For the new Habitat page, identify the geographic locations where your animal can be found, based on your research. You can use a second Wikipedia page about the place as a source for: at least one image, two paragraphs of text, the name of the place and a link to its related Wikipedia article. My example links to Iceland
Demonstration of the Use of the Figure and Figcaption Tags
Fig.1- Arctic Fox in Norway National Park
Demonstration of the Use of the Video Tag
Arctic Adaptations
Arctic Fox Coloring
Arctic foxes have beautiful white (sometimes blue-gray) coats that act as very effective winter camouflage. The natural hues allow the animal to blend into the tundra's ubiquitous snow and ice. When the seasons change, the fox's coat turns as well, adopting a brown or gray appearance that provides cover among the summer tundra's rocks and plants.
Arctic Fox Tail
Like a cat's, this fox's thick tail aids its balance. But for an arctic fox the tail (or “brush”) is especially useful as warm cover in cold weather.
Use of the Embed Tag Demonstrated Below
Arctic fox have become critically endangered in Norway and now a breeding program hopes to bring them back from the brink.
Cute little foxes
Use of the Audio Tags Demonstrated Below
What kind of sound does an arctic fox make?
The first thing you need to know about an arctic fox’s howl is that it doesn’t sound like the famous howl you’d hear from a wolf. The reason for this is because they aren’t canine and, as such, don’t make the same sound.
Instead, an arctic fox makes a series of different sounds that sound a lot more like screeching and screaming. They also make hissing sounds similar to that of an angry cat.