Showing posts with label Vulpes vulpes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vulpes vulpes. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Red Fox at Silver Queen West
We have a Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) living at my condo complex in the mountains and I finally got to see it having gotten up at 5:30 am to walk the dogs, dang them. This specimen looks much younger and much more scrawny than the Red Fox I photographed back in 2009 in Boulder, CO. That post continues to be one of the most popular posts on this blog.
The Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes). It is the most common as well as the largest species of fox and is usually a rusty red with black ear tips and legs. There are actually four species of fox in Colorado, however. Gray Foxes have reddish ears and feet and prefer the Mountains. The Swift and Kit Fox are much smaller and have a coloring similar to the Coyote. They are rare and live out on the eastern Plains.
Our condo manager has told me someone saw this fox pluck a Raven out of the air and corner a rather large (e.g. 40 pd) Raccoon in a small stand of Aspens. As scrawny as this one is, she must be giving all that food to her kits.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Red Fox
Learn about other Critters: Coyote, Golden-mantled ground squirrel, Mountain Goats,
Marmots, Moose
Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) crossing a road. Note the identifying black tips on the ears and the black legs. |
Take this fox's facial expression and put it on a human. How would you read it? |
Looking down a grassy slope. What tasty morsels lie in the grass? |
I have been observing the specimen in these pictures in the early morning in the grassy fields near where I work. It must have a den with kits nearby because I have seen it carry “take-out” rodent across the road. Foxes are the most active at dawn and dusk.
Scent marking |
Red Foxes are primarily monogamous, although the wide-ranging male is known to occasionally wander into other female’s territory “in search of food”.
Disappearing into the shrubbery |
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