Raccoons, Weasels, Otters, Skunks
Boston Public Library
REFERENCE Boston,
MA
02116
i
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2015
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WORLD
OF
ANIMALS
Raccoons, Weasels, Otters, Skunks...
PAT MORRIS, AMY-JANE BEER
GROLIER
Published 2003 by Grolier, Danbury, CT 06816
A
1
division of Scholastic Library Publishing
This edition published exclusively for the school
and
library
market
Planned and produced by
Andromeda Oxford members of
Various
Limited
11-13 The Vineyard, Abingdon, Oxon 0X14 3PX
the
weasel family: European
badger
(1);
pine marten
(2);
www.andromeda.co.uk
European polecat (3);
wolverine
(4).
©
Copyright
Andromeda Oxford
No part may be reproduced, stored
All rights reserved.
Limited
2003
of this publication in
a retrieval system, t
or transmitted in any form or by any electronic, mechanical,
means
photocopying, recording,
or otherwise, without the permission of the
Congress Catalogmg-in-Publication Data
Library of
copyright holder.
Morris, Pat. / [Pat
Morris,
Amy-Jane
Beer, Erica Bower],
Contents
v
1
.
Art Editor and Designer:
Small carnivores
-
v.
2.
-- v. 3.
Large carnivores
mammals
Sea
-- v.
4.
-- v. 6. Ruminant (horned) herbivores -- v. 7. Rodents -- v. 9. Insectivores and bats -- v. 10. Marsupials. and lagomorphs v 8 Rodents 2 ISBN 0-7172-5742-8 (set alk. paper) - ISBN 0-7172-5743-6 (v.1 alk. paper) - ISBN 0-7172-5744-4 (v.2 alk. paper) - ISBN 0-7172-5745-2 (v.3 alk. paper) - ISBN 0-7172-5746-0 (v.4 alk. paper) - ISBN 0-7172-5747-9 (v.5 alk. paper) -- ISBN 0-7172-5748-7 (v.6 alk. paper) -- ISBN 0-7172-5749-5 (v.7 alk. paper) -- ISBN 0-7172-5750-9 (v.8 alk. paper) - ISBN 0-7172-5751-7 (v.9 alk. paper) - ISBN
Primates
-- v,
Large herbivores
5
Angela Davies, Penny Mathias
Editors:
cm. - (World of animals)
p.
Graham Bateman
Project Director:
Mammals
Steve
Marian
Editorial Assistants:
Dreier, Rita
-
1
Demetriou
:
.
McCurdy
Tim Williams
Cartographic Editor:
Picture
Manager:
Claire Turner
:
Picture Researcher:
Vickie Walters
:
0-7172-5752-5 1
:
alk
Mammals-Juvemle
Clive Sparling
Researchers:
Dr. Erica
Bower, Rachael Brooks,
Rachael Murton, Eleanor
paper)
literature
[1.
Mammals
]
I.
Beer,
Amy-Jane.
II.
Bower,
Thomas
Erica.
Origination: Unifoto International, South Africa
World of animals (Danbury, Conn.)
IV
Title
Ill
(v .10
Production:
<
OL706 2 M675 2003 599-dc2
Printed in China
RfF
Q
About This Volume
.
1'
2002073860
Set ISBN 0-7172-5742-8
lU'v
MlclS
200 3 volume
n this
we
introduce you to the basic features of
all
mammals.
We
then go on to cover several carnivore
I groups, from weasels to otters to skunks and mongooses, which are mostly distinguished by their small carnivores tend to be
average domestic
cat, yet
Despite their small
and rather
alert, active,
no
less
dangerous to
size, several
o’
.
in
' i
•on'
]
and
,
al
tigers (see
Volume
vorc', inhabit life
m
2),
They are natural-born
like insects,
kill
numbers
live
of
them
smaller than the
which are too small
to bother with.
for the larger
and more dramatic carnivores, such
However, several species have a varied
diet,
ranging from
every continent (except Antarctica) and most major habitats, although only one
the sea
whi e others
many
animals larger than themselves. But being small also offers
Many
are adapted to tree climbing,
derground, emerging to hunt rodents and rabbits at night. group',,
killers,
their prey.
species regularly
opportunities to exploit prey animals r,
fierce.
alone
Some
size. All
where they pursue prey
Some
small carnivores
or lurk
live in
in
fish to fruit.
— the sea otter
ambush. Others
highly organized social
species are quite numerous, but others have been reduced to perilously low
as a result of hunting for their lustrous
and valuable
furs.
live
Contents How to
Use This Set
4
American Badger
Find the Animal
6
WHAT IS A MAMMAL?
8
SMALL CARNIVORES
European Badger panda
18
lives in
temperate
Striped
THE RACCOON FAMILY
20
Common
22
Raccoon
The red or lesser
Honey Badger
Ringtailed Coati
28
Red Randa
30
THE WEASEL FAMILY
32
Least Weasel
36
Skunk
THE CIVET AND GENET FAMILY
88
Common Genet
92
Common
94
Palm Civet
Fossa
Stoat Polecat
Black-Footed Ferret
THE MONGOOSE FAMILY
98
40
44
Meerkat
100
Dwarf Mongoose
106
46
Indian Gray
American Marten
48
Fisher
50
American Mink
52
Wolverine
56
European Otter
58
Mongoose
108
Banded Mongoose List
110
of Species
112
Glossaiy
114
Further Reading and Websites Set Index
North American River Otter
64
Giant River Otter
68
Short-Clawed Otter
70
Sea Otter
72
117
118
Various
members of
the raccoon
family: a ringtail eating a lizard
(1);
kinkajou
(3).
coati
(2);
forests.
How |
M
Use This Set
to
World of Animals: Mammals
If If describes
is
a
10-volume
mammals from
in detail
all
set that
Article Styles Articles are of three kinds.
corners of
the earth. Each volume brings together those animals that
introductory or review
are most closely related and have similar lifestyles. So
all
groups
and
introduces smaller groups
the meat-eating groups (carnivores) are 2,
and
are
all
in
Volumes
3,
and so on. To help you
find
The
volumes that
animals to be found
in
pages 6 to 7 (Find the Animal).
brief introduction to
each volume
also given
A
article
on page
2
(About This Volume).
filled
statistics
of each animal
introduces large animal
makes up most
like families
articles
(The Raccoon
review the
different groups.
of each volume.
It
The
full
variety of
third type of
concentrates on
describing individual animals typical of the group detail,
Data panel presents basic
One
orders (such as whales and dolphins). Another
Family, for example).
interest you, look at
is
article:
mammals)
the seals, whales, and dolphins (sea
m Volume
1
like
There are two types of
such as the
tiger.
Each
article starts
in
great
with a fact-
data panel to help you gather information
at-a-
glance. Used together, the three article styles enable you to
Image of animal typical
in
become
familiar with specific animals
their evolutionary history
and
in
the context of
biological relationships.
pose Article describes a particular animal
Name and scientific classification of
animal Scienti f: c
name of animal
additional information about each
Sizes given in imperial units followed
Captions to photographs provide
animal's lifestyle
by
Common name metric equivalent
of animal Visual comparison of
average-sized adult
mammal and
6-foot
human
being.
(1.83-m)
Scale in feet (meters)
Habits
$oo 4
vrto*»-iy
sem m
groups of up to 20
eccor&ng to age 4nd vx. often moves
Breeding
M-
produce
'T'rflu'*
.!
years after gestation
Vo*a
< »
•Kjuean.
•.
penod
end
of
1
calf
every 3
14-15 months
used
for
Basic description Diet
Habitat
of animal, cjk)
i’
rt
sees
ge^^'iy
na.»r
sea
xr
its life,
and
in
distribution
m
breeding and lifespan Distribution
i
i
,t«-
be based on figui related species)
Conservation status (see Glossary
Volume
1,
and
pages 9
and
10)
Cross-references
Locator
4
maps showing
to relevant
pages
and other
each animal's
in this
normal range
volumes
Easy-to-read and
comprehensive text
A number
of other features help
you navigate
through the volumes and present you with helpful extra information. At the
references to other
bottom of many pages are crossarticles of interest.
related animais, animals that live
in
They may be to
similar places,
\
animals with similar behavior, predators (or prey), and
much more. Each volume
also contains a
the complete World of Animals:
mentioned scientific
with a
Mammals.
the text are indexed by
animals
common and
A
there are words used
in
will also
help you
you do not
list
fully
if
of useful Further
"List of
the
understand. Each volume ends
Reading and Websites
help you take your research further.
heading
All
names, and many topics are also covered.
Glossary text that
in
Set Index to
Species" you
Finally,
will find
of the animals that are covered
in
that
under the
expanded
listings
each volume.
Detailed
maps
clarify animal's
distribution
Meticulous drawings illustrate a typical selection of
group members
At-a-glance Tables
summarize
boxes cover classification
of groups
Who's
Who
tables
summarize
topics of special
and give
scientific
names
classification of
each major group and
interest
of animals mentioned
in
the text
Introductory article describes major
groups of animals
Graphic full-color
photographs bring Detailed diagrams illustrate text
give scientific
names of animals
mentioned
in
the text
Find the Animal x
yi World of Animals: Mammals
If If
library that describes
Each cluster of volumes familiar
in
group of animals
amphibians,
fish,
and
all
is
the
groups of
— mammals,
but
cover a
will
birds, reptiles
and other
insects
the kingdom Protista that were once regarded as animals,
animals.
living
World of Animals
World of Animals. Also included are those members of
part of a
first
now form
group that includes
part of a
organisms. Kingdom Animalia
and
is
single-cell
all
numerous
divided into
major groups called Phyla, but only one of them
invertebrates.
These groups also represent categories of animals
(Chordata) contains those animals that have a backbone.
recognized by scientists (see The Animal Kingdom below).
Chordates, or vertebrates as they are popularly known, include
The Animal Kingdom The
world
living
is
the animals familiar to us and those most
all
studied by scientists
divided into five kingdoms,
which (kingdom Ammalia)
one
amphibians, and
of
the main subject of the
is
— mammals,
fish. In all,
birds, reptiles,
there are about 38,000
species of vertebrates, while the Phyla that contain
animals without backbones (so-called invertebrates, such mice Volume
squirrels, rats,
chinchillas
7;
cavies, porcupines,
as insects, spiders,
Volume 8
many more.
species, probably Q''je'
.
lagomorpha
rabbits, hares, pikas
Volume
1
-e.
.:
at least
To find which set of
in
the World of Animals
is
relevant to you, see
'Oder Scandentai Volume 9
the chart Main Groups of Animals (page •
million
1
8
volumes /
and so on) include
r
• .
es (Oraer
'sect
.
ora
1
7).
shrews, moles, hedgehogs Volume 9
Colugos, ‘lying lemurs (Order Dermoptera)
Primates Order Primates
Volume
8
Mammals
lemurs, monkeys, apes
Volume
Pangolins (Order Pholidota)
Volume 4
in Particular
World of Animals: Mammals focuses on the
9
most
most
familiar of animals, those
easily
Carnivores (Order Carnivora): raccoons, weasels, otters,
skunks Volume Seals
1;
cats,
and sea
recognized as having fur (although
dogs, bears, hyenas Volume 2
Volume
lions (Order Pinnipedia)
Odd-toed ungulates (Order rhinoceroses, tapirs
may be absent
3
mammals
Perissodactyla): horses,
Volume
in
like
many
this
sea
whales and
5
dolphins),
and that provide
Even-toed ungulates (Order Artiodactyla) pigs, camels
Volume
5;
deer, cattle, sheep, goats
Volume
milk for their young.
6
Mammals
Whales and dolphins (Order Cetacea): Volume 3
are divided into
major groups (carnivores, Bats (Order Chiroptera):
Volume
9
sloths, armadillos
Volume
and
primates, rodents,
Xenarthrans (Order Xenarthra) anteaters, 9
marsupials to
name
just
Elephant shrews (Order Macroscelidea):
Volume
9
The chart shows the major
Volume
Aardvark (Order Tubulidentata
9
groups of mammals
in this set
Hyraxes (Order Hyracoidea) Volume 8
arranged
in
evolutionary
Dugongs, manatees (Order Sirema)
Volume
relationship (see
3
Elephants (Order Proboscidea)
Marsupials
Volume
5
opposums,
volume
in
appears
is
page
10).
The
which each group indicated.
You can
find individual entries
by
kangaroos, koala
Volume 10 Monotremes (Order
looking at the contents page for each
volume or by
Monotremata) platypus, echidnas Volume 10
6
consulting the set index.
SINGLE-
ANIMALS
CELLED
Kingdom Animalia
Kingdom
LIFE
Protista
The Main Groups of Animals alive today.
Vertebrates/
Volumes that cover each major
Invertebrates Numerous Phyla
Chordates Phylum Chordata
group are indicated below.
Insects, spiders.
Mammals Class
Mammalia
Amphibians
Reptiles
Birds Class Aves
Class
Class Reptilia
Amphibia
Single-Celled
mollusks, spinyskinned animals,
Fish Several classes
Life
worms
major groups are shown on the chart on
a few). All the
page
6.
few
To help you find particular animals, a
familiar
in
Naming Mammals
this possible.
names
To be able to discuss animals,
Most people regard
animal and lions as another.
are
needed
tigers as
All tigers
one kind of
more
look
for the
They breed together and produce young
or less
it
at different
was one
species.
formal system of classification makes
Domestic cats are
similar to lions
and
tigers,
example, they do not
genus
(Felis),
but
roar).
Felis,
They are put
a different
Panthera, and other catlike animals
grouped together as the family
mammals
in
Felidae.
The
flesh-
eating
animals corresponds closely to the zoologists' distinction
together with a few plant-eaters that are obviously
species. All tigers
lions to another.
The
lion
belong to one species and
species has different
different languages (for example, in
Swahili),
common mountain
and often a
Lowe
single species
names
all
in
German, Simba
in
may have
several
names. For example, the North American lion
is
also
known
as the cougar,
related to
them
(cats,
order Carnivora. These and suckle their Finally,
the
it
all
mammals
in
amphibians,
all
other animals
reptiles,
and some other animals that seem to be in
the
the class Mammalia.
are included, with (fish,
in
the other animals that
young are grouped
panther, and catamount.
Zoologists find
dogs, hyenas, weasels, and so on),
(such as pandas), are grouped
that have backbones
puma,
larger
the catlike animals or
all
themselves. This popular distinction between kinds of
between
(part)
but not as similar as those species are to each other (for
are
like
A
the mammals.
named
make statements about
often necessary to
groups of animals: for example, all
alike.
is
It
the chart.
different kinds.
described and
times without the zoologists realizing
ones, such as sheep, goats, cats, and dogs, have been
included
may have been
species
Volume 21
Volumes 21-30
Volumes 31-40
Volumes 41-43
Volumes 44-50
Volumes 11-20
Volumes 1-10
and
birds)
related to them,
the Phylum Chordata.
convenient to have internationally
recognized names for species and use a standardized
system of two-word Latinized names. The
lion
is
Panthera leo and the tiger Panthera
The
first
Panthera,
is
the
similar species),
name
of the
genus
which includes the
second word, leo or
tigris ,
within the genus. Scientific
the world. The scientific
tigris.
(a
group of
lion
called
word,
closely
and the
tiger.
The
indicates the particular species
names
name
is
are recognized
all
over
used whatever the
language, even where the alphabet
is
different, as in
Rank
Scientific
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Mammalia
Order
Carnivora
Family
Felidae
Genus
Panthera
Species
leo
name
Common name Animals with a backbone All
mammals
Flesh-eaters/carnivores .
Big cats
Chinese or Russian. The convention allows for precision
and helps avoid most confusion. However,
common one
for
scientific
it
is
Lion
also
one species to apparently have more than name. That can be because
All cats
a particular
The kingdom Animalia families, genera,
is
subdivided into phylum,
and species. Above
is
classes, orders,
the classification of the
lion.
7
WHAT IS A MAMMAL? 1
M eating
ammals from
otters
that success
tigers, flying bats
all
become
example,
first
nourish the
them apart from the
much more
new group
of animals;
ancient origin. Reptiles,
appeared millions of years
earlier,
and
date back more than 400 million years.
fish
They include the production of active
enabling
and the secretion of milk to
newborn young.
mammals
Hair
reptiles, since
they depend on sunshine to
keep warm. The
and
first
mammals were
insignificant creatures.
today's solenodons
The Origin of Mammals
began later
million years
mammals
animal world.
evidence of limbs
ago
a
group of small
to develop the special features that
enable
Fossil
some
to
reptiles
would
dominate the
remains provide clear
of the changes. The
became more
upright, supporting
the body from below rather than
sprawling out to the side as
and
crocodiles.
The
skull
powerful jaws, and
needed
in lizards
developed more
spareâ&#x20AC;? bones that were no longer
as part of the lower
jaw instead became bones
the ear, greatly enhancing hearing teeth of reptiles gradually
mammals
to exploit a
fur also developed,
to colonize cold places
Looking
ability.
became more
much wider range
in
The simple
diverse, enabling
of foods than
small
like
and gymnures, they
fed on insects caught at night.
About 200
and
nocturnal. Such feats are difficult for
are a comparatively
others have a
progressively.
offspring instead of eggs
the animal kingdom.
Mammals
fossils
are other important changes that must have taken place
the combination of special that sets
can cope with. Brain capacity enlarged too,
complex and sociable behavior. Less apparent from
animal groups. The secret of
mammals
reptiles
probably associated with increased intelligence and more
and
they have diversified to
In fact,
lies in
characteristics in
tor
ago. They
include humans, seals, shrews, mice, grass-
the most successful of
many
furry creatures that evolved
reptiles millions of years
cows and carnivorous
swimming
rest of
warm,
are
and become
WHAT
MAMMAL?
A
IS
Body Temperature Mammals Reptiles
are often described as
and even some
fish
"warm-blooded."
are also
warm
inside,
but
they cannot maintain a high blood temperature without
basking
in
the sun or constantly moving around to
generate heat from their muscles. Mammals, on the other hand, are "homeotherrmic," meaning that their inner
temperature
is
usually held at
not only high but kept constant.
sun.
so
mammals
Homeothermy
high altitudes and
Adaptability, opportunism,
and
life.
The warmth
generated
is
are independent of heat from the
also provides protection
temperatures, making
©
is
about 95 to 100°F (35 to 38°C)
throughout the animal's internally,
It
in
it
possible for
polar regions.
from low
mammals
to
Mammals can
live at
also
be
intelligence, plus the
capacity for intricate social relationships, are traits that typify
mammalian
success. All are
found
in
the red fox.
©
Fossils
from the early Eocene (49 million years ago) were found
at Lake Messel, Germany. The reconstruction
community
at the
the
dawn of
first
known
the age of
bat
(1);
on the
left
shows a
mammals: Archaeonycteris,
Messelobunodon, an ancestral artiodactyl
(2);
Propalaeotherium, an ancestral horse
(3);
Lepticidium, an insectivore
(4);
Paroodectes, a miacid (5);
Eurotamandua, an anteater
(6);
Pholidocercus,
a
hedgehog
(7).
9
SMALL CARNIVORES
ana that probably enabled them to escape
a:: .e a* nigh
competition with the dominant reptiles of the day.
Body heat *
is
easily lost, especially
from small animals
nat have a relatively large surface area
their mass.
in
So there are benefits to being
evolutionary lines produced very large
culminating
in
comparison, to big; several
mammals,
the blue whale, the largest animal that has
ever lived Elephants and various extinct giants also benefit from size, not least because
few predators can
.ouch them once they are full-grown. Large
mammals
are
also efficient in energy terms, needing less food per
pound
body weight than small ones. But they require
of
a
greater total quantity of food and will soon eat everything
within reach unless they
move
on.
A
body can be
big
a
handicap because moving around becomes progressively
more J
r
jj
difficult
c
their
with larger
size. Big
animals also put greater
bones and bodies, especially when moving
Rodents (Order Rodentia)
Lagomorphs (Order Lagomorpha) Tree shrews (Order Scandentia)
Shrews, moles, and hedgehogs (Order Insedivora)
Colugos (Order Dermoptera) Primates (Order Primates)
Pangolins (Order Pholidota)
Carnivores (Order Carnivora) Seals
and sea
lions (Order Pinnipedia)
Odd-toed ungulates (Order Perissodactyla) Even-toed ungulates (Order Artiodactyla)
Whales and dolphins (Order Cetacea Bats (Order Chiroptera)
Xenarthrans (Order Xenarthra)
Elephant shrews (Order Macroscelidea)
Aardvark (Order Tubulidentata)
Mammals must expend energy -
Hyraxes (Order Hyracoidea)
Dugongs and manatees
warm
or cool themselves. Elephants lose
body heat by flapping
(Order S.rema)
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
Elephants (Order Proboscidea)
fl
their ears so that
cool air flows over the blood vessels,
and by splashing
METATHERIA INf RACLASS
to
in water.
Marsupials (Supercohort) â&#x20AC;˘
The chart shows the evolution of
SUBCLASS PROTOTHER'A Monotremes
mammals between
the Jurassic era (205
(Order Monotremata)
million years ago)
144
10
million years
ago
65
55
34
24
5
1.8
and the
Pleistocene
era (nearly 6 million years ago).
The
T
Diversity of
Mammals mammals
here are at least 4,500 species of
about 8,000 species of
More than
half of a
sma
s.zec or
and over 20,000
birds
known mammal
and so
sma' est
mamma
on), while (Kitti's
one
in
five
is
They also
arger and both are
The
m
a r gest
ion
single
t
mamma
°~es as
much. The naked
may
travel
a r -us! Migrations
exceot
when
the/
me
Hundred
flesh, fruit, blood, fish,
bamboo,
e rat stays
insects, nectar,
a
in
16,000 km on
Some mammals ^eet
ts
grass,
over 10,000 miles
ive solitary
to mate; others
zed socia systems
knows
ndividua
open oceans. They eat
but whales and
Is
numbering thousands. Yet others tightly orga:~
a
p ace.
have highly complex behavior.
wh
only
MAMMALIA
—2
subclasses,
Order
Order: Carnivora carnivores: 240 species in 92 genera and 8 families Order: Pinnipedia seals and sea lions: 33 species in 21 genera and 3 families Order Cetacea whales and dolphins: 85 species in 41 genera and 14 families Order Sirenia- dugongs and manatees: 4 species in 2 genera and 2 families Order Pnmates strepsirhines, tarsiers, monkeys, and apes: 260 species in 64 genera and 1
Order
— shrews: T8 species genera and family Order Dermoptera—colugos: 2 species
Order
Scandentia
tree
in
6
1
—elephants; 3 species
Order Proboscidea genera and
1
Hyracoidea T
hyraxes:
sts the
1
~a
—
a
species
aardvark:
Artiodactyla
s.
