A red fox takes the powder plunge while hunting for voles in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Foxes hunt rodents who scurry throughout tunnels under the snow using their keen sense of hearing, extreme patience and intense concentration. Recent studies have indicated that foxes may use the earth's magnetic field to help pinpoint their prey. In the study, foxes jumping to the northeast (roughly 20 degrees off "magnetic north") were successful 73% of the time, if they jump in the opposite direction to the southwest they were on target 60% of the time, but if they leapt in any other direction they only found a meal 18% of the time. True to form, this fox jumped towards the west and came up hungry.
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