How do arctic foxes get dark red?

Great cherry red highlights

Used bleach please to add highlights to just the top layer of my hair and then added Wrath all over. Awesome cherry red on top and warm red tone to my medium reddish brown hair underneath. Love it.

How do arctic foxes get dark red?

Always Gorgeous

I love this colour from start to finish, it fades out so beautifully I am never worried about going through that mucky stage like some other brands do.

Eh...

The color was what I wanted at first, but then just looked like a dark shade of pink. I guess I didn't hate it but it definitely was not what color I had expected. I am surprised by some people saying that this washed out quickly, bc has been almost 4 months and I still have remnants of it and at this point I have my roots showing and then I have had a color that I definitely did not want. I wanted to wait until it faded closer to my roots before coloring again, but it seems like it won't ever wash out. I am very undecided about trying artic fox again.

Love it!

Mixed 2 Oz of wrath with a DOT of black on my roots and sides!

How do arctic foxes get dark red?
How do arctic foxes get dark red?

Absolutely love it!

I absolutely love Arctic Fox Hair Color and plan on to continue using it for my hair color needs!

How do arctic foxes get dark red?

ARCTIC FOX (Alopex lagopus)

RANGE: Circumpolar Arctic regions of Europe, Asia, North America, Greenland and Iceland, and islands of the Arctic, North Atlantic and North Pacific oceans.

A TRUE ARCTIC DENIZEN. The Arctic fox inhabits two of the coldest places on the planet — the Arctic tundra and sea ice. Well adapted to its environment, the Arctic fox is shielded from sub-zero winter temperatures by its thick, white fur coat. To help it retain heat, the Arctic fox has a compact body shape with short legs and ears, and countercurrent heat exchange in the circulation of its paws to help maintain its body temperature while it walks on frozen ground. Foxes seek shelter in snow burrows during unusually cold weather, and can lower their metabolic rate during cold snaps and food shortages to retain heat. In summer, Arctic foxes become dark grey to brownish blue to blend into the tundra, and turn their attention to raising young. Fox pairs rear litters averaging six to seven pups in dens on the tundra, some of which have been used by foxes for several hundred years. Arctic foxes typically live three to six years in the wild but with luck can reach 10 years of age.

The Arctic fox specializes in eating tundra-dwelling rodents including lemmings and voles — so much so that fox population cycles often mirror those of their prey. When lemmings are plentiful, Arctic foxes tend to survive better and have large litters that lead to peaks in fox numbers. However, in years when lemmings are scarce, foxes are more vulnerable to starvation and resort to eating other foods from birds to fish to carrion. In lean years, the sea ice provides an important foraging ground offering food resources that can help foxes survive the winter. Foxes have been found to roam great distances over pack ice, often following polar bears to scavenge their seal kills. Some foxes are able to capture ringed seal pups in their snow dens on the sea ice as an extra food source.

POPULATIONS IN TROUBLE.  European Arctic fox populations in Sweden, Finland and Norway were decimated by hunting for their fur in the early 20th century and have failed to recover despite total protection since 1940. Numbering around only 150 foxes, European populations are threatened with extirpation. Although the Arctic fox in the rest of its range is still considered fairly abundant, Arctic foxes have been disappearing from the southern edge of the tundra around the globe. This northward retreat raises cause for concern over the fox’s future.  

HOW DOES CLIMATE CHANGE AFFECT THE ARCTIC FOX?

The Arctic fox faces a multitude of threats from climate change: its sea ice and tundra habitat are shrinking, its lemming prey are becoming less abundant in some areas, and it faces increased competition and displacement by the red fox which is moving northward as temperatures warm.

LOSS OF SEA ICE AND TUNDRA HABITAT.  Because sea-ice habitat provides important winter food resources for Arctic foxes, especially in low lemming years, the loss of sea-ice foraging grounds is likely to result in lower winter survival and reproductive success for Arctic foxes. [1, 2] Desperate foxes deprived of the sea ice may resort to searching for food in human settlements and industrial sites, which increases the potential for conflicts with humans and often ends in foxes being killed. As temperatures warm, shrubs and trees are also moving into the tundra, converting the Arctic fox’s lichen and moss-dominated habitat into shrublands and woodlands. [3] In the Alaskan tundra, dwarf birch, willow, and white spruce have increased markedly over the past 50 years.

