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The Tibetan fox primarily preys on plateau pikas, followed by rodents, marmots, woolly hares, rabbits, small ground birds and lizards. [9] It also scavenges on the carcasses of Tibetan antelopes, musk deer, blue sheep and livestock. Tibetan foxes are mostly solitary, daytime hunters as their main prey, pikas, are diurnal. [4]
10 of the 13 extant canid genera left-to-right, top-to-bottom: Canis, Cuon, Lycaon, Cerdocyon, Chrysocyon, Speothos, Vulpes, Nyctereutes, Otocyon, and Urocyon Canidae is a family of mammals in the order Carnivora, which includes domestic dogs, wolves, coyotes, foxes, jackals, dingoes, and many other extant and extinct dog-like mammals.
The word "fox" occurs on the common names of species. Pages in category "Vulpes" The following 28 pages are in this category, out of 28 total. ... Tibetan fox; Trans ...
Tibetan_sand_fox_illustration,_transparent_background.png (350 × 350 pixels, file size: 103 KB, MIME type: image/png) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The red fox, Ruppell's fox, and Tibetan sand fox possess white-tipped tails. [23] The Arctic fox's tail-tip is of the same color as the rest of the tail (white or blue-gray). [24] Blanford's fox usually possesses a black-tipped tail, but a small number of specimens (2% in Israel, 24% in the United Arab Emirates) possess a light-tipped tail. [23]
Bengal fox, V. bengalensis LC [48] Tibetan fox, ... Wrinkle-lipped free-tailed bat, Chaerephon plicata LC; ... Tibetan antelope, Pantholops hodgsonii [93]
Tibetan antelope; Tibetan blue bear; Tibetan fox; Tibetan woolly flying squirrel; Y. Yak This page was last edited on 1 May 2018, at 21:10 (UTC). Text is available ...
Vulpes qiuzhudingi is an extinct species of fox that lived during the Neogene period in the Himalayas. [2] It was primarily carnivorous. [3] The fossils, dating from the Pliocene epoch between 5.08 and 3.60 million years ago, were discovered in the Zanda Basin and Kunlun Mountains of Tibet.