Arctic Foxes use their colours for camoflage in their environment. In Winter they are pure white and they blend in with the snow and ice, and in spring they turn brown so they can blend in with the rocks and grass after the snow melts.
No, only the Arctic fox undergoes an annual color change.
its turns grey
An Arctic fox can change color with the seasons. In winter, it typically has a thick, white coat that provides camouflage in the snowy landscape. During summer, its fur shifts to a browner or grayish color to blend in with the tundra's vegetation. This seasonal color change helps the fox adapt and survive in its harsh Arctic environment.
The answer is the Arctic fox. In summer, the Arctic fox's coat is brown or gray, but it turns white in winter to blend in with the snow for camouflage while hunting. This seasonal color change is known as "moulting."
Chameleon, Octopus, Seahorse, Goldenrod Crab Spider, Arctic [hare, fox, wolf, owl, weasel etc.]
A Tundra Fox does not exist by that name. Have you tried Arctic Fox?
Snow leopards shed but the overall coat color does not change in the same way as does a weasel, an arctic fox or arctic hare. It is always pale.
In the winter, the artic foxes fur changes white because of its genes that allow the fox to change its coat color.
Simply, for camouflage
brown brown
their beauty
In the summer it is a grayish brown and in winter it is white.