3 genera
species
1
species
ungulates:
— Order Chiroptera— genera and 8 Order Xenarthra— 13 genera and 4 Order — Insectivora
1
family
1
423 species
insectivores:
in
67
bats: over
1
900
species
in
174
families
xenarthrans: 29 or 30 species
in
Pholidota
and
T
families
pangolins: 7 species
in
1
genus
family
INFRACLASS: Metatheria (Marsupials) Order Didelphimorphia Amencan opossums: 63
— Order — genera and Order —monito genus and Order Dasyuromorphia—
5 genera and 1 family Paucituberculata shrew opossums: 5
species
in 1
in
family
1
1
1
del
monte:
1
family
marsupials:
64 species
1
in
1
8 genera and 3
—marsupial moles: 2 —
1
96
Order
in
1
Diprotodontia
—possums,
wallabies,
kangaroos, wombats, and koala: 125 species in
431 genera and 28 families lagomorphs: 81 species 12 genera and 2 families
in
—
—elephant shrews:
4 genera and
genus and 1 family Order Peramelemorphia bandicoots: 21 species in 8 genera and 2 families
species
Order Lagomorpha
families
genera and 6 families
species
ungulates:
rodents:
are
Order Notoryctemorphia
in T
families
in
in
families
families
in
Mammals
Australasian carnivorous
in
family
Penssodactyla
world's ra;or grouos of
species
Macroscelidea
species
family
Tubulidentata
This chart
2
family
— 7 and Order — genus and Order —odd-toed 6 genera and 3 Order —even-toed 82 genera and 10 Order Rodentia— over 1,990 Order
in
139
in 3 Microbiotheria
family
T
communally.
live
species
in T
genus and
mammal.
territory
orders,
species
families
-
27
SUBCLASS; Theria (Livebearers) INFRACLASS: Eutheria (Placentals)
— —
*
the world's smallest
is
of creatures.
— — —
*
Some defend
hog-nosed bat
the world's most diverse and adaptable group
truly
CLASS:
Many
social
systems, while others
ch each
Some mammals have
Kitti’s
with sophisticated scent-marking and recognition
es
ve permanently n
~
and gum. They
shout, sing, and stay silent
ives
form color
sgr
and swim. They
equator and from deserts to the
is
fe,
burrow for :ne whole of
Tir seals
weighs
fly,
land.
beetles.
sma ertnan many-
(the b ue whale
dig,
on
run
range from the poles to the
hog-nosed bat weighs only a
twentieth of an ounce 1.5 g) The Etruscan shrew scarce)/
Mammals
faster than anything else
bat The
a
many mice breed
almost continuously.
mice,
rats,
at a time, often at intervals
of over a year, but
fish).
species are rat-
e r Qne-third are rodents
squirrels,
one young
(but
38 genera and
1
in
0 familes
SUBCLASS: Prototheria Order: Monotremata
(Egg-layers)
—monotremes:
3 species
in
3 genera and 2 families
11
rapidly c
tney stumble on uneven ground.
if
Consequently, there has to be a compromise, and land
mammals cannot be much
w tnout
exceeding the
support
larger than
limits of
what
an elephant can
their bodies
.
the water things are different. Buoyancy
in
removes most of the ejects of
gravity,
enabling the great
whales to be much larger than land creatures. But they turn
managing
a
body pumping blood through enormous lengths
gigantic of
imited by the problems of
become
in
vems and
oxygen to tons of
arteries, distributing
muscles, and conducting nerve impulses along nerves that
may be over 60
m)
feet (18
long.
Body heat can be conserved by using
mammals
done by having dense
is
it
sometimes with Fur
protection
found
m
layers of fat
layers of fine fur,
under the skin for extra
mammals and cannot be
a feature of
is
insulation. In
any other group of animals. Long hairs protea
from ram and snow, while woolly underfur keeps the
warm Dense
animal
and to stand out
arctic b zzards
mammals
also enables
in
to survive
the open
all its life.
Fur
yet be quite
exploit the possibilities of living
nooks and crannies away from predators and sheltered
â&#x20AC;˘rom the elements Small a
in
warm and
to keep
Tmy mammals can
sma
muskox
fur allows the
owing
treetops
and monkeys to leap among the
squirrels In
size also permits greater aaivity,
addition,
it
ensures the efficient use of tiny
things for food, such as ants
and small seeds
Body warmth has many advantages over coldbloodedness Nerves work activity,
increasingly
reactions quickly,
Warmth
making
Digestion
is
also allows muscles to
more
rapid,
efficiency
and constant
body warmth
comfortable, aspects of
warm
it
is
at
faa
body,
mammals
and even to
is
In
many
of the major
conjunction with their
also have a highly efficient blood
higher pressures than
them
in all
works
faster
other animals except
enough food and oxygen
to function
fully.
Reproduction
Mammal
offspring are born as aaive babies
and so avoid
the perilous process of laying eggs and incubating
fly.
not just about feeling
Their blood circulation
the tissues to allow
contraa more
temperatures are kept high
essential to
birds, constantly delivering
12
if
mammalian success
circulatory system
and
in
greater
and digestive enzymes can
work with greater So,
much
complex behavior, and more rapid
possible to run fast
:t
also
enabling
faster,
to
in
the
same
place for
weeks on end. Newborn young
fed on milk secreted by the mother's
struaure^ that are not present
in
mammary
manage
glands,
to raise a
litter
in seals
fatty,
but milk produced within the
hours after birth also has other benefits
immune
proteins.
and
of babies that
weigh more than the mother that feeds them. Milk nourishing and
are
any other group of
animals Milk allows rapid growth, especially whales. Shrews
them
in
is
first
the form of
They provide valuable protection for the
young animals against
infection by germs.
This idyllic scene of
Hanuman
langurs grooming
hides a sinister side of their society.
they
may
kill
and young playing
When new males
take over a group,
Infanticide
^he
the infants of their predecessors.
killing
of
young by members of
their
own
species (infanticide)
is
one of the most
examples of aggression
in
the animal kingdom.
look after them. Parental care, sometimes involving the
been recorded
00 mammal
male too (although he never produces
possible benefits are varied
I
Feeding the babies on milk requires the mother to
among mammals and another young to
what
is
learn
big benefit.
their parents, enabling
It
is
normal
allows the
them
to
know
dangerous, where to go, and what to eat without
them having results).
from
milk),
to find out the hard
Parental care
especially in primates,
sometimes
way
(perhaps with fata'
lasts for
many
and contributes to the
In
in
over
1
arresting
species.
and depend on
The
species.
chimps, which eat their victims, such behavior
simply be to obtain food. rival's
In lions a
offspring brings the bereaved
male that
mother
breeding condition so he can mate with
has
It
may
kills
a
into
her.
years,
fact that a
13
ao' wn**
5* e-e'r-* of r»e
;
-
as
'
acT
**f
r-. r
.
^ ~f~
-o -ra
-
s oas-: aony ec. ooe^f s -oc *>r to
-¥c. 'ements or -o'? saeca
:. a'
ne vse
ma» oe ea*-e2
mamma
5
rather
*.
and c r as nner : most
eam
ge-es anc
'
";
r
e a: .e *
s
me.
s:a'r:*.pec arp to a dtoere-T
0*
a>
k.,
Va—ma r
.o-"2 a e r
.a
fam
success^
Diversity
nxxe
0*
Many
ole
a-2 not necessan
soec.es also
.
2^3
..
than they
coope-ate to
s
Cunous
.
—e
m ght
1
m
»e
?s
^*oe re
s*
cod
ng
fewer
gh
to ac- e.e a h
groups
soc;a
babies
'a se
,
a result, the
in
more
young
edgehogs.
r
g-ve-n
jp ore or
exa-p e wha es
tn
the case o* whales
m
very .\a'm
o°a rn
or.as
•V'e
'
and the
n that they p'odjce eggs
to babes, but they' st
At r mi.
‘ood
s
1
nourtsh
seasonally scarce,
and other htoernators abandon
bats,
enoug' ene'gy to so K be^nat ng s
burrows Ech
too
t
a'*
a h»gn body temperature, and
—
inciuc
ng four
feet,
—-as bee- rnodifeo to a*tow the
.e toes
of e gr
ar- d
*'
ers
,
eff
52 r:.'-'
n
of carr ioies
In
s-<c~ 25 *. -.sis
zr ~e~.es r
typ-ca
ro'-e
rena n
the rones
a
-c
*cvi
cent c ggens. runners,
The teeth are also speoa tzed to
wto mar)
.
2 ifferent k nos of *002 *'o~
aa^es fsh, orass. blood, and nseas
'"eat to nuts
Agam„ there are exceptions associated with speda *estyes Ant-eating speoes such as the aardvark or gnaint a'-teater.
have 'eo^ceo teeth or none at a
try "ood ^eeds no d*ev. ng
s nce the;'
1
ii
Instead, a tong, sticky
tongue s 'eo- 'eo to gather the nsects
The spec .a character-stcs of to
.era
mamma
w oe vanety o* habitats more
the f surroundings a
r
enable them
temperature, for example* than any
Mammals
other animals
is
independently of
:
a re found everywhere, from the
poar 'eg >ons to oese-ts mountamtops. and
Some mace protongeo O
miles
m^y
fly
many
on annual
rr
jungles.
ves nto the oeec sea. while
es each night or walk humQ'eds of
migrations.
Mammals can
surv.rve
successfully n a wider diversity of hapnats than
any other
One mammal Homo sa&enst has even
arim.a group
advantageous behavior
The base mammal oody p an
deveopment
fused to fry— the
others
mes the animals do not nave
ma ntam
:ones
b ucoe-'
n Mole 'ats protect themselves from the
nomeothe"^ * At such
f
among
e nearly hairless as an adaptation *'e
.mar and centra
cooe e~ oent
groups. but no other a" mails have
,%a. c*
scaptoc
t'r^re' '-ex b r.
oesc'oeo above a e found
a*-
mhkh the
Wrists in
rxfqoe'xfent
or their own.
r
'ats a
nstead of gn ng c
sw mmers
'ror—a
provided by aroe amounts of fat
msuiat cm
th
r
appropriate
.
one As
.
spec a advantages For
r
par eular
.
sma
some mammals -eve
.
platypus a'e except
14
;s
and Exceptions
anc -a«:eo mo*e
v.
patterns into
-3-2 te-as to oe
es a r e oe-e'a
nonmamma
ail
each
cobras*. 'ept es
irfe.
c* ** e *eat-'es
*nem
the»r
"2 re
c a and ca- oe ac jsiea to
a-
kxxed are' and tend
.-.e
ate
.vtnch .nd
by
'52*5
r.e ~-e 32 .a-*.age
.
*ran *0 .oung, and somet Ties or
to tne»
in
oe**a. <c'a
'
tec benavxx, on :ne ot-er
cera»n
s./C“
so rs o* core tons a-d circumstances
r-ee: a
Some
Denav 0 r c
5 *.2*5
23 '* mnerted
o* :ne
e 5 "tc oe-a. o'
ir'-r'
arc soeoes.
a^o oat
2" C '2'OC'* Dr C*
*-3
hts s
anoec on toe moon, something that no other an imal has eve' dchevea'
Some mammals have become abundant
and
w oesp'eac A few
that
we
treat
them
are so successfu
and numerous
as pests because they
compete with
WHAT
humans
for food or destroy
in
MAMMAL?
what we have produced and sheep have
ourselves. Horses, dogs, cattle,
played a major role
A
IS
helping
humans
our
in
for
also
own
social
evolution and successful conquest of the planet.
Domesticated mammals,
in
exchange for regular food, with useful services, such
shelter, or healthcare, provide us
as transportation
and muscle power, or products,
like
meat, milk, and leather. Such items would cost us a
more
effort to obtain
(like rats)
Some mammals
by other means.
endanger
are significant carriers of diseases that
many
people, but
assist
medical research to combat disease
some primates and
lot
laboratory mice
among humans.
Challenging Present, Uncertain Future Today
we
live in
the age of mammals. This group
dominates the world,
now
effectively replacing the reptiles
and
amphibians that were once the major land animals. Those that remain are reduced to relatively
comparatively restricted range of the
last
place
5
A
lion killing a buffalo.
Even when agape, the jaw can deliver
in
1
to 2 million years
the variety of
of the world.
mammal
used to cut the
decline
Carnivores, as in this wolf, typically have 44 teeth, consisting of three
incisors
last
{ 1),
one canine
(2),
upper premolar and
to shear
through
flesh.
four premolars
first
(3),
and three molars
lower molar have sharp
Jaw power
(right)
is
tips
(4).
crucial for the capture
The masseter muscle force
when
needed
to cut
through bone.
(b)
car
vore
v0
--
and
power
different parts
extinct,
critically
and many
small numbers.
The
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;our own. Today we humans
it,
all
species that share the world with us.
Mammals have
suffered heavily from persecution by
people, particularly species considered to be dangerous like
the tiger or wolf. Large
they need a
lot
mammals
are at risk because
of space and eat a great deal of food
every day. The
provides the
and grind
in
manipulate the environment on a global scale and, with
and high cusps
tearing up of prey. The massive temporalis muscle (a) delivers the to suffocate or crunch
The
However, over
mainly due to the overwhelming success of just
one mammal species
S
lifestyles.
species
Many have become
others have been reduced to is
species living a
enormous changes have taken
suffocating or bone-splitting pressure. The meat-shearing teeth are then flesh.
few
same
land
cannot support
flesh
the jaws are almost closed.
elephants, for example,
and
also
produce crops
meat-shearing edges
for people. Expansion of
farmland has reduced the
numbers and forced them back built to
of wild animals everywhere
into less suitable habitats. Fences,
keep mammals out of crops, force them to
live in
areas that cannot support such high numbers. Wild
mammals
that steal from crops planted
on the land they
4
15
SMALL CARNIVORES
used to occupy are shot or snared. As numbers of
humans nave
ncreased, wild
same
aside At the
numbers, replacing
mammals have been
of domestic
and goats, have
especially cattle, sheep, in
mammals have been pushed
numbers
time,
world to conserve the
Some
hunted
IUCN has over 1,000
Switzerland, the
Perhaps the best-known
for their skins, ivory,
among
and ecologically sustainable. Based
fair
is
staff
in
and the help
of 10,000 volunteer experts from 181 countries.
wild
production of the Red
or other valuable products. Catastrophic population
declines have resulted, particularly
and natural
seeks to ensure that the use of natural
It
resources
greatly increased
their wild relatives.
specially
mammals,
systems.
diversity of nature
published
the larger
Lists
role of the
IUCN
the
is
of Threatened Species.
First
1966, the books were designed to be easily
in
species because they take a long time to reach breeding
updated, with details of each species appearing on a
age or often produce few young. They cannot
different
compensate
now
nave
numbers
easily for the large
killed,
and many
reached the verge of extinction. About one-
quarter of
threatened
known mammals
all
some way. That
in
information
came
to light. So
far,
the Red
as
Lists
include information on over 18,000 types of animal, of
which over
are significantly
is
new
page that could be removed and replaced
1
1,000 are threatened with extinction.
Gathering such a vast amount of information
roughly twice the
proportion of threatened birds.
but
task,
The Red
it
is
huge
a
provides an invaluable conservation resource.
Lists
are
now
available
in
CD-ROM
format and
Categories of Threat to Animals
on the World Wide Web. Governments throughout the
Two
world use them
types of classification are used throughout this set
regarding conservation status: IUCN categories and CITES
Appendices. They appear, where relevant,
and
the data
in
panel for each species.
when
assessing conservation priorities
in
policymaking.
In
the data panel for each species
section
on
status.
Some
in this set
The IUCN
cases an
With so much conservation is
activity in different countries
some way
important to have a worldwide overview,
coordinating what goes on planet That
is
in
it
of
different parts of the
known
nfluence, encourage,
and
to
throughout the
assist societies
It
in
not relevant.
such
risk. In
Where an animal
IUCN
risk, its
the latest Red
rating
is
given. All
Lists.
to the status of rare species, they
confer any legal protection. That laws,
and
is
do not
done through
national
internationally by CITES.
IUCN CATEGORIES EX
Extinct,
when
there
is
no reasonable doubt
that the last
DD
individual of a species has died
EW CR
Extinct in the Wild,
when
known
only to survive in captivity or as a naturalized population well outside the past range. Critically
a species
is
Endangered, when a species
extremely high
immediate
risk
is
facing an
of extinction in the wild in the
future.
EN Endangered, when
a species faces a very high
risk
of
extinction in the wild in the near future.
VU
the wild
LR
16
when a species faces a high the medium-term future.
Vulnerable,
Lower
m
when
risk
of extinction in
a species has been evaluated and does not satisfy the cntena for CR, EN, or VU Risk,
is
should be pointed out that while IUCN categories
draw attention
is
is
to be officially at
provided
Conservation of Nature (IUCN), also referred to as the
listing
a
categories of threat have been taken from information
the role of the International Union for the
World Conservation Union The mission of the IUCN
IUCN
is
many
animals, for example,
rodents and bats, are abundant and not at
there
NE
Data Deficient, when there
is
about a species to assess the
risk
Not Evaluated, IUCN criteria.
not enough information of extinction.
species that have not been assessed by the
Note: The Lower Risk (LR) category is further divided into three subcategories Conservation Dependent (cd): species that are the focus of continuing species-specific or habitat-specific conservation programs the cessation of which would result in the species qualifying for one of the threatened categories within a period of five years; Near Threatened (nt): species that do not qualify for Conservation
qualifying for VU; qualify for the
Dependent, but which are close to
and Least Concern
two previous
(Ic);
categories
species that
do not
l«.
arts
CITIES
Carver tier on rrematicna
CITIES s Bine
as :re
Ws&r ngtor Convention
meeting
-atons nave agreed Tradi ig
"
C C
\Aasring:cn
i
an,
•,
:c
~C'e ’"e r r
:
<
"own -
a~e' a
I lists-
Currenth TEE
the C
~ais and their ccc\. cats
been a '•"ace
-"as
species,,
nameiy, those that are heading toward extinction wtfl
be harmed by continued
trade. Such)
permit. Permits
are required to cover the whole transaction exporter
and
speaes are
ther native countries and can only
be imparted or exported wtfi a speoai
egJatiors.
TIES
APPOdCES
the most threatened traded
usuaily protected in
'9~5‘
i
Appendix
(also
was acred
since t
V A V WAL"
A
IS
'
Tirade
Endangered Sceces of \A d Eauna arc -ers
HAT
—both
and importer must prove that there is a scientific justification for moving the animal
compelling
m the
-actor
le of some of die *vcddte rarest sceces
dec:
arc CITES aims to
C ~ES eate^ed
contirallthe
Appendices
sts .called
ite r nat:ona
cv.
orSbem
from one country to another. This includes
animals between zoos for breeding purposes. Permits
:a v
sceces
:.nat
are
are only issued
foe id
trace
.'n'e ' a1
"ccaing
ve cr dead
ai
s*cnddder An
when it can be proved that the animal
was legally acquired and that the
made An nals
are assigned ta will;
Appendix
transferring
,
spec.
s* is ‘asrrers
remaining population
mot be harmed by the toss
^ens
and so cr
Appendix
indudes species that are not currently
threatened with ©rttoctiony but that could easily
ce ccrnffisoted tv customs at ntematicaa borders
,v
seacorts or airports Appendix
sceces can ce traded
'temaconali', ouitory under strict controls. V,
trade s
on©" ,aiuacte
am mate CITES
to ~
t:ie
*
*'s;<
,
*viitih
exaroe
far
shew-
rerroers
-
a finest
the
no:
r
'
MS
gnest
co
rave ‘c
—
Sene
sell;
try
the rare species pretending they were a similar
common one. animus,
with:
Permits are required to ©apart such
requirements similar to those for
Appendix speaes.
coo gpore
UCM
li
rare
Appendix
speaes are those that are at
risk
or
categcnes
protected in at least
one Gauntry. Other nations may
C~ES entree cr
be allowed to trade
m the animate m their products*
ercia
-urner seta's of
the rabe C ~E£
oskc
‘
—mav
smpis because they nave not eai
traders
eev, fines or nensenment.
—eve" these
~ar> cats
are
-era eccrc<~'> and; that
Mevec^eess
arid cecole
nes
sceces
:.ti©-
resemble threatened species* since criminate could
d fe
dihreue questions accut the relative ~cortance cf
•a,ses
become so if trade is not carefully controlled. Some common: animals are listed here if they closed
Acce"d ces
a
_e ~aoa
but they will probably need to prove that they come is
re catchy es
from safe populations
SMALL CARNIVORES M
-
:i
:
i
T
.z a
I
zsze mezazz'S z"
Bs.z"
.•
rn Ca"
ma
s
mose n^cec
as
Hc/.e\e r >ze
jr
;
j a
e
nan me
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ago
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a a~a \e.
1
.emdae 'mey evohed fro-
.
ancestors $c~~e 5C
j_z~ za" .zns
ree-dv.e ng a
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zzez
sz~e sze:
~
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'at
nnuscu a' z_z _' ke t'zse c*
m_a
Origins
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me
ard
a'5
ma: ‘eec or
very
an. zesz te ze ng
«,
oremo
*ccz.
