March 2021 - 24

Gray foxes are the only members of the dog family that easily climb trees with accessible lower branches. They have semi-retractable claws, similar to cats, which help them climb. They use this
skill to escape predators like coyotes. (Adobe Stock Photo)

Common gray fox

This fox ranges from Central America to Canada,
but in temperate North America the common gray
fox is limited to woodland and other habitats where
it can climb trees or other structures to escape larger
carnivores such as coyotes. Adults vary in size from
6 to 15 pounds.
It is known in Wyoming from only one specimen
held in the Smithsonian Institution, labeled from
Weston County in 1910. Like the swift fox and
coyote, the gray fox has a black tip on its tail. Like
the swift fox, the sides of its snout are dark. Unlike
swift foxes and coyotes, gray foxes have a gray frost to
the fur on their head, shoulders and back. Also, the
gray fox has long black hairs on the upper part of its
tail. Today, the nearest gray foxes to Weston County
are more than 40 miles east of Wyoming's border in
Nebraska and South Dakota. Gray foxes also occur
close to the Wyoming border in Colorado's Moffat
and Larimer counties and could enter the state from
the south, especially if shrubs gradually encroach on
formerly conifer habitats.
Remarkably, a gray fox was photographed in
Laramie in May 2020, providing the first physical
evidence of it in Wyoming in more than a century.
Terrence Dini, who photographed the fox through
his sunroom window, said it remained near his house
24 | March 2021	

for nearly two weeks. The apparently tame behavior
of this fox raises questions about how wild it was and
how it got to Laramie. Like ringtails, captive-born
gray foxes can be purchased online, and this one may
have become separated from its owner. Researchers
may never know how the first documented living
gray fox made its way to Wyoming, but researchers
eagerly await additional photo evidence of foxes in
the region.

Spotted skunk

Smaller in size and more secretive than the more
common striped skunk, spotted skunks have a pattern
of black and white whorls across their backs. Wyoming traditionally marked the boundary of North
America's two species of spotted skunk - eastern and
western. These animals were once regarded as only
subspecies, until researchers found western populations undergo a reproductive delay in which development of the embryo pauses for several months.
Eastern populations do not undergo delayed implantation, so the breeding seasons of the two animals
do not overlap. The eastern species has undergone a
major reduction in distribution and abundance and
has been proposed for listing under the Endangered
Species Act. Studies currently underway at the University of Wyoming describe the distribution and



March 2021

Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of March 2021

Cover
From the Director
In this issue
A couple pennies
Mailbag
Opening shot
News
Ask Game and Fish
Project profiles
Case files
In the field
Tracking the rarest carnivores
Seeking the slam
A family matter
Getting kids outside
Wild country dispatch
Backpage
March 2021 - Cover
March 2021 - From the Director
March 2021 - In this issue
March 2021 - A couple pennies
March 2021 - Mailbag
March 2021 - Opening shot
March 2021 - 7
March 2021 - News
March 2021 - 9
March 2021 - 10
March 2021 - 11
March 2021 - Ask Game and Fish
March 2021 - Project profiles
March 2021 - Case files
March 2021 - 15
March 2021 - In the field
March 2021 - 17
March 2021 - Tracking the rarest carnivores
March 2021 - 19
March 2021 - 20
March 2021 - 21
March 2021 - 22
March 2021 - 23
March 2021 - 24
March 2021 - 25
March 2021 - Seeking the slam
March 2021 - 27
March 2021 - 28
March 2021 - 29
March 2021 - 30
March 2021 - 31
March 2021 - A family matter
March 2021 - 33
March 2021 - 34
March 2021 - 35
March 2021 - 36
March 2021 - 37
March 2021 - Getting kids outside
March 2021 - 39
March 2021 - 40
March 2021 - 41
March 2021 - 42
March 2021 - 43
March 2021 - 44
March 2021 - 45
March 2021 - Wild country dispatch
March 2021 - 47
March 2021 - Backpage
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/april-2024-e-edition
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/march-2024
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/february-2024
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/january-2024
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/december-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/october-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/september-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/august-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/july-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/june-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/may-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/april-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/march-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/february-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/january-2023
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/december-2022
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/october-2022
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/september-2022
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/august-2022
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/july-2022
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/june-2022
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/may-iak-special-issue
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/april-2022
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/march-2022
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/february-2022
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/january-2022
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/dec-2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/october-2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/september-2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/august-2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/july-2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/june-2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/may-2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/april-2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/march-2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/february-2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/January2021
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/December2020
https://www.nxtbook.com/wyominggame/WyomingWildlife/September2020
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