Seasonal Foods
Wildlife biologist James Masek, writing for Alabama Outdoors, notes that the gray fox in the summer subsists on a more vegetarian diet than it does in winter. In summer, the gray fox devours such foods as blackberries, corn, grasshoppers, persimmons, crickets and acorns. As fall approaches, it will eat all sorts of nuts. In the winter, small mammals comprise the bulk of the diet. The gray fox eats squirrels, rats and rabbits, along with mice and voles, when the weather turns colder. Abundant supplies of food translate into the gray fox being heavier than normal, since it takes advantage of the opportunities that present themselves.
Habits
The gray fox is stealthy and people seldom see it. One reason is that it does the majority of its hunting and foraging for food at night. The gray fox restricts its activity mostly to brushy areas when it looks for a meal. The gray fox climbs trees so well, it actually hunts in them for creatures such as birds, eating any eggs they find in the nests they encounter. If a particular habitat has enough food to support their numbers, gray foxes do not wander far from their place of birth, often living within a mile of it.
Hunting Technique
The young gray fox is ready to hunt by the time it turns 4 months old, when weaned off its mother's milk. When hunting for food, the gray fox does not use its acute sense of smell to track animals down. Instead, the fox walks around and listens for any sounds and scents indicating a small creature is close by. Once they identify a potential target, the gray fox will then stalk the prey, pouncing upon it when its gets close enough.
Pros and Cons
The benefit of a gray fox in the environment is that the canine keeps the number of rodents in the area under control. For example, by killing and eating such pests as the cotton rat, a common southern rodent, the gray fox helps the quail population, since cotton rats prey upon the eggs of quail. However, the gray fox is also a predator of quail and their nests, as well as other game birds such as grouse, wild turkeys and pheasants. In rare instances, notes the National Trappers Association, a gray fox will poach a chicken from a barnyard.