—scer
out seme
aa zne
zcea
Characteristics
No: a
me Camsore are cere camrvorous ma s zn mee a e a r.urroe'' z* zme'
'>e~'oe's of
r
~rea:-ea: ~c a~
ma:
nre acre' atca :
c ocos
predators
m n. me c*
V-'ate.e'
me
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tor a
mem
apart
.ores are
ar '-a
5
cme
cncc comcosec ma
most re ac e
ca"
*ea:-res
.
diagnostic
-
ma** .
c*
-a
Being Small _
~e ~cc'
a~z Z'e '
erem
mee
to ~e-c stac ores
a
n\ Ca^- '.ores a sz
h«*e a
mar
teem zamass^s
srea'
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ge
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re
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mer :eem
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set or
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can me teem
bacvxard
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c'z arc
30
3 'eez _
_ z
eae
Who among the Small Carnivores? Family: Procyonidae — raccoons: 7 genera, 19 species, including
Who's
ringtailed coati
(
Family: Mustelidae
Nasua nasua ); red panda Ailurus fulgens) otters, and badgers: 26 genera, 66 (
—weasels,
species, including least weasel
nimble. The smallest of as
little
weigh
all,
as 5.5 inches (14
just
the least weasel, can measure
cm) from nose to
under an ounce (28
such small size might seem
weasels and their relatives lack
make up
for
in
speed,
stature they
and
agility,
(.
ferocity.
more than
They
unusual
in
own
brasiliensisY,
—
them
to reach prey
burrows, and crevices that would
common
genet ( Genetta genettaY fossa ( Cryptcprocta ferox)
Paradoxurus hermaphroditusY,
— mongooses:
17 genera, 35 species,
banded mongoose
Mungos mungo)
foil
in
nests,
are semiaquatic,
larger hunters.
waterproof
Small carnivores can be solitary
meerkats and
(like
coatis). Smell
is
the stoat) or social
important
in
communication, and most species use scent to mark
most notably the
information to other
members
small carnivores climb well, entire
life in
trees.
is
vision.
Most
and some spend almost
Most can swim, and
a
and
webbed
whose feet,
a powerful, rudderlike
otter
spends most of
even
come ashore
tail.
the water and
its life in
their
few
female.
Compared with other
spend a long time with
and learning the
special
dense,
The sea
may not
to give birth.
majority of species rearing offspring
of their species. The sense
also important in hunting, as
fur,
otters,
Reproductive strategies vary widely, but
ranges and territories and to convey personal
is
(
is
Lifestyle
of smell
civet
including meerkat ( Suricata suricattaY,
adaptations to the water include
home
lutris)
civets and genets: 20 genera, 35 species,
any group of animals. They can also squeeze
into tiny spaces, enabling
(like
sea otter ( Enhydra
common palm
Family: Herpestidae
readily
bodyweight, which
stoat
nivalis)',
including
(.
tackle prey several times their
Pteroneura
Family: Viverridae
disadvantage, but what
in
Mustela
(M. erminea ); wolverine ( Gulo guloY, giant river otter
and
For a predatory animal
g).
like a
tail tip
(
skills
is
in
the
the job of the
small animals, the
young
their mother, gaining strength
they
will
need
in
adult
Play
life.
is
an important part of growing up, and games often involve parents as well as offspring.
© A group of banded mongooses vantage point on a termite
find a
mound
in
the Masai Mara Nature Reserve,
southern Kenya.
j
:
SMALL CARNIVORES
The Raccoon Family accoons are medium-sized, long-bodied
R
with a long l
m
the family Procyomdae,
Raccoons have
its
appearance and ecology. Only the kmkajou has a uniform
as a
body color The
of
facial
have distinctive coats with various
markings and ringed (banded)
on the soles of
partly or entirely
a
Is
most
cats,
except
in ringtails
have semiretractile claws on
tails.
Raccoon?
Camdae.
Their origin
is
reflected
name Procyomdae, which comes from pro.
in
the family
the Greek words
meaning "before," and kuon, meaning "dog."
Recognizable
fossils
of raccoon ancestors have been
found dating back 20
million years
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;to
a time
when
Europe and North America were one continent. As the continents separated, the raccoon family unequally, with the procyonids remaining
World
(the Americas)
weighing
ringtail,
The raccoons are descended from ancestors of the dog family,
and the subfamily
ancestors of the red panda,
in
was in
their feet, like bears.
thumb. Generally, the claws do not
The procyonids range
What
footed and walk
flat
The
red panda, however, has an extra digit, which functions
display a remarkable diversity in their
rest
toes on each foot, with the third
five
toe being the longest. They are
Although there are only 19
tail
different species
members
mammals
split
the
New
Ailurinae,
the Old World (the Eastern
little
retract like those
and red pandas, which
their forepaws.
in size
from the slender
more than
.8
1
pounds
(0.8 kg), to
the stockier raccoon, which can reach 33 pounds (15 kg).
Despite being classified as carnivores, most of the
raccoon family eat surprisingly the bulk of their
diet,
meat.
little
makes up
Fruit
although they often supplement
with a variety of insects and small animals. The kmkajou tops up
its
fruit diet
pa. idas feed mainly
with the occasional insect, while red
on bamboo shoots,
and acorns. Raccoons
lichen,
and worms as well as
snails,
will
eat
fruit, roots,
fish, crayfish,
berries, nuts,
and the olingo preys on small
and
fruit;
and mammals.
birds
The most carnivorous of the procyonids are the I
Hemisphere, excluding Australasia).
ringtail
and cacomistle. They have well-developed,
doglike carnassial teeth to catch and
Family Procyomdae: 3 subfamilies, 7 genera, 19 species
large as rabbits. their external
RACCOONS AND COATIS
The
slice
diet of procyonids
is
up prey as reflected by
appearance. For example, the kinkajou
4 genera, 12 species
has a shorter than average muzzle with a long tongue Procyon
Nasua
7 species, including
common
raccoon
(P.
lotor);
crab-eating
raccoon (P cancrivorus)
for obtaining nectar
2 species, nngtailed coati (N nasua), white-nosed coati
flowers.
(N narica)
Nasuella
1
species,
coati
(A/
olivacea)
flexible
Bassariscus
?.
species, ringtail
KINKAJOU AND OLINGOS Potos
(kmkajou)
RED PANDA Ailurus
1
red
genus.
panda
astutus), cacomistle
7 genera,
sumichrasti) (B
snouts to
.
probe
for insects.
6 species
species, including
alleni
1
(
(
B
(no
B gabbii (no
common
common name)
species
A
fulgens)
-
20
SEE ALSO
mon
from
contrast, the
species (P flavus)
1
Baaaricyon (olmgo) 5 name), B
In
coatis have long,
mountain
it
1:22, Coati, Ringtailed 1:28, Panda, Red 1:30
wl 1
*
r/
J>
,!//f
i ri :
•>'
u
,
Jiii /
If'
kM
TP
y oJm
i
if*
wjBSl
IMifmtwm
:
nP Hi ThSt
f
i.
f'.B
7
©A
*.
*
pair of ringtails. The species
was
w it# Ik?-/
originally reared as a
prospectors' camps in the early American West, hence
name
r
its
mouser
in
alternative
of "miner's cat."
Lifestyle Procyonids can generally no
live
for
more than seven
until their
so
their first spring.
and provide
all
in
They give
birth in
occupy
a diversity of habitats ranging
through most of
forests,
are
while coatis prefer more
found
in
American
is
cliffs
wooded
and dry
regions. Olingos
tropical rain forests, while the
adaptable raccoons thrive
panda
rocky
in
in all
of these habitats.
The red
confined to Asia, favoring remote, high-altitude
forests. All
procyonids are nocturnal, except the coatis,
which are mainly active during the
day.
g)
litters
and are poorly of three or four, but
pandas produce only one or two young
at a time,
and kinkajous usually only one.
North, Central, and South America. The ringtails and
cacomistles are found mainly
dens or nests
the parental care. At birth the young
developed. Most species have red
but
the wild. While males
weigh only about 5 ounces (142
The procyomds (excluding the red panda)
in captivity,
second year to breed, females usually do
wait in
10 to 15 years
Recent studies of the raccoon family reveal that their social structure
as the coati
move around
the
seem
like
ringtail,
the Procyomdae
in
to be
is
in
the wild
complex. Species such
large social groups. Others,
more
solitary.
While some of
—such as the common raccoon — are
thriving, others are classified
by the IUCN as Endangered
The red panda, olingo, and cacomistle are among those in
decline as a result of destruction of forest habitats.
21
CARNIVORES
Sr.'A__
Common Common name
Raccoon
Cor"non raccoon Scientific
Procyon
lotor
Raccoons are one of the most familiar North American animals. Their adaptability has allowed
Family procyon cae
Order Cam vora Lengtt-
reacted.'
tenet"
8-12
1
8-27
in
Procyon lotor
name
43-68 cm);
them
tail
to
succeed
a wide range of habitats while
in
,
ir*
20-30
err
;
he ght at
shoulder about 10-12 n 25-30
25%
about *
1— 3 *
Key features
but sometimes up to 33
lb
bandit* face mask, accentuated by
raccoon's \~eujge\ce, atertness, and
gray cars above and below, black eyes; short,
curiosity
rcureed
settlers
and
bushy
ears;
black
r
with alternate
ta
ngs fusua /
body
5);
brown
hairs long
were
.
females
may
so'itary,
although related
ve close to one another
r
speed of learning
somewhere between and the domestic
Breeding
Four to 6 young born around February to
Ap after gestation period of 63 days. Weaned at 7 weeks, fema’es usua iy sexually r
;
mature by the
Voice
May
/e over
16m
the wild
r f ^st 1
m
7 years
captivity,
up to
Chitters, purrs, hisses, barks, growls, snarls,
Fruit,
and seeds;
crayfish, clams, sna.
Almost anywhere
m
Distribution Southern Canada,
s,
and earthworms; crops
North America, including
can become quite a handful.
Masked Bandits Raccoons are unmistakable animals, with their
stout
little
tail.
across the
They have
bodies, typically weighing
and 18 pounds
weights are
and 8
(5
known
to
kg),
between
although
change with season and
U
S
,
and Central
common
of raccoon family; continues to
range and increase
in
numbers
than
southern ones. The heaviest raccoon recorded
reached 62.4 pounds (28.3
its
mask
distribution; northern animals are larger
Population abundant Most
expand
Young accoons make
ntrigumg pets, a though as they mature, they
1 1
America
member
cat.
monkey
r
also fish,
urban areas
Status
that of the rhesus
eyes and their bushy, banded
such as corn and stored grain
Habitat
thought to be
is
characteristic black “bandit"
bernes. nuts,
in captivity,
spring, males by 2 years.
and squeaks Diet
Native Arre r car
in
Raccoons are often kept
*o!kiore.
and the Nocturnal mainly
a source of fascination to early
a^d are celebrated
and gray Habits
kg).
Enormous numbers of raccoons have been trapped or shot for their to
make
kept
jackets
in captivity
and
farming, the to France,
of Russia
in
Raccoons are also
gams
to be
made from
Germam ana
the 1930s and 1940s wild,
Switzerland, Austria,
As a fur
raccoon was introduced
Netherlands,
escaped into the
Some have
which are used
to supply the fur trade.
common
me
skins,
hats.
result of the financial
parts
Many
and raccoons spread to
and the Czech Republic.
also turned
up
in
Poland, Hungary,
Denmark, and Slovakia The European raccoons are
now sometimes
considered a nuisance.
The raccoon's coat
is
made up
of hair The short, fine underfur
SEE ALSO
extremely
popular with people.
-i Biaoc
make them
their appealing looks
Vale
arger than female
5-8 rg
fb
err
R ngtailed 1:28, Panda.
is
of
two types
uniformly
Red 1:30, Old World Monkey Family. The 4:40
XT
:
RACCOONS COMMON RACCOON
gray or brownish and provides the animals with
warmth and some
protection from the wet.
Growing from among stiffer
guard
hairs,
short coat are longer,
its
which are tipped with black
The density of the guard
or white.
hairs alters
the overall appearance of the coat, often giving it
shaggy
a fuzzy or
look.
Raccoons molt
in
the
early spring, with hair loss beginning at the
head and proceeding along the back. fur
New
grows throughout the summer to
provide extra
warmth
for the winter.
Many raccoons have amounts
of yellow
variable their coats,
in
and some albinos have been reported. Apart from size the
sexes are similar
in
appearance,
and juveniles resemble
adults.
Raccoons are excellent climbers, aided by sharp claws
and the
ability to rotate
the
hind foot through 180 degrees (thereby turning
Such
ability
it
backward).
makes them one
of
Š The raccoon's "bandit" eye mask, brown-and-black ringed
tail,
round ears are trademark
and
small,
characteristics of
this highly distinctive species.
Raccoon Currency
T
he raccoon's fur has always been the main reason for hunting
and trapping the animal. During the 17th century bans were
imposed to prevent too many raccoon
skins being exported
from the
United States. At one time the skins were used as currency; and
when
the frontiersmen of Tennessee set up the state of
Franklin, local officials received
each
year.
payments of "coonskins"
Although they are hard wearing, raccoon skins
are not especially valuable nowadays,
and trade
no longer
However, a movie
a threat to population size.
about Davy Crockett, king of the wild a
sudden fashion
frontier,
for coonskin caps like the
in
created
one worn
$
in
the movie, costing the
lives
of
many
them
raccoons!
is
iccoons omen use dens
i
*
-:
‘
.-
r
nr-r and speno The day
'
wvhem mar
almost a
•.
exceo*
©ve
dens mav
r»f
The
Trees.
& about 9 to
wmc^
in
m Tan
Each den
the
its
Alaonpuam worn amkun, wn.ch
o:
only
washmp
ven
rts
oea:
occuped
’
refers to the
mor
name
scientific
-leamnp To wash
roughly translates as "ne
who
a reterence to the frequent grooming that
’
accoons. characteristically mouipe
tki
is
The German name waschbar.
in
raccoons nadir of washing
its
tood
taken from the Latin wore /ai*re
’
~he perception that raccoons wash themselves wrm then hands actually comes Timm observations
when
win®.;
roreoaws are a orominent teature and are name oe common name raccoon is derived from
skiltrui
scratcnes wrrh ms. hands
mom
is
accoon-
reflected
to
they wit
pm-prs protection
rencton anr the .veathe
.
tits:
brushy nests oic buildings
nr mies anc haystacks
.a s
ash nc Sears
«\
above the ground ~nev also use
bumnws
r
itwr
r* v
hollow
in
e— ance hr.* that
.-
? ~
fee*
-
hang:
.a"'
air desceno nee funks near
':t
.
the
‘
'
Tacco°hs carchmp and Teedinp on aauaTic prey. ~ne\ danoie and splash, in the ware in an
tot
1
ongp w/np
•
over
u.c
a
twrtt\
mothe has sne
will
instinctive
afco
movmc
her
1
to catch,
aooearance of washing instinctive
a nr drfftcutr business
manne
off
(ever
tamny
fish, pivinq
their
food
It
is
every
the same
Pehavior disniaved by captive raccoons
when
there
the notion of the
no
is
"
water', that
washing bears
has encouraged
”
Water ^o\nnc h»e raccoor % torenaw.' nave e wel--aevetonpr sense o* rover
nrnughout ther range
acmons
anr air caaabK of miiaae mamoviaTior.
are found arm os:
B
a.-
skilttu as t
monkret
a'
everywhere that ware; s avaiiab* They are mosr
mangroves hood niam v-
'-
.."
.
>e*'
^
pi
o
Garmons
»
are less
nev also Tenr tr avoir
true
r
oeoends on
ai
cr The northern
southern a-vn
.
ana da thev
win place-
i
^ tartMT
r
an on
fleser;
to
live
m
areas Thev
me
parts,
iea lonp
fr
of then Tanpe they
nrrt
to huddle tooethe’
Raccoons
m
acmmy
active
21
SCI
rate
The» body temperature stays
ALSO
am
warm whe-
r
tvnically active
fust
is
a neai
morn sunset to in
teedmg
before midnight Raccoons
vOasta marshes may be se*r.
all
they snuggle
a single den
aimouoh there
living
bv
Teedmg durmo
the day whpr ther tood source oi crustaceans is
exposed
opfinnunsts. able to
whatever tood
nedme
long and
ur close Up to 25 raccoons have Peer known
a®
hear
m
do
am sieer Their
tall,
e^^ energy keening
the northern imitec States and
wimp
summer and
buildings
ano moMusks
Thei
resents they have Puih up
1
sunrise
^
surviva
denning togethe ovei wmTe: since they use
m att«ides above t t>HD
fcacroons do not hibernate and
no
oi
Ther body weight Raccoons are ohten found
ivem and springs Raccoons
anpK round
nenod ther
Irrtle
harsh winters raccoons may lase up to naif of
united Stares and like
inactive
the- fa:
ove- the previous
pe ooen
Vherr they have spread out onto
metabolic rate remans
moemsrars. Since they consume
tood during ther
common
ia r
thei
high As a result They use more energy than
ub«ai: woodlands especially where pine
•
-
common m
hanpuy r suburban areas within
~ P-^'de
3n°C. are
95**F
anr abandoned tarmiands and can
-ec
o.iitt
•.
and mesh anr
marshes ~ney are also
are' .
Tnrests
is
at lovy tide
make a meal from
available
does
take advantage of so
above
The secret ot ther success
Am*
I.
an
.
.
*v ?:3f
Raccoons
tt
ts
then
many kinds
at
ability
to
fond that
is
tr Tact
handime
its
roe raccoor
tooc
RACCOONS COMMON RACCOON
In
most areas plants provide the main food
eaten by raccoons, espec
ally,
will also
born a few weeks
eat
earthworms and nsects and sometimes stored gram. Corn
is
a particular favorite
taken jst before
it is
noe
and
jsua
is
a.^c ready *or
'za r ds.
fy
".ran
Where trey
near turt e nesting beaches, they ;
a^d
steal
the buried eggs. They wi
other vertebrates such as gopne shrews, rabb
forage beside lakes, or
and
ts,
m
s,
aiso eat squi
rr els,
fish,
such
and other aquatic
spring, although
animals. They also take
not breed unt
strong swimmers.
At
birth
raccoons weigh about 2 to 3
ounces ^60 to 75 inches
na
r,
HO
cm,
g-
and measure about 4
in length.
They are covered n
although the mask and
tai
rings are
represented or y by dark-pigmented skin. Afte r
Their iegs
/ely
become
their eyes,
and making ch strong
tter
enough
when
ng noises.
for walking first
molt
they shed the
mfant coat, and the adult fur begins to grow.
Raccoons become sexua
and are
a factor that limits
the spread of raccoons farther north.
occurs at seven weeks,
Breeding
being
and May. The
by the fourth to sixth week. Their
horses.
crayfish, clams, snails,
readily to water
may be
squirming act
marshy areas
where they feed on
to survive the winter
from the corpse. Raccoons occasion a y
mamma s
litters
born, the less chance
about three weeks they open
and even
between
the young have to fatten up for winter. Inability
/e
dig jo
itter is
â&#x20AC;&#x17E;sus y a r eady dead, so the r accoons just feed
as deer, cows,
rivers,
r
:
nk; but suc^ an mals are
scavenge the rema ns of arger
C Raccoons often
w
usually
later in April
ater n the year a
consumption. Raccoons also eat small birds and
somet mes snakes and
is
February and March, with most
fleshy fruit,
and seeds. They
berries, nuts,
the breeding season
some
their
y
matu re
particularly
n trie
r
*irst
males do
secona season. Mat ng can
be from Decemoe- through August, occur' ng ater in the season farther south.
Tne pea< of
Weaning takes and the young
place from seven weeks,
start to leave
forage for themse ves. They
the nest and
may
still
be suckled
by their mother for up to four months. By ,jvenies
may we.gh up
fall
to 15 pounds 7 kg
,
City Slickers matings
^phe I
variety of
it
become
Males may
to thrive in a
In fact,
occupy
will
live
alone or
small groups
in
and
a distinct territory ranging in size
from 125 to 12,500 acres (50 to 5,000
has
it
|
I
|
human-dominated
environments.
range, with the smaller males
securing a few matings each.
raccoon's adaptability has
enabled
in his
roam over 1,500
general, raccoons will
very familiar to city
ha). In
a year. Males
may
acres
dwellers. However, these
(600 ha)
masked bandits are notorious
but they disperse during the breeding season,
for raiding
garbage
known
only are they
when
Not
bins.
in
fighting
I
travel together;
and competition between them
increase. Social relations are probably
to carry
]
away whole
established
bins, but the
mmble-fmgered
raiders
The secret of the
to secure the bins, rather than
can
make
common
raccoon's success
that
is
different calls
it
scents. At least 13
have been identified
Sounds are used between
meal of almost any available food,
a
in
raccoons.
individuals in close
proximity to each other. Mothers keep
including the contents of garbage baskets.
through them.
and
postures, vocalizations,
have
also learned to untie ropes used
bite
and signaled through various
in
touch
with their young by purring sounds, while
and snorts express
hissing, short barks,
common
Despite the success of the
but
full
size
is
not reached
year. Families generally share a
and the young raccoons
the second
until
den over
leave their
will
by the spring. Few wild raccoons five years,
but
some
survive
after
20
was
mother
more than
live
up to 16
oldest recorded captive raccoon
raccoon, several related species
winter,
The
years. still
living
Cozumel
Social Organization
by the
listed
as Endangered. The Barbados raccoon
(Procyon gloverellani) extinct
sometime
is little
common Two young raccoons
raccoon {Procyon pygmaeus)
Island
— are
there
years.
—such as the
from southeastern Mexico
IUCN
fear.
to
said to
is
have become However,
after the 1960s.
compromise the
survival of the
raccoon. Predators such as wolves,
bobcats, pumas, great horned owls, and I
by
their nest in a
tree.
hollow
to look for their
food, their
move them ground
to a
start
own
mother
will
den
at
level to prevent
them from
falling.
social organization of
raccoons
However, several females related still
—
will live in
— usually
males
will also
alligators
solitary.
raccoons actually
inhabit the
One
same
or
The main cause
mate
relatively
for
few are
concern
is
the
can be transmitted to humans, such as
season females mate with between one and
leptospirosis, tularemia,
for
mating
is
competition between males
privileges,
with heavier males
gaining greater access to the females. successful male
is
likely to
(and worst of is
One
be
responsible for over half the
killed.
common
raccoon's susceptibility to certain diseases that
with the resident females. During the breeding
four males. There
few
Common
prey to them.
fall
"coon hunting"), but
more
area and
a small threat, but
raccoons are also hunted for sport (known as
closely
areas that overlap, but they
tend to avoid each other.
may pose
not well
is
known, although adults are generally
As they gain
independence and
The
all)
rabies.
