Animals as such include birds like ravens and gulls. Members of the dog family like Arctic foxes is another good decomposer. Wolverines will also eat a dead carcass that lies buried under snow.
Polar bears, grizzly bears, brown bears, wolves, Arctic foxes, red foxes, wolverines and mink are the major carnivores found in the Arctic. Some are actually omnivores and eat plant matter as well as animals.
some omnivores are... Coyote- They mostly eat other animals/meat but sometimes they eat plants a grizzly bear- a grizzly bear eats both plants & animals Raccoon- same with the grizzly bear they eat both plants & animals Arctic fox- Arctic fox mostly eat other animals/meat- carnivore but sometimes in the winter they are forced to eat plants/like a vegetarian