LESS LEMMING PREY. Because Arctic foxes rely heavily on lemmings for food, climate change impacts on lemmings can have profound effects on foxes. During the winter, lemmings live in spaces under the snow that provide insulation from the cold, protection from predators, and access to plant foods. If snow conditions are good, lemmings prosper and can even get a head start in raising young. However, in Norway, scientists have found that rising temperatures and changing humidity in recent decades have created cycles of thawing and icing in winter that result in poor snow conditions for lemmings. [4] These poor snow conditions have dampened lemming population cycles, creating a new pattern where lemmings never reach peak numbers. Scientists believe that the absence of regularly occurring lemming peaks is likely responsible for the breeding failures and dramatic declines in Arctic foxes in Norway. [5] Future climate change is likely to dampen lemming population cycles across wider areas of the Arctic.

RED FOX COMPETITION. The Arctic fox has a fierce competitor [5] — the red fox — a dominant, larger-bodied fox that can kill or expel the Arctic fox in areas of overlap. Red foxes historically lived south of the Arctic fox’s tundra habitat. However, red foxes have been moving northward at the same time that Arctic foxes have been retreating from the southern edge of the tundra. [6] Climate change appears to be a leading factor driving the northward movement of the red fox. Warming is converting the tundra to shrublands, which are favored by the red fox. Warming-related reductions in lemming populations are also lowering lemming grazing pressure on the tundra, favoring the shrublands that encourage the northward invasion of red foxes. [7]

1. Roth, J. D. 2002. Temporal variability in arctic fox diet as reflected in stable-carbon isotopes: the importance of sea ice. Oecologia 133:70-77.

2. Pamperin, N. J., and E. H. Follmann. 2008. Sea ice use by arctic foxes in northern Alaska. Polar Biology 31:1421-1426.

3. Post, E., M. C. Forchhammer, M. S. Bret-Harte, T. V. Callaghan, T. R. Christense, B. Elberling, A. D. Fox, O. Gilg, D. S. Hik, T. T. Hoye, R. A. Ims, E. Jeppesen, D. R. Klein, J. Madsen, A. D. McGuire, S. Rysgaard, D. E. Schindler, I. Stirling, M. P. Tamstorf, N. J. C. Tyler, R. van der Wal, J. Welker, P. A. Wookey, N. M. Schmidt, and P. Aastrup. 2009. Ecological dynamics across the Arctic associated with recent climate change. Science 325:1355-1358.

4. Kausrud, K. L., A. Mysterud, H. Steen, J. O. Vik, E. Ostbye, B. Cazelles, E. Framstad, A. M. Eikeset, I. Mysterud, T. Solhoy, and N. C. Stenseth. 2008. Linking climate change to lemmings cycles. Nature 456:93-98.

5. Hendon, J.-A., B.-J. Bardsen, N. G. Yoccoz, and R. A. Ims. 2008. Impacts of differential prey dynamics on the potential recovery of endangered arctic fox populations. Journal of Applied Ecology 45:1086-1093.

6. Hersteinsson, P., and D. W. MacDonald. 1992. Interspecific competition and the geographical distribution of red and Arctic foxes Vulpes vulpes and Alopex lagopus. Oikos 64:505-515.

7. Killengreen, S. T., R. A. Ims, N. G. Yoccoz, K. A. Brathen, J.-A. Henden, and T. Schott. 2007. Structural characteristics of a low Arctic tundra ecosystem and the retreat of the Arctic fox. Biological Conservation 135:459-472.

How do arctic foxes get dark red?

How do arctic foxes get red darker?

You can make a deep crimson or blood red by adding a bit of Ritual to Poison or Wrath. For a more purple-based burgundy, try mixing equal amounts of Purple Rain and Ritual! For lighter colors, add a few drops of Ritual to Sterling for a smoky mauve or to Arctic Mist diluter for a dusty rose.

How do arctic foxes change color?

Over the winter the arctic fox has a heavy white coat, but when early summer temperatures begin to melt the snow cover, the coat is shed for a thinner, two-tone brown pelage. White fur not only provides camouflage in winter but adds warmth.

What causes a fox's color to change?

When the snow starts to melt, the fox sheds its winter coat for a thinner greyish-brown coat. Near the end of summer the Arctic fox begins to grow a thicker coat again. The color of the fur turns grey and then white. The oily fur sheds water and helps to keep the fox dry.

How do I darken my arctic fox hair dye?

Add just a few drops of it to a base of Arctic Mist Diluter to create a smoky light denim. If you're still wanting a dark shade, add more Transylvania to your mix as needed to get into more of a navy range!