The
the major carrier of rabies
United States and all
and most commonly
in
common in
raccoon
the southeastern
1997 accounted
for half of
reported cases of rabies from wild animals
in
the whole country. Raccoons also often host a
type of parasitic the raccoon
roundworm
itself,
that
it is
species,
common
raccoon
is
in
expanding
in
harmless to in
small children.
so familiar in North America
often the topic of TV cartoons. it is
is
may cause death
but
domestic animals and even
The
that
A
successful
both range and numbers.
SMALL CARNIVORES
Common name
Ringtailed Coati
Ringta>ied coati (coatimundi)
name Nasua
Scientific
Nasua nasua
nasua
Family Procyonidae
and
The ring tailed coati
is
Latin name, nasua,
means "nosy one" and
intelligent
sociable. Its
Order Carnivora
aptly
Size Length head/body:
16-26 tail
in
describes the inquisitive, long-snouted raccoon.
(41-67 cm);
length: 12.5-27
(32-69 cm); height shoulder: up to 12
in
at
At
resemble a slender version of their black-
(30 cm). Male generally
Weight
7-13
lb
flexible snout; long,
banded
common
raccoon. Like
and bold
facial
tail
markings. Their forelegs are
shorter than their hind legs, so coatis always
reddish-brown to black upper
stocky,
cousin, the
raccoons, they have a distinctive banded
(3â&#x20AC;&#x201D;6 kg)
Key features Long, tail;
masked
female
larger than
glance coatis (often called coatimundis)
first
in
body, yellowing underneath; coat has coarse,
seem
to walk with their
bottom held high
the
in
long hairs; distinctive white muzzle, chin, air,
and throat
accentuating their tapering
which
tail,
is
longer than their head and body. They have a Habits
Active throughout the day; females form
gangs with
Breeding
males are often
juveniles;
solitary
sensitive Births occur mainly April to June,
gestation period of about 74 days. at
4 months; sexually mature over 17 years
live
in captivity,
after
Weaned May
at 2 years.
9-15
in
is
It
sniffing
and
particularly
well adapted to
out insects and poking
bits of rotten
among
stones
wood.
Coatis are found
woodland
in
They
areas.
require vegetation for cover, since they are
mainly active during the day, although adult
Grunts and chittering used to maintain contact with group, also snarls and squeaks;
Diet
flexible.
is
the
wild
if
and
which
perhaps
2-7 young born
earlier farther south;
Voice
long, flattish snout,
threatened,
will indicate
alarm by barking
Woodland
invertebrates (such as earthworms,
millipedes,
and
snails);
frogs
and
lizards
males can also be active after dark. At night they sleep curled up
in
climbers, using their
tail
rotate their ankles
the trees. They are good to balance,
and can
180 degrees, enabling them
caught with forepaws; adult males tend to prey on large rodents, very fond of
Habitat
to descend trees headfirst.
fruit
Woodlands
Fruit-Loving Carnivores Distribution Colombia south to Argentina and Uruguay
Ringtailed coatis generally travel about 1,600 to
Status
Population abundant Generally
common
and widespread
2,200 yards (1,500 to 2,000 m) each day search of their favorite food
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
fruit.
not available, they forage the forest thrusting their snouts
among
in
When
it
is
floor,
the leaf
litter in
search of invertebrates, such as millipedes,
earthworms, termites,
snails,
and
tarantulas.
Coatis are the most sociable of the raccoon family.
Females and juvenile males gather
bands of up to 20
individuals.
in
However, males
over two years old are normally
solitary,
except
during the breeding season, and are usually
excluded aggressively from bands by the adult females. originally
28
SEE ALSO
r
(
ommon
1:22,
In fact,
they are so isolated that
it
thought there were two kinds of
Mongoose, Dwarf 1:106, Mongoose, Banded 1:110
was
I
animal
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;the
coati,
which
lived in
the coatimundi, which led a solitary
place once a year during
life.
The bonds between females are strong,
and
a
young, not
just their
own
group to construct
or those closely
The juveniles are well cared
related to them.
two- to four-week period.
Pregnant females separate from the
band members help take care of the
all
â&#x201E;˘
Mating takes
groups, and
for,
a tree nest,
may
do not share food, the bands forage together
infants.
so females can watch over and defend the
days and leave the nest at
young. Band members
their
groom each
other,
parasites
climb up to the nest to assist
from each other's fur and gently
The young open
mother and the
A
using their long claws as combs, picking
nursing the
five
rest of
weeks
Numbers peaked
in
coati, its
range
the 1950s
and have since declined. Coatis are now scarce
Bonding Sessions In
in
the breeding season adult males are accepted
into bands, but
behave submissively toward
few days
allowing
young.
them
after the
young
become
to
What sounds
familiar with their
gesture
is
males do not
actually a defense
mechanism.
identify with their
young, they may attempt to
kill
and eat them
when
they
If
at other times of the year
become more
carnivorous.
is
it
in
Mexico.
seems more
threatened by habitat
disruption. Coatis are generally tolerated
because they
are born,
like a friendly
Farther south, the ringtailed coati secure, although
females. Males are also permitted into the band for a
the United States and declining
rarely
Coatis can be practice
is
reduction
show
do any harm
made
to livestock.
into pets,
although the
discouraged to prevent further in
Ringtailed coatis are
climbers
and nest
and sleep
in trees.
They
adopt two techniques for
her group.
white-nosed
Š
good
1
to join
Central America and extended
north to Arizona.
nibbling with their teeth.
in
their eyes after
similar species, the
lives in
give
young. Sometimes another female
birth to their
even after they leave the nest. Although coatis
will
where they
climbing, either
ascending hand-over-
hand or galloping up wide trunks with forefeet
and hind
feet clutching
the bark.
On
they
the ground
move through
forest at a
the
walk or
gallop, holding their tail
upright, except for the slightly
drooping
tip.
wild populations. Captive coatis
high levels of intelligence, often causing
trouble for zookeepers by unscrewing lamps
and hoarding screws and bulbs as playthings.
29
SMALL CARNIVORES
Red Fdnda The red panda
Ailurus fulgens
a puzzling
is
many features of
creature, sharing
Common name Scientific
Family
Red panda
name A
(lesser
raccoons, bears,
panda)
jrus fulgens
famous
more
its
cousin, the giant panda.
Procyonidae (sometimes considered a
member
of the bear family, Ursidae)
T-ere has been
Order
and
much
among
debate
zoologists
Carnivora
about whether both panda species belong Length head/body 20-24 tail
12-20
engtT
m
in
(50-60 cm);
(30-51 cm); height at
shoulder about 10-12
Weight 6-13 b 3-6
in
the bear ramily (Ursidae), the raccoon family, 'Procyonidae), or
(25-30 cm)
Ailuridae.
Key features /ague
darker on
DNA
red
One
m
m
mature
Voice
Norma
Diet
Bamboo
trees
and feeds there n spring
and summer
Weaned at 4 months; sexually 8 months. May live for 7 years in
1
1
8-14
m
the wild
forests,
conifer, often
and
Mountains
in
the trees.
the mixed forests that
slopes of the Himalaya
at altitudes of
between 6,500 and
5,750 feet (2,000 and 4,800 m) above sea It
gets very cold at night, and the pandas
have long, dense fur to help keep them warm.
Thumblike Structure
both deciduous and
on steep slopes
Myanmar
and
and small mammals
Distribution Himalayan 'egions of Nepa
and Yunnan
fruit, berries,
live in
grow on the lower
level.
shoots and leaves;
size,
but
pandas are more arboreal than raccoons,
Red pandas
1
y silent
Temperate
(genetic
appearance are those of a raccoon. However,
spending most o i their time up
days.
flowers; birds, eggs,
Laos.
at night
June) after gestation period of
at
captivity,
belly; tail
young born
to 4
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;the
distinctly bearlike,
Arboreal and nocturnal, spends most of day
114-145
.
Like the giant panda, the red
Bhutan, India,
(Burma), and China (Sichuan
additional "thumb."
One
panda has an
of the small bones in
the wrist (called the radial sesamoid) has
Provinces)
become enlarged Status
is
the animal's general shape,
'peaks
Habitat
molecular structure)
banded chestnut and cream, face has cream and white "maskâ&#x20AC;?
sleeping
Breeding
The red panda's
own
raccoor ke animal the size of a
/
;arge domestic cat. bright chestnut-colored fur.
Habits
whether they should be
classified in a family of their
kg)
in
Population unknown, but unlikely to exceed a few thousand, IUCN Endangered, CITES
structure against
to provide a thumblike
which the
five true digits
can
I
grip
and hold food. The pandas are
also able to
hold onto the branches of trees with ease.
Although they are quite average domestic
cat, red
climbers: Their grip
scamper down falling off. Yet
large, bigger
is
than an
pandas are excellent
so strong that they can
tree trunks headfirst without
when
they walk on the ground,
they tend to have a waddling gait caused by their front legs
being angled inward
Nevertheless, they can travel quite fast by
bounding along, but when frightened, they seek safety by climbing trees.
30
SEE ALSO
2:32
Pa-d^ Giant 2:98
will
RACCOONS
sim
PA'.:-
Ree pandas also
lar see.
have a general
stow
y
metabolism which helps conserve enemv Un ve the giant
oa"ca the restreted to
core
a et s not
'
:
bamboo.
eaves flowers
t.
T**ey
ete
so eat the
a.
.v
.
and bark of
roots
other p ants, and "a.e pee" kno.vn to
co"s â&#x20AC;&#x17E;'"e ~ung
Occasional
;
a-c eat ,c ous sma a r
and w
also take b ds
the.
.
Âťv
I
catch
indue no
'^a s :
eggs or
'sects,
nestlings.
ma
Meverthe.ess although the, belong *o a
cam vorous group not norma
of mammal's,
hunt an
,
y
pandas do
red'
~"ev behave as
flooc
rial
n
inefficient herbivores iinstead.
Red pandas mate ea
me and
n the
.
the young are bom' about four and a half
months
later
A female gues
ole or nock crev ce to a
birth
sma fam
four cubs. She looks ah:er continuously for about a
n a tree
1
them
week
y
up to
of
moire or less After that she
spends increasing y ong periods away from the nest to feed herself Put returns regularly to suckle and
dean her
babies. After three
months
the young cubs ane ready to leave the den They
go out each
night, staying
mother, earning the I,
r
dose to
their
way around and how
to
find food. They usually disperse before the
breeding season arrives again,
the mother wi
I
if
do
they
drive he' youngsters
not,
away
Warning Displays Pandas have evolved from carnivorous (meat-eating) ancestors. However,
they are mainly vegetarian and eat relatively little
@ Deforestation croc
ss
s~ throughout
the
r.e' efforts are nov,
ce ~g -see fo conserve
~s
,
~ forests,
system'
is still
- di
cere fit the spedes.
basically that
a simple stomach' plant-eating
red penes s range
nounta
animal food. Yet the panda
in
of a carnivore, with
mammals have
Most
very long intestines
maximum
digestive
needed to cope with fibrous plant
food. Therefore
much
what the panda
of the nutritional benefit
eats
is
their inefficient digestion lot
digestive
a short intestine.
order to provide the
efficiency
in
and
s
more than
Red pandas
ive solitary
meet, they engage displays. Actions
in
ves;
and when the, oo
a variety of raccoon
undude arching
their
bacs
n
a
threatening manner, shaking their head, and
snapping their jaws shut. Sometimes they rear
up on then hind
held high
in
the
legs with their front
Red pandas face many forest
w paws
air.
difficult es
n the
r
home. They are sometimes hunted and
frequently get caught in traps intended for
musk
deer. However, the
mam
threat facing red
wasted. Because of
pandas today
pandas have to eat a
habitat as trees are felled for timber
a specialised herbivore of a
we
is
the large-scale loss of their
dear space for crops and
and to
livestock.
31
SMALL CARNIVORES
The Weasel Family Fan
,
Mustelidae: 6 subfamilies. 26 genera, 66 species
WEASELS, MINK. Mustela 16
AND POLECATS
species, including long-tailed weasel
weasel
(M
*
nivalis):
(A/f
stoat
(M
1
species, wolverine (G gulo)
Vormela
1
species,
1
species, zorilla
Poecilictis
Poecilogale Galidis
7
(/.
1
(
V.
banded weasel
weasel
(
L
.
marine otter
(L.
Lutrogale
species,
1
Amblonyx Aonyx
(L
(P.
common
weasel),
mouse burrows. Mustelids
are small
enough
form the
largest family of carnivores
to
live in
and occur
naturally
Australia,
and
smaller islands.
What
Is
a Mustelid?
same
many
patagonicus)
other groups of carnivores, but their exact evolutionary history
river otter (L.
is
somewhat
obscure.
basic ancestors as
Some
zoologists believe
canadensis):
that the skunks are sufficiently different to be classified
felina)
.
sumatrana ); spot-
maculicollis): Eurasian otter
smooth-coated otter
Cape
2 species.
the least
libyca)
(L.
(L.
lutra)
perspicillata)
clawless otter (A. capensis):
their
own
separate family
in
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;the Mephitidae.
Most mustelids attack and
their
kill
own
prey on
land, but the various species of otters obtain the majority
species, short-clawed otter (A. cinereus)
1
like
Mustelids evolved from the
3 species, including hairy-nosed otter ( L
necked otter
Some, such as the
grison (G. cuja)
4 species, including North American
Lutra
sea otter, are quite large; others,
weasel (also known as the European
some
little
legs.
throughout the world, except Antarctica,
peregusna)
genera, 13 species
Lontra
T
and short
European polecat
species, African striped weasel (P albinucha)
species, Patagonian
1
vi son):
striatus)
2 species, grison (G. vittata):
Lyncodon
OTTERS
marbled polecat
species, North African
1
frenata): least
mustejids are small, fierce animals with
long, thin bodies
putorius)
Gulo
Ictonyx
(A/f.
erminea), black-footed ferret
(A/f
mgripes ), American mink
A/f
i
8 genera, 24 species
ypically,
of their food (mainly fish) from the water.
Congo
clawless
mustelids, particularly martens
Some
and badgers, are more
otter {A. congicus)
omnivorous, eating a wide variety of Pteronura
1
Enhydra
species, sea otter (E lutris)
SKUNKS
and
nuts,
other vegetable material, as well as animal food. 1
To deal with such a variety of different foods,
3 genera, 10 species
Mephitis 2
species, striped
skunk
mephitis):
(A/f
hooded skunk
mustelids have a very varied dentition (arrangement of
(M macroura) teeth).
Spilogale 3 species, including western spotted skunk
The badgers and wolverine have the most teeth
(S, gracilis)
(38), including
Conepatus 5 (C.
MARTENS
fruit,
species, giant river otter (P brasiliensis)
species, including
mesoleucus): Andes skunk
(C.
grinding solid food and even bones.
chmga)
8
species, including pine
marten
(A/f
More
typically,
the
weasels have only 34 teeth, but they are needle sharp to
2 genera, 9 species
Martes
broad and almost flat-topped molars for
western hog-nosed skunk
marten (M. martes): yellow-throated
stab their prey and tear
it
to pieces.
The honey badger
flavigula)
has the fewest teeth, with just 32. Eira
species, tayra (ÂŁ barbara)
1
Mustelids are characteristically smelly creatures.
BADGERS 6 genera, 10 species Mydaus 2 species, teledu (A/f (M Arctonyx
Melogale 4 Metes
1
Mellivora
Taxidea
stink
badger
hog badger
species, â&#x20AC;˘
specif".,
Skunks are notorious
(A
collaris)
European badger
noney badger
(A/f
(A/f
badger
(A/f
personata)
smells that are so characteristic of mustelids are produced
meles)
capensis)
Mustelids are typically small, fierce animals with long, thin bodies
American badger (T taxus) legs.
Some,
the least weasel,
SF
i
Also
when
weasels and stoats smell strongly. The pungent, choking
and short
32
for the stench they create
defending themselves against attack. Even the small
species, including Indian ferret
,p>-
1
Palawan
marchei) species,
1
javanensis),
1
is
like the stoat (right),
can be
fairly large,
the smallest carnivore on earth.
American 1:48, Wolverine 1:56, Badger, Honey 1:82
but one,
SMALL CARNIVORES
m
:ne ana scent glands underneath the base of the
The scent also to
is
used not only as a deterrent to attackers, but
mark out
territorial
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
like
family includes
likely
markings than any other group of mammals: the various
skunks, for example. as the least weasel
and
several
A
and
become
the marbled polecat, and
zorilla,
may
turn white
in
and even the
sea.
except during the mating season.
solitary
in
to be hostile. By contrast, the European badger
extended family groups known as
livesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
clans. Several speciesjl
of otter, as well as the spotted skunk, are relatively social
couple of northern species, such stoat,
wide range of
exploit a
Encounters between members of the same species are
However, the
more species with black-and-white
types of badgers, the
Between them, the mustelids
Most are
most other
â&#x20AC;&#x201D; are some shade of brown.
Lifestyle
habitats, including forests, deserts,
boundaries.
The majority of mustelids
mammals
tail.
winter,
loose family groups.
animals, living
in
nocturnal, but
some
Most mustelids
are
i
o
are active any time of day or night.
Mustelids have five toes on their front and back feet,
paler with increasing age. All
j
mustelids have a keen sense of smell. Their hearing
usually with a sharp claw
is
used to subdue prey or to get a good grip on tree
excellent too, but their visual abilities are probably less
well developed than
many
in
other
mammal
on each. Sharp claws can be
branches. Borrowers, especially the badgers, have stouter
species.
Ij
but blunt claws. The typical slender body of most t
,
>
These mostly southerly species
means
that they are lithe
and
agile creatures,
of mustelid share the same body
able to climb well and squeeze through small gaps.
plan as the stoat and least
However, a long, thin shape also means they are
weasel, but tend to have black, not
generally larger: African striped weasel (1); zorilla (2); little
European polecat weasel
(5);
grison
(4);
Patagonian
marbled polecat
(7J;
body
metabolic
heat.
rate,
mammals
(8).
less
at preventing the
Although they have an unusually high
which compensates still
for heat loss by
have to spend a
lot
of time
hunting to acquire sufficient food to fuel their metabolism. Small weasels their
own weight
in
may need
to
consume
them indulge
in
half
prey every day. Mustelids are
therefore always alert for something to eat.
North African
banded weasel
than shorter-bodied
generating more, they
(3);
black-footed ferret (6);
efficient loss of
brown, as the major coloration, or are
2
mustelids
"surplus"
killing
when
Many
of
prey animals are
abundant, catching more than they need and hiding the bodies
and
away
a larger
become
for later consumption. Badgers are bigger,
body
loses proportionately less heat.
lethargic in winter, saving energy
short supply. They also feed
on
a
They
when food
is
wider variety of food,
including vegetable materials that take
34
SEE ALSO
ack Footed 1:46. Mink,
American 1:52, Badger, American 1:76, Badger, European 1:78
in
'
The mink and various species of otters
cold water and
live in
so keep themselves
dense, insulating
warm
fur.
with
This has
proved attractive to hunters, and species of otter have
many
suffered heavy losses as a result.
numbers of the
Conversely, large
American mink have been reared
on
farms
fur
in
various countries,
making the species
artificially
numerous. Some have escaped
now
and
cause considerable
problems to the not least
mink
native its
in
local wildlife,
Europe, where the is
being replaced by
American cousin. Other species of mustelid
have suffered a severe reduction in
their
numbers. For instance,
the American black-footed ferret reached the brink of total extinction,
captivity
but has since been successfully bred
and restored to the
wild.
At
least
in
16 other
Š Spot-necked
otters playfully chase a terrapin in the clear waters of
Lake Tanganyika, east-central Africa. Such play reinforces social bonds
and helps young
otters perfect their hunting techniques.
species of mustelid are considered to be seriously
threatened. Gamekeepers and farmers have traditionally mustelids
killed
in
defense of their livestock,
Š
Various
members of
with a shell in
its
forepaws
exterminating several species from whole countries. Otters
American mink with
have proved to be highly vulnerable
polecat
out
in
parts of Europe
agricultural
and
due to the
industrial
pollution, dying
tc
effects of acid rain
and
chemicals on their prey.
However, many species of carnivores are protection, both nationally
and
now
given legal
internationally. Moreover,
people are not as dependent on chickens or sheep for their
more
main income as they once were and can afford to be tolerant. Predator persecution
is
no longer
widespread and automatic; and indeed, many species, such as badgers and otters, are very popular.
The European polecat has been domesticated to create the ferrets used
in
the hunting of rabbits and small game.
A
few mustelid species are sometimes even kept as pets.
in its
(6);
wolverine following (7).
(1);
least
a rabbit (3);
winter coat
marten with a bird
a scent trail
the weasel family: Indian smooth-coated otter
(5);
weasel dragging a mouse
European badger
pine
(4);
(2);
European
SMALL CARNIVORES
Common name Scientific
name
weasel)
Mustela
Family
Mustelidae
Order
Carnivora
Size
Least Weasel
Least weasel (European
common
nivalis
Th'e world's
Length
Hemisphere. However,
dense undergrowth most of the
length:
1-5
time.
in
(3-12 cm) Least weasels are solitary, elusive creatures that
Weight
1
.7-3 oz
are hard to see, partly because they
;48-85 g)
fast
Key features Long,
sleek
and short
brown and
in
body with short
tail; flat,
legs
narrow head; fur reddish-
summer, with creamy-white neck turns white
belly;
winter
in
in
northern
and are gone
easily
be confused with
species of weasel
so
However, they are
a flash.
in
more common than people
move
realize.
