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Grey Fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus), portrait

Image of Grey Foxes

Description:

Description: English: The grey fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus) is the most common fox in California, with a silvery-grey coat with patches of yellow, brown, rust, or white on the neck and belly. They are mostly found in coastal or mountain forests at low elevations where they rest in hollow logs, under boulders and crevices. Their main source of food are small rodents, birds, insects, berries, acorns, eggs and fungi. The fox has short legs so it can climb trees to retrieve food and to seek refuge and measure from 21-29 inches in body length with a bushy tail around 15 inches long. Their mating season is mostly in January with three to five pups born in February or March and the pups will start to hunt within three months. This grey fox was on display at the California Living Museum in Bakersfield, Calif. Photo taken August 20, 1993. Date: 20 August 1993. Source: California Department of Water Resources. Author: California Department of Water Resources. Camera location 35° 25′ 55.2″ N, 118° 53′ 09.6″ W : View all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth: 35.432000; -118.886000.

Source Information

license
cc-publicdomain
creator
California Department of Water Resources
source
California Department of Water Resources
original
original media file
visit source
partner site
Wikimedia Commons
ID
219113f6a0a7bc2506b5e2b7f588ca23