cyotes
Yes, the gray fox is an omnivore. It eats both plants and animals.
His job. What else?
The gray fox preys on the eastern cottontail in the eastern U.S., though it will readily catch voles, shrews, and birds. In California, the gray fox primarily eats rodents, followed by jackrabbit, brush rabbit, etc. In some parts of the Western United States (such as in the Zion National Park in Utah), the gray fox is primarily insectivorous and herbivorous. Fruit is an important component of the diet of the gray fox and they seek whatever fruits are readily available, generally eating more vegetable matter than does the red fox.
the challenges for a gray fox is that its prey hibernates in the winter time and the berries that they eat die out and so does everything else so it suffers without any food
the gray fox is primarily noctrnal
The gray fox is a vertebrate.
a red fox is related to a gray fox
The gray fox preys on the eastern cottontail in the eastern U.S., though it will readily catch voles, shrews, and birds. In California, the gray fox primarily eats rodents, followed by jackrabbit, brush rabbit, etc. In some parts of the Western United States (such as in the Zion National Park in Utah), the gray fox is primarily insectivorous and herbivorous. Fruit is an important component of the diet of the gray fox and they seek whatever fruits are readily available, generally eating more vegetable matter than does the red fox.
the red fox will eat about anything but lets go with rabbits the fox eats the rabbit the rabbit eats grass an the grass gets energy from th sun.
There is no such thing as an Italian gray fox.
No, the gray fox is a placental mammal and not a mursupial.
The gray fox is a secondary consumer,