They can
two other
at least
North America: the long-
in
populations tailed
Habits
Solitary, territorial
animals; fierce predators;
very active both day
Breeding
Up
to 2
and night
all
weasel (Mustela frenata) and the stoat, or
ermine (Mustela erminea).
year round
At a glance
all
three species look similar,
young born each year after gestation period of 34-37 days. Weaned at 3-4 weeks; females sexually
animal. The long-tailed weasel has distinct dark
mature
facial
live
litters
at
of 1-9
4 months, males
up to 10 years
at
in captivity,
8 months. usually
May
under a
but the least weasel
is
by far the smallest
markings, and both the long-tailed weasel
and the stoat have
bushy black-tipped
longer,
year in the wild tails.
Low
trill
a male
screech
to signal a friendly meeting
and a female;
when
between
Habitat
and
The European variant—the European
common
weasel
loud, harsh chirp or
disturbed or ready to attack
Mainly small rodents, especially mice; also rabbits, lemmings, moles, pikas, birds, fish, lizards,
insects
—was once regarded as
separate species, but
same
the
is
now
a
considered to be
species as the least weasel.
World's Smallest Carnivore
Almost anywhere providing suitable cover
Barely longer than a
rat,
and access to rodents, including meadows,
smallest carnivore
the world and the smallest
in
farmlands, prairies, marshes, and woodlands
of Distribution Northern Hemisphere: Canada, Alaska, Siberia, Japan,
northern U.S., northern
all
the mustelids.
Population abundant
One
of the
more
numerous small carnivores
the least weasel
is
the
has a long, sleek body
It
with short legs and a short
and narrow with
Europe, and Russia
Status
tail. Its
large black eyes
head
is
flat
and
prominent, rounded ears. During the
summer
months weasels have
a reddish-brown coat with
a creamy-white patch
on the neck and
early
fall
it
is
winter coat.
belly. In
replaced by a lighter-colored In
some northern weasel
populations, particularly
colder climates, the
in
coat turns completely white
in
winter.
The white
color gives the animals natural camouflage
against the
snow and
helps
them avoid
detection by predators.
Weasels have acute senses of
and hearing, and often stand on to scan their surroundings.
36
SEE ALSO
is
an elusive creature that
it is
hardly ever seen, remaining well hidden in
is
in
(17-25 cm); tail
smallest carnivore, the least weasel
abundant throughout a wide area of the Northern
head/body:
7-10
M us tela nivalis
•t
1:40,
Lemming, Norway 7:9
sight, smell,
their hind legs
They are incredibly
rl
WEASELS
LEAST WEASEL
quick and agile, and often dart around erratically or
bound along with
arched and their
their
backs
held straight out or
tails
pointing slightly upward. They have five clawed
toes on each foot, which they use to grab their prey and to climb trees. Their climbing ability
enables them to reach birds' nests, where they
can consume both eggs and chicks. They are also strong
swimmers. Weasels are powerful
animals for their size and are capable of
running 300 yards (275 m) while carrying a large
mouse
in
their
mouth!
Huge Appetites Weasels are so small and dynamic and have such a fast metabolic rate that
must eat almost
survive, they
weight
in
order to
in
half their
food each day. This means that they
must catch about two mice or one day lot
body
As
just to stay alive.
fat vole per
a result, they
spend
a
of time hunting, although they frequently
take short rests
in
one of
their dens.
Weasels are specialized predators of small rodents, but will also take birds, lizards, insects
whenever the opportunity
long, sleek
into the smallest crevices
and hunting rodents down
its
the weasel's head
body.
If
the rest of
arises. Their
body means that weasels are well
adapted to squeezing
In fact,
and
it
can squeeze
its
body
will
their
is
own
burrows.
the widest part of
its
head
into a hole,
follow without getting
stuck. Access to such tunnels provides weasels
with shelter from predators and also allows
them all
to hunt at any time of the day or night,
year round. They do not hibernate and can
hunt even under deep snow.
Weasels are renowned for being killers.
They catch small
prey,
efficient
which they
kill
with a few swift bites to the back of the neck. If
they encounter their prey head-on
tunnel, they
kill
it
in
a
with a crushing bite to the
windpipe. Weasels also hunt larger prey, which
Š Weasels have extremely acute senses of hearing,
and
smell.
They
will often
sight,
stand on their hind
legs to scan their surroundings.
37
SMALL CARNIVORES
they stalk quietly and then pounce on the victim's
back for a
the base of the
series of precision bites to
Males, which are often
skull.
twice the size of females, are more
hunt larger
likely to
while the females mostly look
prey,
for small rodents.
The weasel's mode of killing
whatever
whenever
can,
it
survival involves
can. Faced
it
with an abundance of mice, the voracious
weasel follows the only pattern will
at
knows and
it
more than
kill
any one time.
it
It
can eat
sometimes
stores surplus food for future
meals its
a side
in
chamber
den. Weasels are extremely
and can
versatile
wherever there shelter
them
live in
They use
log.
Weasels
live in a
variety of habitats,
including thickets
and
woodlands, as long as there
is
a
piles,
mountainous
junk heaps, abandoned
and burrows dug by mice, ground
buildings,
squirrels, or
may
rock
do not normally
They usually make
regions. in
and open
wetland areas, sandy
deserts, or
dens
for
to reproduce
country, but
their
suitable
is
forested, bushy,
a rotten
live
and enough food
successfully.
A weasel by
off
chipmunks.
chambers with grass or
nest
line their
sometimes the
fur
colder climates they
In
and feathers of
prey.
good supply of
suitable prey.
No Time
to Lose
Weasels only have a short reproduce frequently and
life
span, but they
prolifically.
food
If
supplies are high, weasels are able to take
advantage of the favorable conditions, and
diligently for her
female weasels can have up to two
By seven to eight weeks the cubs begin to
year.
The weasels usually breed from
spring to late
about as
litters
few
five
as
litter
size
accompany
early
summer, and the pregnancy
weeks. The
per
lasts
may range from
one or two young to as many as 20,
depending on food average of four to
supplies, although
six is
an
their
38
the
same
deaf.
They only open
eyes after 30 days. The mother cares
SEE ALSO Marten, American
1:48, Mink,
up,
kill
later
mother on foraging
trips
efficiently for themselves.
and
A few
the family group begins to break
and the young
their
rapidly.
mother's
start to disperse
home
away from
range.
Weasels are heavily dependent on rodent
an American one cent coin and are wrinkled,
and
weeks
most common.
Newborn weasels weigh about
pink, naked, blind,
can soon
their
young, which develop
as
populations Often
in
the spring,
populations are low, there in
is
when
rodent
an associated peak
weasel mortality, probably through
starvation.
American 1:52; Lynx 2:40, Coyote 2:58,
Fox,
However, weasels also Red 2:64
fall
victim to
predators, particularly owls
and martens, but
also coyotes, lynx, hawks, cats, foxes, mink,
even stoats. Weasels are also frequently by
traffic as
and
killed
they dash across busy highways.
nesting birds.
In fact,
weasels are often
killed in
a harvest
traps intended for stoats.
Weasels are superbly check populations of
efficient at
many
keeping
hundreds of mice
a year to
crawling
Least weasels are often regarded as vermin by
feed herself and her offspring. Any
gamekeepers and poultry farmers, and have
game
been widely hunted and trapped. They are
weasel's value as a destroyer of pest spec
thought to
kill
young game
birds but are not
birds or poultry
which cause untold
is
far
in
to
outweighed by the
losses to
nest.
is
and the
capable of
down burrows
and squeezing
into
crevices in pursuit
les,
growing crops and
cons dered so serious a threat as stoats, which
stored food. Without predators
can devastate fragile populations of ground-
such losses would be even greater.
;
damage
mouse
the weasel's diet,
animal
weasel
investigates
Rodents form the bulk of
One female
Farmer's Helpers
kill
in
species of rodents
that can be harmful to agriculture. will
A weasel
like
the weasel
39
Stoat The stoat range
—
Mustela erminea
—or ermine, as
is.
much of its most widespread member of the
the
mustelid family.
name
called in
range includes a wide variety of
Its
habitat from windswept arctic tundra to dense forest.
short-tailed weasel)
Scientific
it is
M usreJa erminea
Family
Muste dae
Order
Cam.vora
The stoat almost certainly evolved as a rodent-
catchmg spec
Leng f ~ head/boc. 7-12.5 length
5-5
1
Weight
in
Key features
nch brown with cream on
brilliant
round Habits
wh*te
m
bei'y;
.vith
tail;
body
may
turn
and long whiskers
and clrnb
well; active
and
solitary
and
rats
S rgle
m
tter of
agile; a territorial,
jsually 4-9>
young born
spring after gestation period of 10
including delayed
months, males at 12 months. 0 years
m
captivity,
May
many fewer
at
live
in
at
Shr
Diet
Carnivorous, includes small especially rodents
and
inside a tunnel.
forests
from
arctic
spine
Its
much
to travel
A
flexible,
is
faster than
its
stoat can streak
sudden leaps and bounds, and change an
instant.
It
direction
can also climb trees and rocks
and swim extremely
well. Stoats
found up to 50 feet
(1
have been
5 m)
in
(800 m) offshore
trees
and over They have
half a mile
crossed even larger expanses of water,
in lakes.
the wild
mammals,
rabbits; also birds
apparently unaided, to colonize small coastal
C
islands in parts of their range. Stoats are light
their explorations at high
enough
speed and not
to run along the surface of fresh snow,
and
but can also
move below
the surface, out of
and sheltered from the wind.
sight of predators Varied,
enough to follow
2-3
eggs. repMes and amphibians
Habitat
The
burrows and to turn
rabbits into
it
slim
s
up to
squeaks when excited
Voice
ii
almost equally
it
months
Weaned
mplantation)
6-8 weeks, females sexuaily mature
1
physical adaptations
through long grass at amazing speeds, take
predator
3-18
and
around
in
Breeding
its
short iegs might suggest.
Mainly nocturnal, terrestnal. but can swim
fierce,
but
smuous body
which adows
wmter; smat head with
ears, large eyes,
st,
and hunting techniques make
animal's
ong-bodied animal
.•."e,
a
effective n pursuit of other vertebrate prey. g)
short legs and longish, black-tipped fur
tail
(4-12 cm)
5-12 oz 42-340
'
17-32 cm);
ir
Stoats carry out
surprisingly
bum
up a
great deal of energy. The
tundra and moorland to
and meadows
Regional Differences
long, thin
body
inefficient
when
is
also
it
Distribution Northern Hemisphere ^Eurasia and North
America from within Arctic
Circle to latitude
There are as of stoat,
Status
Population abundant. v
Common
despread, but trapped for fur
as
29 recognized subspecies
most of them from North America,
where they are often known as
and in
many
some
areas
short-tailed
weasels. They are distinguished as
much by
geography as by any obvious physical characteristics.
As a general
rule,
American
stoats are smaller than those in the Old World,
and throughout the
stoat's
geographical range
males are bigger than females, sometimes twice the size Perhaps the most notable regional difference
is
that in higher latitudes stoats turn
white
m
zones
retain their
winter, while those in
brown
color
more temperate all
year round
Stoats are small, but they sometimes use surprisingly large
40
SEE ALSO
all
1
.
Arctic 2:70, Bear Family,
home
The 2:82
ranges
An
active
male
to conserving heat.
comes
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*3
SMALL CARNIVORES
Mas tela putorius Common name Scientific
Po^cat
name
A
Du tori us Family
Mustelidae
Order
Carnivora
Size
Length head/body:
12-18 tail
Polecats were persecuted relentlessly in the past as a means of protecting gamebirds and chicken houses
Vfusre/a
from
expanding
length:
5-6
in
Weight
female
nobility in
1-3
reputation for being bloodthirsty
lb (0.5-1 .4 kg)
in
were therefore believed to be in
summer, but
winter; bold, dark
mask pattern
on face throughout the year Mainly nocturnal;
solitary;
One
litter
young born about June mature
at
1
forages along the
Voice
Diet
after gestation period 1
in
the wild
May squeak and is
hiss occasionally, but sound not used for social communication
Mainly rabbits and voles; also birds, frogs, occasionally eels caught
whatever
is
in
wet
most abundant and
I,
Later, large
and many thousands were
grass;
killed.
numbers were trapped by
gamekeepers, especially
Weaned at month; sexually year. May live up to 14 years
captivity, 5 in
a threat to
England they were declared vermin by Queen
per year of 3-7 (can be up to 12)
of 42 days.
and
killers
livestock, especially chickens. In 16th-century
Elizabeth
ground; occasionally climbs
Breeding
medieval times. They also had a
with a long,
cat,
sinuous body; almost black pale cream
fur,
which was highly prized by the European
Key features Resembles short-legged
Habits
areas.
Polecats were often trapped for their fine
generally larger than
\
many
in
(30-46 cm);
in
(12-14 cm). Male
1
predation. However, present populations are
the 19th century.
in
Polecats are particularly vulnerable to traps, especially the old leghold traps used to catch rabbits.
The traps were often
or gaps
in
hedges and
polecats dive
in
set in rabbit holes
walls, exactly
and out searching
where
for prey.
Such traps were sometimes deliberately used to catch polecats, but
many more
polecats were
killed as a result of accidental trapping.
easiest
to catch
Habitat
Young
forestry plantations
and woodland, but mainly on farmland where there is plenty of cover in hedges, walls,
and old buildings
Distribution Western Europe from Britain and Spam east to the Black Sea and Baltic countries
Status
Population abundant Previously eradicated from Scotland and most of England, but now
Respite from Persecution Although polecats were once widespread and abundant, numbers decreased the
World War brought
First
from the
activities of
sharply.
However,
welcome
a
gamekeepers
reprieve
in Britain
and elsewhere, and soon polecat populations
began
recolonizing, thanks to reduced persecution
to increase.
survived parts of
was
in
Enough polecats had
remote areas to begin recolonizing
Wales and England, but the species
already extinct in Scotland. Polecats are not
and
much
parasites, but often
affected by diseases
fall
victim to poisoning,
usually as a result of eating poisoned rats.
Modern
many
rat
polecats
poisoning threat
poisons are very powerful, and
is
live
routine practice Another
comes from road
may be
see ALSO Weasel.
traffic.
annihilated as they play
attempt to cross
44
around farmyards where
Least 1:36, Stoat 1:40, Skunk. Striped 1:84
it.
However,
it
Whole in
rat
modern families
the road or
appears that
WEASELS POLECAT
new
forestry plantations provide excellent
polecat habitat, especially
and grass provide
where young
trees
huge populations
shelter for
of voles, a favorite food. Further assistance has
come from
the recovery of rabbits after the
disease myxomatosis devastated populations
the 1950s.
Britain in
The
ferret, a
polecat, has
domesticated form of the
been bred
in captivity
early as the 4th century B.C. initially is
in
now
It
from as
was
raised to assist with hunting, but
a familiar household pet,
especially in the United States.
Ambush Techniques Across Europe polecats seem to be a .
lowland species. However, urban areas and huge,
with
open arable
fields
cover and few prey
little
animals are uninviting habitats. Polecats have acute hearing and
|
good
night vision. They hunt mainly
after dark,
spending about four hours
every night searching for food, mainly
ambushing
rabbits
and
voles. Polecats will also
eat eggs, small birds, frogs, and the occasional eel
found wriggling
usually
wet
in
amble around
grass.
The animals
an unhurried manner,
in
pausing to investigate interesting sounds and smells,
but they can also
bounding
gait
move
rapidly with a
and with the back arched high.
Polecats are playful creatures, but normally live
alone, each occupying a
about 250 acres (100
may
home range
ha), within
of
which they
use five or more different dens. Polecats can produce a
pungent scent
from large scent glands. The scent
mark stones and
is
used to
logs within their territory
and
probably helps the animals recognize each other.
The scent glands
protection:
also provide
Few animals
will try
some
to attack
polecats because of their strong smell.
0 Polecats have luxurious
fur that
cream
mask pattern
year round.
all
dark colored
in
the summer. Their faces have a
winter, but pale
in
is
45
SMALL CARNIVORES
Black-Footed Ferret
Musteia nigripes
The black -footed ferret specialized
in
hunting prairie
dogs and suffered heavily when these animals were eliminated from agricultural areas. The ferrets ha\'e 3lack-footed ferret
been reintroduced
Musteia nignpes
but
Common name Scientific
name
its future is
to the wild from captive-bred stock,
precarious.
Family
Mustelidae
Order
Carnivora
Black-footed ferrets were never
Length head/body: 14-18
lived
Size
in
(36-45 cm); tail length: 5-6 in 2- 5 cm) Male generally about
(
1
1
more than
10%
prairies
2-2 4
lb (0
9â&#x20AC;&#x201D;1
3.5 miles (6 km). They used to be
found widely across the American short-grass
bigger than female
Weight
common. They
alone and were often spaced apart by
from Texas to beyond the Canadian
kg)
1
border. Over
90 percent of the
prairie dogs,
but the animals would also
ferrets'
food was
Key features
Slender animal the size of a small cat; pale yellow with short black legs, black mask, and
mice and other small
tail tip
Habits
get by on prairie
underground Breeding
what
Usually nocturnal; spends the day
3ne
tter of
March-Apnl
up to 6
young born
after gestation period of
1
in
(called a town), living as a
residence."
The black-footed for
Voice
Normally
Diet
Mostly small rodents, especially prairie dogs
Habitat
Grasslands
prairie
food and shelter has contributed to
dogs
its
silent
in
the wild. During the 20th
century whole prairie dog towns were plowed over or eliminated using traps, gassing, and
Distribution Formerly widespread
Midwest from Texas
to
in
poisons to
the American
Canadian border,
now
make way
for agriculture
Growing crops
ranching.
survives only as reintroduced populations in
prairie
Montana. South Dakota, and Wyoming Population about 500, mostly I
on
ferret's reliance
precarious situation
CITES
quite a small
in
Disappearing Food Source
1
the wild
Status
single ferret could
could catch
it
dog colony
"predator
A
45
Weaned at month; sexually mature at year May live 12 years in captivity, similar in
days '
(usually 3-4)
prey.
kill
since
dogs was
and
successfully
impractical,
among
the
and farmers found
their tractors often got stuck in collapsed in captivity;
burrows.
1975
Prairie
dog towns were
hazard for horses and their
broken legs and other tripping over dirt In
Kansas
dogs
with
riders,
injuries resulting
mounds and
many from
tunnel entrances.
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;a former stronghold of
prairie
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;over 98 percent of the towns were
eliminated
As a ferret
was
also a serious
in
fewer than 100 years.
result of the
numbers
also dwindled,
believed to have
of ferrets
and
demise of the
become
their tracks
prairie
dog,
and the species extinct
Sightings
were reported from
time to time, and a small population was '
discovered
46
SEE ALSO
(f
1:44
Dog, Black-Tailed 7:56
in
South Dakota, but
it
had died out
WEASELS BLACK-FOOTED
by 1974. -
Black-footed ferrets
commonly
inhabit the
In
of black-footed ferrets
Wyoming.
was found on
began, but the white-tailed
prairie
(rodents of the squirrel
which they mainly fed were
hit
over part
of the tunnel system as
predator
in residence.
into captivity to
a ranch in
extinction. Their
Detailed studies of the animals
burrows of prairie dogs
family), taking
Meanwhile,
1981 a substantial wild population
few
a
form an insurance against
numbers slowly
enough
by disease and
wild.
and
some back
Wildlife
into the
Over several years a few hundred were
restored to
the wild.
and
for the United States Fish
themselves caught canine distemper and died left in
built up,
total
by the end of 1991 there were over 300,
dogs on
Service to begin releasing
1987 there were none
had been taken
ferrets
suffered catastrophic losses. The ferrets
out. By
FERRET
Montana and South Dakota. They
began to breed, although rather
slowly; but
many
ferret
and the black-footed
died,
not securely reestablished on the
is still
prairies.
While reintroduced wild populations were
numbers
suffering setbacks,
of black-footed
continued to increase. By
ferrets in captivity
1996 there were more than 400 and today the animals are kept zoos and
in captivity, in
many
wildlife conservation centers.
The black-footed and
legal protection,
now
ferret
enjoys
dogs are no
prairie
longer massacred. The current problem challenging conservationists
is
that the
entire population of black-footed ferrets
comes from only
Wyoming inevitably
in
few animals removed from
a
the 1980s. The population has
become
inbred, resulting in limited
breeding success and poor survival of offspring. It
remains to be seen whether the newly
I restored populations â&#x20AC;&#x2122;
this
manage
will
to
overcome
problem and increase to form a viable wild
population. Even
if
they do,
black-footed ferrets
it
unlikely that
is
ever again be
will
widespread, because prairie dogs their existence relies
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;on whom
â&#x20AC;&#x201D; have long since
disappeared from huge areas of the Midwest.
Widely Dispersed Black-footed ferrets have offspring
in
litters
up to
six
the spring. The young emerge from
underground
in
early July, having
when
until
disperse.
Young females often
fall,
Adult males do not
live
stays
the young males
together
the
grown almost
The family
as large as their mother.
raise
of
stay nearby.
with their family or help
them. Black-footed
ferrets
widely dispersed to avoid too trying to feed off prairie
dogs
need to be
many animals in
any one place.
47
SMALL CARNIVORES
American Marten
SalnPs
A
Martes americana
charismatic small forest predator, the American
marten has suffered heavily from the
and
trappers
Common name
activities
of
also from habitat loss.
Americar
(American pine marten, American sable)
American martens are typically associated with Scientific
name
Martes americana
Family
Mustelidae
Order
Carnivora
Size
northern forests, particularly those dominated
by mature spruce and in
Length head/body: 20-27 length:
7-9
in
in
(50-68 cm);
trees.
They also occur
but the most distinctive
forests,
features of their habitat are the complex
mixture of different species, the different ages
Weight 10-44 oz (280-1,250
If
tail
(18-23 cm)
deciduous
fir
and the presence of glades and
of the trees,
Male
g)
generally at least a third bigger
clearings.
Such habitat generally has abundant
than female
and diverse Key features Slender
cat-sized animal with short legs
and bushy
tail;
fur ranges
from pale brown to
prey.
