Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Ezo red fox (Vulpes vulpes schrencki) is a subspecies of red fox widely distributed in Hokkaido, Sakhalin, the Kuril Islands and the surrounding islands of Japan. The Ezo red fox's formal name, kitakitsune (北狐), was given to the subspecies by Kyukichi Kishida when he studied them in Sakhalin in 1924.
Also called the Ezo squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris orientis) Ezo red fox: Fauna Native to northern Japanese archipelago (Vulpes vulpes schrencki) Ezo tanuki: Fauna Subspecies of raccoon dog native to Hokkaido (Nyctereutes viverrinus albus) Hokkaido dog: Fauna A Spitz-type domesticated hunting dog perhaps descend from introduced Akitas: Dosanko: Fauna
Bonin flying fox; Echigo mole; Endo's pipistrelle; Ezo red fox; Daubenton's bat; Dsinezumi shrew; Fraternal myotis; Frosted myotis; Greater horseshoe bat; Hokkaido red-backed vole; Hokkaidō wolf; Honshū wolf; Horsfield's shrew; Ikonnikov's bat; Imaizumi's horseshoe bat; Iriomote cat; Japanese badger; Japanese boar; Japanese Bobtail; Japanese ...
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]
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.
Michael J. Fox didn't have to travel back in time to buy this farm in South Woodstock, Vt., built in 1817. But he did own it briefly starting in the late 1980s. Now, it can be yours for $2.75 million.
Ezo, a genus of red algae in the subfamily Lithophylloideae; Ezo red fox, Vulpes vulpes schrencki, a subspecies of red fox; Hokkaido wolf, Canis lupus hattai, also known as the Ezo wolf; Patinopecten yessoensis, the Yesso scallop or Ezo giant scallop, a species of scallop; Ezo salamander, Hynobius retardatus, a species of salamander
Furs of wild animals were a popular part of fashionable clothes at the time, and they brought a good price. More valuable than red fox was the silver fox, a sport of the red fox. In 1901, the brothers read in Hunter Trapper magazine about a silver fox pelt that sold in London [2] for $1200, [3] the price of many Wisconsin farms at the time ...