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  2. Fox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fox

    The fox appears in many cultures, usually in folklore. There are slight variations in their depictions. In European, Persian, East Asian, and Native American folklore, foxes are symbols of cunning and trickery—a reputation derived especially from their reputed ability to evade hunters. This is usually represented as a character possessing ...

  3. Foxes in popular culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foxes_in_popular_culture

    Monument of Bystrouška from Janáček's 1924 opera The Cunning Little Vixen in Hukvaldy, Janáček's hometown. The fox appears in the folklore of many cultures, but especially European and East Asian, as a figure of cunning, trickery, or as a familiar animal possessed of magic powers, and sometimes associated with transformation.

  4. Deception in animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deception_in_animals

    Deception in animals is the voluntary or involuntary transmission of misinformation by one animal to another, of the same or different species, in a way that misleads the other animal. The psychology scholar Robert Mitchell identifies four levels of deception in animals.

  5. Red fox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_fox

    Juvenile red foxes are known as kits. Males are called tods or dogs, females are called vixens, and young are known as cubs or kits. [14] Although the Arctic fox has a small native population in northern Scandinavia, and while the corsac fox's range extends into European Russia, the red fox is the only fox native to Western Europe, and so is simply called "the fox" in colloquial British English.

  6. Vulpes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulpes

    Vulpes is a genus of the sub-family Caninae.The members of this genus are colloquially referred to as true foxes, meaning they form a proper clade.The word "fox" occurs in the common names of all species of the genus, but also appears in the common names of other canid species.

  7. South American fox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_American_fox

    The South American foxes (Lycalopex), commonly called raposa in Portuguese, or zorro in Spanish, are a genus from South America of the subfamily Caninae. Despite their name, they are not true foxes , but are a unique canid genus more closely related to wolves and jackals than to true foxes; some of them resemble foxes due to convergent evolution .

  8. Predation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predation

    [8] [6] Egg predation includes both specialist egg predators such as some colubrid snakes and generalists such as foxes and badgers that opportunistically take eggs when they find them. [17] [18] [19] Some plants, like the pitcher plant, the Venus fly trap and the sundew, are carnivorous and consume insects. [12]

  9. The Fox and the Golden Egg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fox_and_the_Golden_Egg

    The second egg is taken by an eagle who drops it on her way to her nest. The last egg is taken by the fox who the crow does not trust as foxes love to eat eggs. But the fox is the only one who carefully curls her tail around the egg and carries it safely to her den where she cares for it until it hatches.