The martens
using different areas at different times of year,
depending on food
almost black with an orange or yellowish
move around
will
availability.
throat patch
Habits
Breeding
Active throughout the year and also at any
Disappearing Habitats
time of day or night; climbs well
Martens are found across much of North
Up
to 5 (usually 3)
young born once
the spring after gestation period of
Weaned 1
Voice
Diet
in
live
1
America from Alaska through the forested parts of
Canada and
States.
7 years
in captivity,
east into the eastern United
silent,
At one time they were also
common
the wild
sometimes makes chuckling
in
fairly
the southeastern United States.
However, the harvesting of trees and clearing of forests to
Wide
deprived the animals of enormous areas of
variety of small animals; also insects,
and seeds
Deciduous and coniferous forests
also Rocky
Mountains and
lustrous fur of the
Sierra
Nevada
Population abundant Widespread but elusive, rare
make way
for farmland
have since
suitable habitat. Moreover, the dense
Distribution From Alaska eastward to eastern Canada;
Status
in
month.
noises or gives the occasional scream
fruit,
Habitat
15
Normally
a year
6 weeks; sexually mature at
at
5-24 months May
at least
1
and declining
in
some
places
marten made
target for fur trappers,
easy to catch. As a
it
and
a prime
and the animals were
result,
martens were
eliminated from the southern part of their natural range
many
and have become quite
M
rare in
other parts of their range, too.
American martens do not hibernate and are active
throughout the
year.
They hunt mainly on fcv
the ground, although they can also climb well.
They are perfectly capable of swimming, but do not enter the water unless absolutely necessary, preferring to cross streams by
overhanging trees and
way
of
logs.
American martens have a very varied
and more than 100
48
SEE ALSO
1:50; Mink,
different types of
American 1:52. Vole, Southern Red-Backed 7:94
diet,
food have
8:
4
-
WEASELS AMERICAN MARTEN
substances
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
precisely to deter animals such as
martens. However, the American marten
wholly carnivorous and quantities of fruit
in
will also
the
fall
eat large
and even
seeds. The indigestible remains of
its
can be seen as chewed fragments
ripe
varied diet
in its
shiny
open
black feces, which are often deposited on tracks
and prominent
mark out
its
not
is
probably to help
logs,
territory.
Martens are extremely active creatures and
move
can
when
rapidly
they need
They
to.
trot
and bound around, stopping frequently to investigate likely places to find food. their foraging
done
is
early in the
in
the evening, although martens
at
any time of the day or night.
Most
of
day and
late
may be
active
Delayed Implantation Martens are
territorial,
and each one
lives
alone, except during the breeding season.
male may
live
with a chosen female for a
couple of weeks
in
time the animals
will
in
mock
the summer, during which
with several partners
becoming quite result of the loss of to farming
and
rare in places as a its
forest habitat
egg remains
the wall of the uterus and developing
normally. until
mammals such
As a
However, they
will also
result,
food, and the weather
many
fallen log.
They grow
ground
mother. Males
mice
is
pocket gophers, and even
due to the
common and
fact that such prey
easy to catch
forest clearings.
Martens
in
and
eat birds
if
they can catch them and any large-bodied insects,
plenty of
challenging.
in
the family.
den among
a
in
rapidly,
except those that produce evil-tasting
and by
are almost as large as their
will
grow
to at least one-third
bigger than females. The young face few predators and are nimble
is
the long grass of
will also
is
boulders, a hollow tree, or the shelter of a
eat mice and
hares. Their preference for voles
less
is
there
as five babies
The offspring are born
midsummer they
snowshoe
when
average three young, but sometimes
occasionally larger animals, such as chipmunks, squirrels,
the young are not born
the following April,
Litters
as red-backed voles.
fertilized
as
200 days before implanting
for over
there are as
small
in
delayed implantation. The
logging.
been reported. Their main prey consists of
only a month, but births
known
itself in is
lasts
The
a season.
in
midwinter are avoided by a process
dormant
Š The American marten
and indulge
play together
They mate many times, often
fights.
pregnancy
A
likely attackers.
time
when
it
is
enough
However, winter hard to find
deep snow. Nevertheless, and some martens
live
for
is
to escape a difficult
mammal
prey under
survival rates are high,
up to
1
5 years.
49
SMALL CARNIVORES
Fisher The fisher
is
Martes pennanti
a large marten.
an opportunistic
It is
predator and one of the few animals that hunts porcupines. However, trapping for the fur trade has
Common name Scientific
name
eradicated
Mustelidae
Order
Carnivora
Fishers are medium-sized
Length head/body: 18.5-29.5
Weight
12-16.5
length
tail
Male 7.7â&#x20AC;&#x201D;1 2
lb (3
(47-75 cm);
in
5â&#x20AC;&#x201D;5.5
kg), occasionally
up
(2-2.5 kg)
Key features Cat-sized weasel with short bushy
long,
relatively large,
tail;
head
rounded
is
long body,
legs,
wedge shaped,
ears; coat
Active any time of day
in
Breeding
probably
fishers
litter
do not eat
named by American
mature for
year,
1
10 years
males
settlers
who
fitches or fitch ferrets.
Fishers are
sometimes
because of
their luxuriant fur.
called
American sable
Growls, hissing coughs, or
clicks,
but
which
means they
will
eat any animal they can catch.
few animals
f
young
trees by
that will eat
makes them popular with can
removing
damage
or even
their bark. Fishers
also eat the flesh of large
dead animals, such as
deer and moose.
Porcupine Hunt
When
hunting porcupines, a fisher travels long
normally silent
distances on familiar routes, inspecting most of Diet
Porcupines,
snowshoe
hares,
and small
the porcupine dens along the way.
If
it
rodents; also carrion, birds, eggs, insects, reptiles,
Habitat
Mature
and amphibians; some forest
fruit
and nuts
encounters a porcupine, there
drawn out attack
and swampy woodlands
is
usually a long,
that can last over half an
hour. Porcupines are usually attacked Distribution Northern
U
S
extends south
Status
and Canada, in
ground.
up and
Population unknown, perhaps tens of
thousands Protected
in
some U
S.
states
If
one
is
up
try to force
the porcupine attack.
The
falls
to
keep
its
a tree, the fisher will climb it
to the
end of a branch.
to the ground,
its
face.
When
During such charges
which has no protective
it
it
is
quills,
n,
soft,
its
tries
face
spiny
flailing its its
and the
when
exhausted, the fisher
and attacks the
i
to
can, the
exposes
attacks repeatedly. Eventually,
SEE ALSO
open
The porcupine
porcupine charges backward,
porcupine
is
back toward the fisher and
close to a tree trunk.
tail.
it
If
fisher circles the porcupine,
attempting to bite
50
on the
distribution
mountainous regions
porcupines
a branch
attacking
live
the wild
in captivity, similar in
will kill tree
ground.
Fishers are generalized predators,
kill
May
trees.
end of
spring
sexually
They
branches of
which are also known as
352 days (including
at 2 years.
in the
by knocking them off the
foresters, since porcupines
2-4 months; females
at
at
They were
fish.
and even hunt
noticed their similarity to European polecats,
trees with ease
an uncertain period of delayed implantation).
Weaned
the wild. Contrary to
alive in
porcupines. Their diet
after gestation period of
Voice
name,
seen
meeting during the mating season; mainly
in
Fishers are excellent
some of their prey
rarely
They are among th
per year of 1-5 pups born
0
and are
hours; territorial and mainly solitary, only
One
largest
dark and
is
short bouts of 2-5
ground dwelling, but climbs
mammals and the
climbers
vanes between sexes, seasons, and individuals
Habits
States.
of the martens. They are shy, elusive creatures
their
(30-42 cm)
in
to 19.8 lb (9 kg); female 4 4-5.5 lb
and
from many parts of the United
Marxes pennanti
Family
Size
it
Fisher
face, fisher
the
flips
it
over
unprotected underbelly.
American 1:48, Porcupine, North American 8:20
All
and
them on the
come together
briefly for
breeding, and the males do not stay to help rear the family.
spring
in
other prey bite to the
fisher
the
is
killed
with a quick
back of the neck. The
consumes the porcupine from
liver,
and leaving the
feet,
and
skin, large
bones,
During attacks on
intestines.
porcupines fishers freguently get their body.
in
quills
They do not seem to
cause serious discomfort, but can be lethal
if
they puncture a
vital
organ.
Fishers travel fairly long distances
when ),
hunting and use temporary dens for
when
particularly
logs,
trees or
progress
is
made
brush
piles,
or tree roots,
are rarely used for
more than two
Fishers are territorial and, like
mark
and scent from flank,
in
hollow
ground burrows, or under snow. They
mustelids,
hollow trees or on rocky
Although blind and helpless
months and
after four
at birth,
own
their
kill
prey
are fully independent by
their first winter.
Threats to Survival Threatened by the fur trade and logging, fishers have been eradicated from many parts of their original range, particularly
coastal parts of the United States. Their
persecution to
still
Because they
most severe
will
in
the early furs,
but
silky pelts of
the
eat carrion, fishers are
easy to bait and trap. They are legally in
some
still
states. In others
hunted
they are
listed
as threatened
and given protection.
many
also suffering
from the effects of deforestation.
anal, cheek,
abdominal, neck,
like
is
also
used to communicate during the breeding
find receptive females.
its
females are particularly valuable.
Many
will travel
at
continues today. The black,
ranges with urine
when males
was
mid-1900s owing to the fashion for
home
their
along the western
or three days.
and feet glands. Scent marking
season,
in
they grow guickly. They can
by heavy snowfall. Dens are usually
under
in
eating the heart, lungs, and
belly,
stuck
are born
nursing dens that are usually well
concealed high ledges.
Young
long distances to
Males and females only
to
down
of the old-growth forests
make
their nursing
for timber
if
which they
dens are being cut
and other commercial
Fishers dislike crossing
vulnerable
in
Fishers are
uses.
open areas and so
the forests they inhabit
broken into small patches.
are
become
SMALL CARNIVORES
American
Mink
Mustela vison
A widespread waterside predator in North America, thi. Amt lean mink has also become established i
Common name Scientific
name
m parts of Europe, American mink
successful but
Mustehdae
Order
Carnivora
American mink are widespread and
Length head/body: 12-18.5 tail
Weight
9-4
1
(0
5-9
length
lb (0
dark-brown
in
(30-47 cm);
substantially smaller than otters
(13-23 cm)
9-1 8 kg); female 1-1
darker .8 lb
pencil.
They are
Mainly nocturnal; swims and dives; uses
and smell
lairs
among
tree roots at water's
One
distinctly unpleasant.
Mink are
usually associated with slow-
rivers
and lowland
lakes, preferring
4-6 young born April-May after gestation period of 39-78 days, including a
places
variable period of delayed implantation.
bankside vegetation. Each has a hunting
litter
of
Hisses
when
lakeshore.
about
threatened;
some
high densities, as
Mostly lowland areas beside
on rockpool
and
Distribution .anada. eastern and most of central U introduced to Europe: in Britain. France, Spain, Ireland, Scandinavia,
common
in
upland
places they have established
many
mink behave rather
rivers, lakes,
less
colonies along the coast. Here they can reach
mammals, waterside birds and their eggs, also some invertebrates such as beetles and worms, especially along coasts
ponds, also marshland and along seashores
plenty of overhanging
half a mile of riverbank or
may scream
small
is
Mink are
areas, but in
defiantly in self-defense, but usually silent Fish, frogs,
where there
territory of in
the wild
mile (1.6
km) of
fish,
as three individuals per
coastline. like
Along the seashore
coastal otters, feeding
but also climbing steep grassy
slopes to raid gulls' nests.
cliff
S. Italy,
Lone Rangers
and Iceland
Mink are Status
wet. Their droppings are easily
burrows and
Weaned at 5-6 weeks; sexually mature at 2 years May live for 10 years in captivity, 2-3
Habitat
and much
deposited on rocks and logs at the water's edge
flowing
Diet
when
about the diameter of a
pointed muzzle
for itself
Voice
common
recognized, being black and cylindrical and
short-legged, glossy black or
edge, also rabbit burrows, but does not dig
Breeding
fairly
appearing almost black,
in color,
especially
cat;
proving a
across most of North America. They are
5-0 8 kg)
Key features Resembles
Habits
in
it is
unwelcome invader
Mustela vison
Family
where
:
Population abundant Increasing
in
Europe
active at dusk
and
after dark,
bounding around on land and swimming and diving underwater. They are unsociable
A
creatures, territory.
and each one tends
Male
territories
to live in
do not
its
own
overlap, but
often include parts of the territories of one or
more females.
spring
In
out on long journeys
may
travel
There
52
SEE ALSO
1:58; Ott>
is
new
mate mink
no
of the males set
search of females and
widely across the countryside,
helping colonize finding a
in
some
pair
areas.
still
However, even after
do not
set
up
families.
J
bond, and after mating the
an River 1:64,
Otter, Sea 1:72
l t
WEASELS AMERICAN MINK
animals litter
year, usually in April or
each
average
produce only one
apart. Females
live
size
litter
four to
is
six
May. The
young, although
mink can produce many more. The
captive
two months
babies spend up to
mother's nest, normally
dense tree
in
in
their
burrow or among
a
They are weaned
roots.
about
at
five
and the family disperses soon
to six weeks,
grow
afterward. The babies
rapidly to reach
adult size before the end of the year and are
capable of breeding the following spring.
Females can
few reach
still
breed at seven years, although the wild, and most mink
this
age
in
die within the
first
three years of
life.
Dangers Faced Young mink tend
to disperse
away from
mother's
sometimes
traveling
territory,
than 6 miles (10 km) to
live.
new
established a
mink tend to stay
territory,
the
in
same
patch well, since they are
in
place,
know
often for several years. They need to
home
more
search for a place
in their
Once they have
their
their
constant
danger from gamekeepers, farmers, and trappers.
Thousands are
may drown
killed
each
year.
On
traps set to catch fish.
in
other hand, mink have
little
to fear
Others the
from natural
predators and are well able to defend
themselves
attacked by foxes or cats.
if
Perhaps that
is
why
they are often active
broad daylight, although their main takes place after dark,
more
beetles,
activity
prey animals are
be found.
likely to
Mink eat
when
in
and
fish
birds,
worms, and other
but also take
invertebrates.
Most
of their prey consists of small creatures, but
often mink
will
attack rabbits.
they
In fact,
will
eat almost anything apart from fruit and other plant material.
they spend
less
Mink are such successful hunters than 20 percent of their time
away from the den. The away
are safely tucked
Š Mink are
rest of
the time they
asleep or grooming their
solitary creatures
and only meet
However, after breeding, they do not set up the female raises the
young
to breed.
families,
and
alone.
53
SMALL CARNIVORES
produced, ranging from silver-white to cream, as well as the natural dark chocolate-brown.
The mink industry expanded
and
in Britain
Europe during the 1950s, producing more than a quarter of a million skins per year. But the
mink
is
able to climb and squeeze through
and
small gaps,
many
inevitably
escaped. The
animals often proved adaptable and survived successfully
in
the wild, despite attempts to
Mink spread widely and within
eradicate them.
30 years occupied most also
of Britain.
found over most of
Iceland,
They were
Norway, and
Sweden. Today they continue to spread eastward
established
now
mainland Europe and are
in
also
in Ireland.
Invaders of Europe The American mink's extraordinarily successful invasion has
mammals
added another species to the
of Europe, but
accompanied by serious sleek
and
lustrous
old rabbit
The den may be
burrow among rocks or
brushwood, but edge.
fur.
it
is
a separate
may
entrance underwater. Each mink several
Mmk
dens at different times of the
use year.
do not hibernate, although they become
significantly less active during winter
months.
spread has been
losses of native
animals. The rare European mink ( Mustela lutreola) has
now become
almost extinct, and
Britain
the water vole has disappeared from
lucrative business,
nearly
90 percent of
and
common. Mink
trade
a
was once
a
mink coat was
considered the height
managed
of luxury. However,
offshore
fur has since fallen
in safety,
out of fashion.
Here they have
are
sites
where
was formerly
to reach islands over 2 miles (3
where seabirds had
km)
previously nested
protected by the surrounding water. killed
hundreds of adult birds
and
Mmk
colonies have been wiped out
have a glossy coat that has been highly
it
chicks, as well as eating the eggs. in
Whole
the space of
few breeding seasons, and
some
prized by the fashion industry. Although wild
only a
mmk
places seabirds have been almost eliminated.
are easy to catch, trappers could not
enough
result, special
especially in
skins to
meet demand. As
When mink
a
mink farms were established,
Europe Mink were
from America to European
fur
first
farms
in
Second World War. However,
postwar years
raising
seen as a lucrative animals bred well
mink
in
the
for the fur trade
was
new moneymaker. The in captivity
and could be fed
cheaply on unwanted animal waste, including bits of
get into parks with captive
cause mayhem,
killing
many
birds.
chicken from the expanding broiler fowl
where there eat.
Gamekeepers regard mink
because they take many gamebird chicks and eggs. However, recent studies suggest that
mink numbers may be recolonize
mink.
In
rivers,
falling in Britain as otters
perhaps displacing the smaller
the United States mink
seem
breeding even more valuable colored furs were
better balance with nature
Water 7:98
They also
as vermin
problem, so perhaps one day they
Vole,
they
are high densities of juicy trout to
industry Moreover, through careful selective
SEE ALSO
fly),
create havoc on chicken farms and fish farms
the
1920s, but only small numbers were kept until after the
in
ducks (often pinioned so they cannot
imported
in
good syvimmers and have
Fur Farming
obtain
54
fur farm in Estonia.
Breeding mink for the fur
piles of
always close to the water's
may sometimes have
It
ŠA
an
in
its
in
will
less of a
achieve a
Europe, too.
WEASELS AMERICAN MINK
The In
Freedom
Price of
1998 animal
British fur
was an
fur farming
is
right or
irresponsible act, widely
conservationists
European Mink
wrong,
it
condemned by
and animal welfare groups. The
mink posed
released
broke into
farms and released thousands of
Whether
mink.
rights supporters
a serious threat to
many
its
other species, and such releases were also cruel
bred
many
captivity for
in
generations: Like pet
mice or guinea pigs, they were unaccustomed to
the wild. Large numbers were easily
life in
recaptured, since they had no idea
being caught.
Many were were
roads. Others
how
also run over
to avoid
on the
annoyed landowners and gamekeepers. Some mink even found
way
their
similar in
American cousin, but has
a
white area around
appearance to
upper
lip.
its
European mink prefer to
rather than lakes
Spain, Estonia,
and
coast, but have
into people's houses,
is
live
now found
only
has disappeared from
It
about 80 percent of decline.
in
small areas of France, of the rest of
and the invading
American mink.
in
in
notably scarce
and Romania, having been driven out loss
still
beside fast-flowing water
become
Europe by habitat
made
by dogs or shot by
killed
is
recent times. The species
mink themselves, since they-had been
to the
T
he native European mink (Mustela lutreola)
its
former range and
is
Urgent efforts are being
to establish captive-breeding
colonies from which the species might
one day be restored to the
wild.
having been driven by hunger to enter through the cat flap
in
search of food.
The rare European mink (above) has a white
Fashions have changed, and fur coats are
no longer so much less profitable
in
demand. Mink farming
today than
it
patch around
its
upper
lip.
is
once was, and
animal welfare legislation imposes
many
conditions on the managers
numbers of
of fur farms. Large
businesses have closed leaving fewer
mink
down,
in captivity.
However, populations of wild
American mink to prosper
in
Europe
and are
likely
contii
to remain
permanently established there.
Š An American mink returns to a
henhouse
in
Britain to
feed on hens
killed the
previous night.
Mink have
also
it
been
responsible for losses to
many
native animals.
*
f .
SVA„ C~'\\ Oc ES ,
Wolverine A
a ferce and greedy predator. Ruthless
persecution res resulted in
Soe-'rrfK rvame
?ve--ne 3 ,"Cr. sku-k .
iVcl.t-
’jes
a*£ olinc a^cxnd the
ocw
Family
Arctic
Oder
cota conditions sng
in
As a rcsAt an >ea'
We>gnt 2Z-65
fc
A-Ef
*.
;
Mate
.
ctse' a-
:
ma .vw
a-ge oowe^j paws. coat pare» cr *ace
Mabrts
a: *eas:
'
0*i*
ana
Soi'-a*. creaturc
s*vrt oa'*.
o-g
we:
rrvats
m
>ov\
covering over 30
woe>
tt
One
fctrcr
c* jC to
Fefcnary-MVct)
wW enough *ood
bom esanor pe-'oo
afte^
The summer
a:
S-'O
<m
arc orowfc wn?- annoyed
he spent out cr
w w grate to We shelter of
some: mes youmeynng jp to 50
A though
SO sses
n a day Often
open tund'a or mountainsides Out come the
of
*orc$ts
~
—
myths may
wnter wohennes vVeanec
v
we'e s only one wolverine n nore wan 200
w oe\ mams
- bates
oe avec replantation
Voter
<e the wolvenne
to *eec sometimes
-£
es
so^arc mnes 500 so. Breeding
sno\%
afsc playful
f
werc
too
ts
much
of it the s*xxt-
chasing ang
dtfftcutty
caotunng prey As a result winter
Wet
m we
spent »'»ne'e
Mountainous
‘o'ests
ts
rcatne shelter of con
normally
*er forests
of,
ocx. arcas ana Tunara
a-srexte:: across
nerwem
Eurcoe
Although wolverines normally prey on sma crcaturcs such as Arctic narcs and
lemmmgs,
Wev must mave We most o4 any food
manage
to
*
no
n the
ripe Pe~*es to eat
and many
young mammals and During leaner
:
mes
they
there are plenty of
fall
experienced
birds that arc easy to k
the
wo verne wl
sometimes attacx animals as arge as oee* and
w»d
sheep, storing surplus food for ate' (The
woher ne$ powerful aws mean
down
animals
much
*
te-
There arc
can drag
larger
than
to t
more than
wohen ne s tendency has gnen nse tc
it
l
ts reputation as
many
foHc tales
tsetf.)
