General Information: San Joaquin kit foxes are the smallest foxes in North America. They eat kangaroo rats, rabbits, squirrels, ground-nesting birds, reptiles, and insects. They are often found in grasslands, open scrub, and deserts.
Category: Focal species
Surface Water Needs: None
Federal Listing Status: Endangered
State Listing Status: Threatened
Potential Conservation Actions:
- Develop grazing plans
- Recontour ground
- Avoid disking croplands
- Plant natives
Fun Fact
Kit foxes are an umbrella species – protecting their habitat will protect several other imperiled species, too.
Habitat
San Joaquin kit foxes enjoy various habitats, including grasslands, shrublands, vernal pool areas, alkali meadows and playas, and agricultural lands (e.g., row crops, orchards, irrigated pastures).
Grasslands
Vernal pool areas
Shrublands
Agricultural lands
Disturbance and Stressors
Kit foxes are impacted by traffic, urban development, agriculture, oil and gas development, and other causes of habitat fragmentation.
Intensive agriculture
Urban development
Oil and gas
development
Predation
Sources: Cypher et al. 2000; Cypher et al. 2012; Cypher and Brown 2006; Egoscue 1962; Grinnell et al. 1937; Laughlin 1970; Nelson et al. 2007; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services 1998, 2010, 2017, 2020
Photo credits: Peterson, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service