The it
needs
a wanton
about the
cunrung and boodthirsbness of wolverines Rjr
56
SEE ALSO
2:70. Bear
2 --
.
—
'c
'»
a<-.
7:9C
'-arc
-
C
8 S2
‘
.*
o
rc s
r>e-~re’ o*
fmmffi iv
I
«5 ;
me
Of
e-ges:
me and
It is territorial
oerc-c ts
OeSf
s-a
33Ce3'r '‘aE
aoo/'ist
we same
the sncn% s usualy ess deeo
Waste Not Want Not Ostnbut»on
'ic: w *
m les
they can cope with oeec
eggeo wofvennes nave
Habitat
Arctx: a
number. Wofvennes ~eed
~we* must ,\5ooe'
ana bushy
we
rue cm
—pawicua-ty D'esators
tend tc be
3->a
we
mean ws:
nters
.v
brow*' bur
'.axs, tai thict
war -cams
egs
eases of
Amenca and E„-ope The
North
hjge arcas to provoe them
Ke> features
rare.
g~cw stow>> and orey animals s re scarce
plants
-
becoming quite
it
oe-S'
3 c
3*
ouh
woh enne has a
nararalh' scarce animal the
re pi tatior as
Com'non nanie
Gulo
sex
home
orvn
of
WEASELS AOLVER
trappers
comp
a n that t h e an mafs steal :
from
their traps,
and e naeer henfs^en fear that
wolverines
w
r
attack the
r
Wolverines are senstive creatures and eas y disturbed. The remote areas
animals.
Wolverines mate n the
summe and would r
normally give birth after a few weeks However, they avoid producing young process result,
just
m
known
in
midw
nter by a
as delayed implantation.
time for the long days and
abundant food supp es of the
As
a
about Apr
the babies are not born unt
relatively
Arctic
summer.
The young continue to use the mothers de~ until
May. They stay within her normal
range
until
home
about August. After that they tend
once
accessible.
are shot
sight,
not just
species
seems
likely
Wolverines were at one time found
it
to rvn
snow without
on
sinking
in.
V
much
farther south in Europe than they are today,
even into Germany.
the United States they
In
used to occur across the whole continent as far south as Arizona and
New
Mexico. Today they
are extinct east of Montana, with a
British
5,000 animals.
widespread
still
Columbia
Scandinavia wolverines have
freeze together
now
and
Siberia,
Canada, about
known about numbers
also for their fur. Their long hairs tend not to
Ruspia
in
a stronghold with
s
Little is
few
and Idaho.
in California
in
t^e intense cold of tne Arctic,
feet allow
to suffer further decline.
because of the damage they might cause, but
in
The wolverine's broad
woivennes are regarded as threate°ed, and the
and on
which they
The remaining populations of
Wolverines are
The Human Threat
in
becoming more
lived in safety are
remaining
to disperse, especially the males.
Many wolverines
ME
but
in
northern
become
rare
and
occur mainly n the remote mountains of
so the pelts are prized by local people for
Norway and Sweden.
trimming the hoods of winter coats.
are
left
n the
It
whole of
s
thought tnat only 40
Finland.
57
SMALL CARNIVORES
European Otter European
popular creatures. However, few
otters are
people have ever seen one or are Common
Mustelidae
Order
Carnivora
Size
Length head/body 24-35 tail
The European otter
length: 14-18.5 in
m
shoulder about 6
20%
so, since
in
family
(60-90 cm);
(35-47 cm); height
at
(15 cm). Male about
and has
a member of the weasel
s
body with
a typical long, thin
short legs. However, the similarities
much
Otters are large and spend
end
there.
of their time
bigger than female in
Weight 13-37
[
do
urbanization and pollution.
Family
•HI
likely to
they are becoming increasingly rare as a result of
Scientific
1
Lutra lutra
water. They are probably
more abundant
(6-17 kg
lb
than people think, but they are very elusive
Key features _ong,
tapenng
long,
wth
creatures. Finding signs of otters
all
4
feet are
on
webbed
Usua
ly
bom
in
mud, but the most
soft
important otter signs are spraints (droppings).
may
during the day
2-3 cubs
easier than
seeing the real thing. Their web-footed tracks are distinctive
land, usually nocturnal, but
come out
is
dark-brown fur
L ,es alone; swims and dives well but can be act ve
Breeding
light- or
tail;
and
legs
broad, flattened head, small ears, and
small eyes,
Habits
body with short
slender
Evidence of Otters
after gestation period
Otter droppings are smeared onto rocks and
of 2 months; births at any time of year in
western Europe, more seasonal
and
Weaned
east.
mature
at
captivity,
at
about 3-4
Voice
Occasional
Diet
Slow-swimming
shrill
the north
in
live
up to 15 years
in
the wild
Edges of
rivers
rocky coasts
in
fish, especially eels,
and
but also
in
oil.
—
50 years
unpleasant to humans.
hairs,
Declining
in
extinct in parts of
most
Europe
areas; in
the
meaning that
Otters are riparian species, river
In
few
a
places, Ireland
and
western Scotland, for example, they may
live
along the coast, feeding on rockpool
and
A
the day. different
live,
in
often
may
among
from grass and twigs, deep
An
fish
need a secure
which to shelter during
single animal
lairs,
otters
use more than 20
tree roots or
ground Sometimes they make a
otter can travel over
in
soft
above
couch
a thicket.
6 miles (10 km)
in
a night
and sometimes uses 50 miles (80 km) of
river in
a year Coastal otters usually have
much
smaller territories, only a mile or so long That
C tter.
N
which are essential
for keeping the animal
banks, lake edges, and other
place close to water
SEE ALSO
otter
underfur and long guard
crabs Wherever they
58
© A European
bits
droppings of most mustelids, they do not smell
waterside habitats.
last
bones, scales, and
possesses short, dense
Population widespread but scarce, IUCN I.
fish
of crayfish or crabs, for example. Unlike the
they frequent
become
patch of thick
Closer inspection reveals characteristic
of North Africa
has
like a
south
Lanka, Malaysia, Sumatra, and parts
Vulnerable. CITES
only about 2 to 3
itself,
areas
Europe east to China and Japan, also
Status
proportion to the otter
fragments of prey
Distribution From Britain throughout most of western
India, Sri
fresher than others. They are small in
look tarry and black, almost
lakes, often in reed beds;
some
some
small groups,
in
inches (6 to 8 cm) long and rather slender. They
whistle, otherwise silent
mussels, shrimps, crabs, and lobsters
Habitat
logs as scent markers, often
with
4 months; sexually
May
year
1
in
encan River 1:64,
Otter, Giant River 1:68
is
well insulated in water.
WEASELS EUROPEAN OTi
perhaps Decause *ood r
f
^ore abundsr:,
is
since
oc*'Doo *3" are easier to catch than :he b'gger sh
found
n rivers. _arge r -ers are noi
^ecessar y best for otters and they ofter nunt in
streams and
here and
Otter Conservation
ft is
tr
outaries There
is
more food
r
eas;e to catch fish n pools and
O
nce a population of a scarce species becomes small and thinly dispersed,
it is
highly vulnerable to extinction
population by releasing captive-bred animals
may
and may be
Boosting the
help save a species
sha low streams than n arge bod es of water
That has been attempted
Tne
Beginning n 1983, captive-bred otters were released into
r
so
i
otter's ears are qurte
very acute. Sight
ofsmei sigrt
but rearing
aiso good,
ar d
ts
the sense
mam
senses used
land otters can run at speeds equivalent
to a fast
waikmg
swtm
pace, but in the water they
faster than
adapted for feet *or
.
kewise very important; Underwater,
ts
and touch are the
On
car.
ts
smai
life *n
humans. Otters are wel
water. They have
swimming, and the long
tai
webbed forms a
rucder behind The the body twists and turns to allow swift
changes of direction and detatled
expl orator of
underwate r nooks and crannies.
systems to bred,
ft rs
known
population
been
gaps
fill
m
in
in Britain
river
the wild otter population. The animals soon
that at least 25 otters
were added to the
local
eastern England The use of captive-bred animals has
criticized
because they have been produced by a limited number
of animals and might be inbred. However,
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;even
inbreeding
tried elsewhere.
in
all
rare animals nsk
the wild. Restocking with unrelated animals
may
actually he'p reduce the problem. Further support can be given to
otters by providing suitable lying-up sites in the
thickets or
mounds
of earth
and
form of planted
logs at the water's edge.
SMALL CARNIVORES
The
fur
very thick, allowing the otter to
is
warm and
remain
dry even
water However, as pressure squeezes characteristic
surface.
The
trail
it
air
freezing-cold
in
dives, increasing
out of the
water
leaving a
fur,
of bubbles rising to the
insulating effect of the fur
is
therefore reduced, causing loss of body heat.
That
is
dive
in
is
less
one reason why
shallow water where the water pressure
The
making otters
otters normally only
it
the fur also creates buoyancy,
air in
hard work to stay underwater, so the
soon get out of breath. Dives are
therefore short, and otters rarely stay
submerged
for
more than about 30
40
to
seconds. They also spend less than 20 to 30
minutes get
the water before coming ashore to
in
warm They
shake their fur
dry,
sometimes
running around with an arched body or in
rolling
the grass.
Versatile Hunters Otters are predators of prey caught
in
and feed on
a
wide
the water, including
variety
fish
weighing several pounds, frogs, and crustaceans However, they also catch land
animals such as rabbits and the occasional
They are very
flexible in their
bird.
hunting behavior,
being able to adjust their technique to cope with whatever opportunities arise They
will
nuzzle submerged stones to catch crayfish hiding underneath, grope feel for fish
among
sleeping bird on
its
in
muddy water
to
tree roots, or grab a
Most
nest
of their diet
consists of fish seized in the teeth. Shallow
pools are best, because the
fish
cannot
easily
get away, and the otter can breathe every
seconds
Many
dives are unsuccessful, but
few
young animals. Adults cannot spare much
in
energy for play
effort
and time are better
shallow rockpools the animals might find food
spent searching for food. Adults do not often
every once
meet
in
three dives. Otters need the
equivalent of about three
1
-pound (0.5-kg)
fish
per day to satisfy their hunger. Otters normally
alone or
live
and
also
make
in
a family
a sharp bark, but otherwise they
are not particularly vocal animals. Captive otters play a
lot,
behavior
but play seems to be relatively rare
in
the wild and usually involves only
SEE ALSO
f
in
the wild; and
be a serious
when
fight, especially
they do, there
between
may
rival
males. Fights involve squealing and chasing and
group They occasionally emit a loud whistle
60
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;the
(T
iropean 8:70
sometimes
biting, until
up and runs away they
and
may in
indulge
If
in
a
one
of the animals gives
male and female meet,
vigorous romping on land
the water. Mating takes up to half an
hour and happens either on land or while
swimming. Afterward, the two animals separate
The European
lithe,
otter's
elongated body and
webbed
feet are built for
vigorous swimming. The
long
tail
forms an
effective rudder
and
allows for deft
maneuvers when searching for food.
WEASELS EUROPEAN
make
Otter cubs suckle frequently and
grow
chirruping noises. They
weeks
or
weight
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;the
more
size at
open. Cubs take
weeks
(0.9 kg)
in
which the eyes begin to food from about seven
solid
of age, but
little
slowly, taking five
pounds
to reach 2
OTTER
it
will
be another three
weeks before they venture outside the den months
Otters are three
play.
first start
to swim,
to
old before they
and the mother may
be
still
catching over three-quarters of the food for
cubs nearly eight months leave
home when
old.
territory of their
than
five years,
finally
they are about a year old.
New-found independence and many young
The cubs
a very tricky time,
is
otters die as they search for a
own. Few
otters survive
and probably only one
more 100
in
reaches 10 years of age.
Chemical Poisoning The main threats to European otters are food shortages and accidents, especially getting run over on the roads.
Some
and drown. Others
fish traps
caught
otters get fall
in
victim to
insecticides used to protect crops. Toxins build
up
in
the animals' bodies,
leaving
them
killing
them
or
infertile.
Across Europe the effects of industrial pollution
and acid
the food
rain are affecting
supplies of fish on which the otters depend.
Otters are
becoming scarce or even
wide areas as
a result.
However,
extinct over
strict
controls have allowed otters to survive
of western Europe from which they
pollution in
may
parts
slowly
recolonize suitable habitat once the threats
have been removed. Repopulation
and go about
their solitary lives.
not help raise the family
needed by the cubs
is
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
all
The male does
the support
water, the long guard
provided by their mother.
Otters can breed at any time of the year
where the climate
is
not too severe and food
is
always available. Although females can have a litter
every year, nearly half of
only raise a family lasts just
born rising
in
in
them probably
alternate years. Gestation
over two months, and the cubs are
a special den, well
above the
flood waters. There are usually
three cubs, but there
may be up
to
level of
two
five.
Fresh out of the
or
hairs in
an
tend to
stick
otter's pelt
together
creating a spiky
appearance.
happening
more
in Britain,
which
now
is
already
probably has
otters with a healthier future than almost
any other country
in
western Europe.
CARNIVORES
Disappearing Otters #
T fa
r
he
survey of otter distribution
first
was
in Britain
carried out in
the mid-1950s. The animals were found to be widespread and
ly
common,
despite decades of hunting for sport. Otters
were
even reported on the fringes of London. However, by the 1960s
some
were reporting reduced
surveys
fewer than 6 percent of
sites
and
had signs of
central England
legal protection
Meanwh
still
otters. Otters
However,
egislation alone
is
is
it
full
fall.
now
extinct, proving that protective
not the answer. Research has identified causes of
decline that are potentially
more dangerous
to otters than hunting.
demise coincided with the spread of the introduced
American mink and a massive increase Habitat destruction
is
riversides, since tree roots
backwaters
in
and boating.
fishing
another threat, especially the clearance of provide otters with both
which to catch
in
was the
the otter
were given
the Dutch otter population increased tenfold following
e,
otter's
1970s
inspected over large parts of southern
from 1978, but numbers continued to
egal protection
The
success. By the late
fish.
introduction of
and sheltered
lairs
However, the main problem for
new
agricultural pesticides in the
1960s Tiny amounts washed into ditches and streams, and were taken up by plankton The plankton was eaten by turn
consumed by
fish,
which were
in
otters.
Long-lived species
are especially vulnerable, since
like otters
adults steadily accumulate the toxic chemicals, but stay alive, giving
no
sign that anything
long before poisoning
population collapses
Many dangerous
sources
New
If
the older animals die, since there are too
going.
it
danger has emerged
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
fish
this
especially eels, thereby
turn results
in
amount
at
minute concentrations. Heavy metal
and cadmium)
fewer otters
It
62
SEE ALSO
M
'
In
of predators like
more problems because
and other food
may account
for fish,
for the
which
in
disappearance of
Europe
European otters are scarce or declining
and pollution
also contaminate
damaging the health
of insects
otters in parts of Central
destruction
time from industrial
through pollution from factories and waste
and are damaging
reduces the
now been phased
have
agricultural chemicals
the otter Pollution from acid rain creates yet it
reduced
the adults cannot breed, the
pollutants (notably lead, mercury, fish,
is
chemicals called PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) are
contaminating effluent,
fatal.
is
when
few offspring to keep
out, but another
wrong. However, breeding success
is
some
m
most
areas, mainly as a result of habitat
parts of Europe the species
American 1:52
is
now
extinct.
VI
V
ItV
4
*V?I
Ry vV«u A K j
k
1 a*
yi
f
A
*^.'7;
SMALL CARNIVORES
North American River Otter
Lontra canadensis
North American river otters are playful, intelligent animals that were once common throughout most the United States
Common name name
Lontra canadensis
Family
Mustelidae
North American
Order
Carnivora
all
Size
Length head/body: 26-42
12-20
length:
in
in
(66-107 cm);
(32-46 cm); height
and Canada
until at least
at
were the most widely
1
cylindrical
legs, long,
pointed
and
small ears
body and tail;
short, stocky
small, blunt
with plenty of
brown
do not Lively
and
playful: lives
alone or
in
November-May
sexually
21 years
Voice
Diet
mature
Shrill chirps, soft
14
in
May
and scrub cover and
polluting water with pesticides. Because otters
live
to
are at the top of the food chain, they are
the wild
sensitive to
"chuckles," grunts, coughs,
any pollutants. Another threat to
Mostly
30,000 animals are harvested every
also crayfish, frogs, crabs, birds'
mammals
Coastal and freshwater:
large
rivers,
is
Distribution .anada and mainly northwestern,
U
areas of
but extinct or rare
in
U
S.
actually
year.
Such
be sustainable as
is
healthy. Sadly, this
frequently not the case, and pollution,
and
loss of habitat
about the extinction of otters
S.
Population probably low thousands; CITES
the fur trade. About 20,000 to
numbers may
disturbance,
southeastern, and Great Lakes states of
is
long as the otters' habitat
streams, lakes,
marshes, swamps, and estuaries
Common m some
cities
a threat to otter
otter survival
reservoirs,
Status
away from
and growls; loud screams when frightened fish;
are
industry, or recreation,
habitats by removing tree
5-6 months;
at 2 or 3 years.
in captivity,
eggs, and small
Habitat
at
any
them
When waterways
disturbance.
and towns agriculture poses
after gestation period of
Weaned
in fact,
Yet they are shy animals and
the otters usually leave. Even
approximately 50 days (including delayed implantation).
like
fish.
developed for housing,
1-6 (usually 2 or 3) cubs born from
Litters of
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
small
groups, semiaquatic; active at any time of day
Breeding
and streams
healthy water systems that can provide
head with
eyes; fur light to dark
mammals
distributed wild
the United States. They favor coastal areas,
estuaries, rivers, lakes,
Habits
the 18th century.
Along with the beaver and timber wolf, otters
in
Key features .ong,
in
the major waterways of the United States
than female
Weight
used to be found
river otters
tail
shoulder: 10-12 in (25-30 cm). Male larger
t
in
have brought
many
areas.
II
and Canada,
Favorite
Games
others
Otters are intelligent/ quick, curious,
and
exuberant creatures. They are famous for their playful nature
~r
activity.
games
and
make
will
a
game
The young and even adults of tag, tumbling,
favorite pastime
is
of any
will
belly
play
and wrestling A
sliding
down mud
or
banks into the water, tobogganing on
snow
their
with their front legs folded back. Small
objects such as shells, stones, or sticks are used as toys
64
rivers are
too polluted or urbanized to support them.
(northern liver otter) Scientific
and Canada. Many
North Ar.erÂŤr*r.^;,er otter
SEE ALSO
Ott*
opean
1
:
58 Otter, Sea ,
1
2,
and
for
games
of hide
Beaver, American 7:30
and
seek. In
of
now
WEASELS NORTH AMERICAN
captivity otters
have been shown to have good
memories and can be trained
to perform tricks
their aquatic
Š North American
river
body and
river otters are well
life.
They have
feet with
webbed
a long, streamlined toes.
The
fur
with long, glossy guard
is
dense and
widespread as they once
Long, sensitive whiskers help the otter locate
were and are
now
mostly
prey
in
murky water, and the
hairs.
small eyes are set
confined to Canada and
high on the head and close to the nose, so the
the northwestern,
otter can look
southeastern,
and Great
Lakes states of the
United States.
around above water while
keeping most of
its
swim by
in
side.
m)
They have
a top
6 to 7 miles per hour
and
tail
speed of (1
Waterway
Travelers
Otters can have very large
may
use
many
home
ranges and
miles of waterway. Males
generally travel farther than females. The length
home
of a (8 to
range can vary from 5 to 50 miles
80 km), with the
An
size
depending on
otter living
in
an area with
plenty of food, for example, will not have to
the water. They
twisting their hind quarters
from side to
feet (18
deep. They can stay submerged for over four
habitat quality.
body submerged.
Otters are very graceful
60
adapted to
otters are not as
oily,
at least
minutes, but most dives are shallow and brief
such as retrieving objects.
American
km/h) and can dive to
RIVER OTTER
0 to 11
travel as far as
one that
lives
where prey
scarce. Territories of individual animals
overlap,
and the home range of
crosses that of
a
is
may
male usually
one or more females.
Within their
territories
have many resting
American
sites
river otters
and dens. Rather
digging their
own
dens,
they usually use holes
female together, or even a group of bachelor males. Groups are temporary, have no apparent
and do not cooperate
leader,
share
what
is
hunting or
caught.
Most American
when
in
they are
two
river otters start to
breed
years old. Receptive females
advertise their condition by markings at scent stations,
two
and the powerful smell may
attract
or three males. Although American river
do not form strong
otters
once
pair bonds,
a
male has mated, he may drive away other
who come
males
receptive.
part
made by
other animals, such as beavers. They
otherwise use natural shelters such as hollow
even abandoned
Tj
A
will
rearing the offspring. However,
the family group
a stream in
when
months
boathouses. Nursing dens have an underwater
born blind and helpless,
November and May, but
entrance with a tunnel leading to a nesting
but
chamber
and
lined with leaves, grasses, mosses,
bed
hair to provide a soft
for the
young.
fully furred.
They are
April.
usually in
The pups are born
fully furred,
about seven weeks, bjt
the adults.
six
The young are born between
old.
introduced to water at
rejoin
the young are about
Montana. The young are
tree trunks, driftwood piles, or
is
then leave her and takes no
sometimes fathers have been known to
river otter with
young by
in
He
near the female while she
and look
blind
like
and
March or but
helpless,
miniature versions of
are often reluctant
Scent Marking Otters
other
mark
swimmers and have
their territory using scent. Like
members
dragged
of the weasel family, an otter
has scent glands near
its
anus that produce
a
be
Reluctant
Swimmers
Otter milk
very rich,
quickly
on
is
it.
and the young grow
They open
weeks and begin
their eyes at
their mother.
onto scent posts throughout
to water by the time they are seven
tree stumps,
usually well
They
prominent stones, or
above the water
marks do not get washed levels after rain.
its territory.
off
line
by
logs,
so that scent
water
rising
As well as depositing musk,
otters leave spramts (feces),
which provide
messages
for the inquisitive noses of otters
visit later
Scent posts are usually
places
on the
who
obvious
in
otter's route, including dens,
rolling places, slides,
runways, and haul-outs.
Otters will also scratch up
mounds
of
soil
and
debris or twist tufts of grass together, marking
them with scent deposits
or spramt.
As well as
defining boundaries, scent marking also signals
when
the otter
probably
its
last
passed through,
its
sex,
and
age, helping avoid potential conflict
with other otters
Although generally
spend time
made up
in
solitary, otters will
a small group,
which can be
of a mother and her pups, a male and
SEE ALSO Hare
owshoe 8:74
about four
playing with each other and
strong-smelling musk, which the animal wipes
may be
66
there.
to
The mother introduces the pups
weeks
old:
They are often reluctant swimmers and may
need to be dragged
into the water.
A mother
wil 5 pend a lot of
catching sma!
and releasing them agair so
fish
r
the young otters can develop the s*
ore
B>
ills
or
reared unt the>
w -'o
r
morths but somet mes memoe's together tor a year or
amounts
lots of fist
,
:
j r ne
of a
s
>
’a” \
along wrtr s~,a
frequently
1
rg of 'food
ir
iVher hunting
time diving and chasing stories at
a single
the<,
or
fisr
a
lot o'
oggmg m mud
the botto" of ponds and streams
r
r
seasno e
n the mouth, not the
Otters catch prey
r
5mal 'oop rtems a e eater
-
the water
paws vh e
>arge r ories are tare’ asnore
Otters tend to catch ,arge or
slow-moving *'eas*
fsh concentrated 'to sma
—
exhausted "spawned-ouT salmon ere
easy to cater
depend
Fo most r
of the year
or other types of fs'
no sever
Acoough
fast-swimming species suer as trout anc pire
commor m
fish
.
but are more
be
—
visible
cr
me
e> r activity
to dry
*
r
^
so4*
me
webs oe* weer
r
sorrietimes on twisted turns of
n anc vegetation
rvers and .ahes, otters usually
some soo
r
t
re\ to eat other species
that actually corioete with soon fish for food.
w
Otters
sometimes eat water? dw such
’
and ducks, and rad the
as coots
eggs. “'ey
ma^ take oead o
particularly
ir
active /
streams or shallow pools with nowhere to
a e
piies of c
aiso
'iame giver by angers Driers eat
1
During salmo r spavv r ng times m~e rs
or the hordes of
r
ge a r eas of battened vegeta: on
r
go fo r ease r prey They do not oese've the pad
mportant pan
of the diet, as a e craos along the
otters
o
r
or the bar
rol
show the ost octve marks
So rants may r
,a
the water, tney
t
mea They
spend
for smaller prey Crayfish are ar
escaoe
toes
o*
relatvey easy to find dues to
ter
have a rapid metabolism so they need to eat
fi$h
their footprints
is
it
of othe r pre> The> corisume up to
2 pounds
and
come out
themseves, leaving
g'ass
-..up
and elusve, few peope a r e ucky enough to see
>
them However,
/y/her they
!y
months so
a
O
tters are sr
ns: oe fu
are a: east three
They a re not fu u y odspendem
Oners eal
hunting
ID weeks of age toev star to
eat soup ’oop, although they
wil stay
Signs of Otter Activity
-
time lead ng her pups,
me snoot ng
unt and k
h
r
'
r
nests
ured Di'ct
seasor
heathy
*'or
but
w
An o ~ er ’eeos on
also
birds They stalk
trout caught
me" by swim m ng underwater and grabbing me birds from below Ome s are aiso among the
will
~ew o'eoators m.at
noting
r
Occasional
1
/,
mammals on American sm.a nares.
oners wi
river
Trey wi
and
mar
turtles
piros a nd
land There have been
c~e
mammals up
rosenips
snapping
k
r
s
r
epons
chasing and catch ng
to the size of
a:so ea: berries
snowshoe
sum
blueberries, bu* that
is
as
unusua
G e rie ral‘y,
m
river
a
a rver.
omers
take la'oe o r slowfish rather
than
fast-swimming species, of
such as trout. During
salmon spawning times otters will feast
exhausted
on
fish resting in
shallow pools
SMALL CARNIVORES
Giant River Otter
Pteronura brasiliensis
The giant river otters of South America have been severely reduced
Common name
numbers as a
in
result
of
hunting for their fur They also
Giant river otter
suffer from habitat Scientific
name
fortunately, small populations
Family
Mustelidae
Order
Carnivora
Size
survive in protected areas.
Length head/body: 34-55
13-39
length:
tail
shoulder: 16
in
(86-140 cm);
in
(33-100 cm); height
in
at
(40 cm)
Giant
48-57
Key features Large
lb
(26-34
otter with short, glossy
when
creamy nose and
and
is
female
kg);
(22-26 kg)
that looks black
tapers
lb
brown
webbed
many
Groups
20
as
individuals living together.
usually consist of a
feet; tail
flattened with a flange along
otters are the
most sociable of
otter species.
They stay close together, often
all
the world's
each other or indulging
in play.
water
The adult male and female often share the
Up
each
same den,
to 5
Weaned 2 years.
young born
at
in
a single
litter
65-70
days.
3-4 months; sexually mature
May
live
over 14 years
a habit that
is
not seen
Giant otters are also believed to help each other
by driving shoals of
where they can be caught more
Mainly
fish,
and
whistles; very vocal
but also freshwater crabs and
mammals
Slow-moving
and swamps,
fish into
on slow-moving
usually feed catfish,
rivers, creeks,
the more
at
in captivity,
Loud
yelps, barks,
in
familiar river otters of the Northern Hemisphere.
possibly similar in the wild
occasional
Habitat
along
Lives in family groups, mostly in the
year after gestation period of
Diet
pair,
animals from the previous year as well. Giant
calling loudly to
Voice
mated
with their young born that year and often a few
each edge
Breeding
family groups of six to
fur
wet; often white or
throat;
river otters live in
eight animals, although sometimes there can be as
Weight Male 57-75
Habits
damage, but
Pteronura brasilien sis
shallow water easily.
They
species, such as
which are easy to catch. Some such
fish
can be over 2 feet (60 cm) long.
especially within forested areas
Distribution Once over
much
of tropical South America
south to Argentina;
Status
now
rare
and patchy
Population perhaps fewer than 2,000 the wild, IUCN Endangered; CITES I
left in
Coveted Fur The giant
river otter
is
the largest of the
freshwater otter species, and has a distinctive flattened fur
is
tail.
As with other types of
when
giant otter's fur
is
in
the water. However, the
very distinctive, being short
glossy, like velvet.
sought after
was
in
It
became
the 1960s
particularly
when wearing
selling a single giant otter skin
than they would get
in their
working hard as laborers
for
pay packets for
two
or three
months. The same skin would be worth
SEE ALSO
furs
very fashionable. Native hunters could earn
more money by
68
the
dense and helps protect the animal from
getting cold
and
otter,
ropean 1:58, Otter, North American River 1:64, Otter, Sea 1:72
five
WEASELS GIANT
RIVER OTTER
Giant otters are mainly active during the
daytime and so expose themselves to many
humans with
dangers, particularly from
spears
or guns. Giant otters are also very vocal,
frequently calling to each other using a wide
range of sgueals, barks, and whistles. Their noise draws attention to
them and makes and
easier for hunters to locate
whole family
kill
groups. Another fatal characteristic otters are very curious animals:
around with
their
their
that giant
They often swim
surroundings
—
to shoot. They will
makes them easy
swim toward
often
is
heads held high out of the
water to keep an eye on habit that
it
and
intruders
potentially
dangerous situations to investigate more closely
— again making
and to
it
easier to shoot
them
others of the group that stay around
kill
what has happened.
to see
A Host
of Threats
As huge areas of the South American forests
were opened up
made
tracks
it
for logging,
much
new
roads and
easier to reach places that
had otherwise been remote
retreats for the
giant otter. Gold mining has been a problem, too: Large
amounts
of cyanide
and other
poisonous pollutants have been released into the
rivers
where the
otters
Dredging for
live.
gold also makes rivers very muddy, which severely reduces the fish populations
the otters. People still
more is
It
the
fish
rivers,
needed by
too, removing
of the otter's food supply.
little
wonder
that giant otter
populations collapsed, and soon the species
seemed Trade
to be heading for early extinction.
was banned
in
1970, but there was
considerable black market
activity,
and skins
were smuggled through countries where law
©
times as
The giant river otter
of South America
is
much
in
the fur trade after processing.
Financial rewards provided a major incentive for
the
and
the 1950s over a
enforcement was
slack.
Nowadays
are not fashionable, so the market richly
rewards hunters for
killing
most sociable of all the
hunters to
otter species—
thousand giant otter skins were exported each
Fortunately, giant otters are
characteristic that has
year from Peru alone. Since otters reproduce
in
sadly helped decimate
slowly, with only a single litter
populations. is
Nowadays
a rare sight.
it
kill
otters,
in
each
year,
no longer
the animals. fairly
numerous
the Pantanal (bordering Brazil and Paraguay)
and
in
parts of Peru.
Some
breeding rates were not enough to keep up
are relatively secure
in
with such high levels of
the giant
enjoys
loss.
still
otter skins
river otter
of the best habitats
national parks, full
and today
legal protection.
69
Short-Clawed Otter -
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-
WEASELS SHORT-CLAWED OTTER
Fun and Games Young short-clawed
to help
otters are social
and
playful
creatures.
They tumble, play chase and tug-of-
war, slide
down muddy
boisterous.
When
and are generally
hills,
otters are not entertaining
themselves, they bask on rocks, hunt for food, Short-clawed otters are very sociable in
and
live
loose family groups
numbering up 12.
to
or
go
otters, they
many other
spend more time on land than
in
Short-clawed otters tend not to dig their
own
dens, since they lack strong claws. Instead,
make use
of the
playing games, such as
they usually
chase and tug-of-war.
of other animals or shelter In
areas
where there
in
is little
The
driving shoals of fish
otters are put
keep any
to
Short-clawed otters often feed rice paddies.
the
are largely nocturnal.
flooded
farmers because they sometimes uproot young rice plants
while probing
the
in
mud
for food.
However, they eat huge numbers of crabs, a pest
in
nee
fields,
so
it is
likely
they
do more good than harm. Short-clawed otters are
officially
otter species. However,
In
in
They can become unpopular with
dense vegetation.
disturbance, short-
on a harness
they catch.
fish
at a lower risk of extinction than
paddies of Malaysia, where there are often
many people around, they
and allowed
work by
abandoned dens
clawed otters are active during the day. rice
at
into their nets.
which are
water, preferring shallows to deep water.
about
The young enjoy
for a leisurely paddle. Unlike
them
range, such as
deforestation
opens up
in
is
in
some
classed as
some other parts of their
parts of Malaysia,
a serious
river valleys for
problem because
it
development.
Development means disturbance and often
Short-clawed otters are sociable and easily
food. Increasing use of pesticides
trained. In Southeast Asia fishermen tram otters
pollutants also
since
many
harms the
less
and other
otters, particularly
of their prey species are very
sensitive to pollution.
entanglement
in
Other threats include
fishing nets
and
fur trapping.
Asian short-clawed otters are part of a
jyyvorldwide captive-breeding program that aims to protect the species from extinction.
program
is
The
focusing on the best ways
of keeping and breeding
so no
them
more need be
taken from the wild.
SMALL CARNIVORES
Sea Otter
En hydro
lutris
*
The sea otter was once widespread along the coasts of the North Pacific, but hunting for skins brought the
species to the brink of extinction.
Common name Scientific
name
Enhydra
protection
lutris
Order
Carnivora
Size
Length head/body: 29.5-35
and some successful
Today sea otters are
length:
shoulder:
1—12.5
1
8-10
in
in
(75-90 cm);
(28-32 cm); height
at
lb
(14-38 kg)
make them
antics
on
otter with blunt-looking
that turns pale
a popular species to watch.
head
in
their fur
One pup born each
year
after gestation period of
mature
May
at 3 years;
live for
in
early
summer
4 months (including
in
the waves. their
a strand of kelp
their chest. Periodically, they feed
by making short dives of about a minute to the
seabed to look
rabs, sea urchins,
for
and
mollusks. They cannot dive deeply, so they have to stay
in relatively
cannot
last
shallow waters. They also
males at 5-6 years, but do until at least
over 20 years
7 years.
in captivity, similar
the wild
make
long without food and are unable to
long journeys out to sea
crossing large areas of
Voice
Normally
Diet
Crabs, shellfish, sea urchins,
silent
fish,
and other
marine animals
Habitat
—often anchored by
months; females sexually
not breed successfully
m
over and over
rolling
draped across
up to 8 months delayed implantation). at 5
and
They also spend long periods dozing on
and calm waters;
kelp beds
dives to feed from seabed
Weaned
back at the water's surface, grooming
their
backs on back
their time floating quietly
cream with age; feet
completely webbed; hind feet form flippers Floats
observed, especially
along the California coast, and their playful
They spend most of
Key features Dark-brown
easily
reintroductions.
(20-25 cm)
in
Weight 30-85
Breeding
now
substantially recovered, thanks to strict international
Mustelidae
Habits
has
Sea otter
Family
tail
It
Kelp beds and rocky seashores
if it
entails
deep water. However,
northern Pacific from California to Kamchatka
The sea otter
they do sometimes undertake long journeys
possesses the densest
along the coast, sticking close to shore where
coat of any
they can continue to feed along the way.
help keep
and
Generally, sea otters are solitary animals,
Distribution Formerly along coasts across eastern and
(£)
males are
territorial,
competing
probably to avoid
for limited
chilly
warm
in
to
the
seas of the North
Pacific.
food resources.
it
mammal
There are
estimated to be over half
and northern Japan, exterminated over most of
its
range,
now
California, Alaska,
Status
a million hairs per square
reintroduced to coasts of
Oregon, and Washington
Unwitting Conservationists
inch of
Population about 150,000 and growing;
Sea otters are intelligent animals and have
IUCN Endangered; CITES
learned to bite open old drink cans that have
II.
Given
protection in 1911 and probably
full
now
legal
secure
sunk to the bottom of the ocean and provide a hide.
A-
lair in
which a small octopus may
They also eat large numbers of sea
urchins, helping control their
numbers down eat
now
growing
is
kelp.
numbers. Keeping
important because the urchins If
there are too
many
the kelp beds are unable to flourish and protect the coast from the Pacific tides
result
full
urchins,
do not
force of the
Beach erosion and flooding may
Hence sea
otters are very important
ecologically for maintaining a healthy coastline.
72
SEE ALSO
Ottfr. Giant River 1:68,
Whale, Killer/Orca 3:62
fur.
WEASELS
SEA OTTER
Densest Fur on Earth Sea otters are probably the smallest
blooded animals that spend water.
all
warm-
their time in the
The coastal seas of the North
Pacific are
very cold: Even far south off California the sea is
and
cool
quickly.
will chill
The sea
mammal's body
a
needs very
otter therefore
effective insulation to prevent loss of Its
protection
is
are estimated to
twice as
be more than
as
found on the
The fur has long, shiny guard keep the water
half a million
at
otter's
body
larger fur seals.
hairs that help
bay and prevent the underfur
from becoming matted and losing value.
heat.
mammal. There
square inch on the sea
many
body
provided by a thick coat of the
densest fur possessed by any
hairs per
quite
Below the guard
hairs
is
a
its
insulation
dense mass of
extremely fine underfur that traps a layer of
air
against the skin and acts as insulation to
prevent heat
loss.
The sea otter
is
fabulous fur to enable
without becoming
much
of
its
dependent on
totally it
to
chilled.
live in
It
the cold seas
therefore spends
time grooming and caring for
precious coat. That
is
also
its
why
its
the animal
cannot dive deeply, since the increased water
Š Sea to the
otters
make
dives
seabed to look
for
prey such as crabs, sea urchins,
and
mollusks.
However, they easily get out of breath, so cannot dive deeply,
and must
stay in shallower waters
along the coast.
73
SMALL CARNIVORES
pressure at depth squeezes the
causing
fur,
to lose
it
The trapped
air
buoyant, so
also
insulating properties.
makes the
into the
it
breath.
from staying
to dive repeatedly until
When
more, the hunter speared
not just valuable to the
200 years
it
was
also
one of
human
A
for winter wear.
last
was
miles of coastline. Sea otters have
plenty of incentive to hunt the otters.
one had been
for the early exploration of the
occasionally
them smash open hard
North
During the 18th century Russian
withstand heavy
Prey
is
navigators expanded their trade
placed on
the otter's stomach
Pacific.
colonized Alaska and
and
what
is
in
now
Columbia, as well as the Aleutian
crushed with the stone.
the
British
and Americans joined
skins
and
rapidly
year
British
Islands. Later
Skin Trade were
killed
between 1750 and 1850, with 17,000
skins
in
shipment made
in
were bartered with the Chinese
in
fine porcelain,
Expeditions
for
which could then be taken to
Europe and sold for immense
would stock up with axes and
made
America, then
back to the North
sail
in
natural
losses.
They do not breed
and produce only one youngster per
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;often not even every
not breed
until
year.
Females do
they are over three years old
first
have a breeding
five years old
baby.
Male sea
mature and may not
territory established until they
Slow breeding meant that sea otter populations could not cope with heavy exploitation,
and the animals soon disappeared
over wide areas. By the early 20th century the
profits.
other useful tools
few
are 10 years old.
1803. Pelts
exchange
every
until
them) and are not adapted to
kill
otters take even longer to
a single
otter.
whales, bears, and bald eagles
(killer
and sometimes can be over
in.
million sea otters
and
along hundreds of
killed
before producing their
Over three-quarters of a
skinned. The
into the sea,
an entire year's wages for a seaman, so there
main reasons
shells.
was
they could be hunted systematically
carry a flat stone to help
back. Sea otters
it
did not seek safety by dispersing out at sea,
sea
predators
its
where
Since the otters only lived along the coast and
use,
Hunting sea otters and fur seals was one of the
on
to dive any
the hunter paddled on to find the next
could be sold for the equivalent of
otter's skin
of
and dragged the
it
body was then thrown back
is
into the kayak,
it
was out
it
was too exhausted
it
depths. The otter's fur
making warm coats
swimming
was forced
body
the world's most prized furs for
shellfish while
hunted from canoes
easily
and kayaks. An animal would be chased so
soon gets
It
were
otters
underwater long enough to reach greater
animal: For over
sea otter feeds on
The
otter rather
a small seal or whale.
more
trade the tools with local hunters for yet sea otter pelts.
water than would be
out of breath, which prevents
A
from the
has to expend more energy
it
swimming down needed by
its
vital air
sea otter had
Europe and North Pacific
and
become exceedingly
been reduced to perhaps fewer than thousand animals
was on the
a
the whole North
in
having
rare,
Pacific.
brink of total extinction. Yet
It
its
range crossed several international borders so
Tool User
giving
it
legal protection in
one country would
not necessarily help: The animals might be
he sea otter
is
one of the few animals, apart from apes,
learned to use tools.
armpit and uses
It
to help
it
often carries a
its
paws
in
to
crushing
it
calm water, with lift
its
the stone and
against
its
stone tucked into
smash open the hard
mollusks, and sea urchins on which floating
flat
it
feeds.
prey lying on
hit
that has
shells of the crabs,
The its
its
otter
chest.
lies
on
its
back,
The animal uses
the prey hard and repeatedly,
chest until the juicy insides are exposed and can
killed illegally in
smuggled out
country, but then
to be sold
was needed was an
international
any marine animal.
In
The 4:12; Chimpanzee 4:28
What
agreement
1911,
in
the
first
such
international agreement, the Russians, British
(on behalf of Canada)
total protection for the sea otter
throughout the North
Family,
else.
to
However, that had never been done before for
agreed to
SEE ALSO Ape
somewhere
give the animal legal protection everywhere.
Americans, and
be eaten.
one
Pacific.
Repopulation Success Slowly, sea otters
have regained
and today there are about about
half the
In
number
1
their
numbers,
50,000 o f them,
that probably existed
300 years ago. Gradually, they are spreading back to
many
parts of the coast
where they
have been extinct for more than a century.
was once thought
that sea otters had been
eradicated from the California coast, but a
were spotted increased to
in
It
1938, and numbers have
lately
more than 2,000. Fishermen now
say there are too
many
that the otters eat too
of
them
many
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;complaining
mollusks, crabs,
and other valuable sea creatures. Population growth leveled out small decline
in
the late 1970s, and a
may even have taken
place since
brown
surplus animals have been transported to
pale cream on the head
Washington
State,
Oregon, and Alaska to
repopulate areas along those coasts. Overall the sea otter seems
now
expanding future
new
in
to have a secure
the North
Pacific.
dangers, notably from
are almost as dangerous.
comes from TBT found
in
(tri
butyl
tin),
adult.
Sea otters
and
for over 20 years
However,
now a
oil spills
near the coast. Detergents used to clean up spills
coloration turns
with age, as with this
fully
may
live
and are
protected
species.
oil
Another threat a
substance
the special paint used to prevent
barnacles and seaweeds growing on the hulls of boats.
marine
The substance also
life,
including
some
kills
other forms of
of the
main foods
of the ÂŁea otter. Nevertheless, the sea otter's
one
of the best examples of
1998, perhaps indicating that the habitat
comeback
cannot sustain any more, and sea otters are
successful international cooperation to secure
back at their natural population
the conservation of a rare animal.
size.
otter's dark-
recolonization of the sea otter's former haunts,
there are
few
Š The sea
an attempt to speed up the
is
75
SMALL CARNIVORES
American Badger I
Common name Scientific
name
Family
Order Size
The American badger catches most of its food by digging. It can tunnel with amazing speed and will turn over vast
Mustelidae
AMERICAN BADGERS HAVE A BODY
Carnivora
With
tail
quickly.
in
at shoulder:
move through
lb
(8-12
female 13-18
kg);
lb
(6-8 kg)
soil
webbed
surprisingly
membrane)
third
to protect their
eyes from dust. Loose skin on their back and shoulders gives
Key features
partially
There are stories of badgers digging
eyelid (a nictating
Male 18-26.5
for digging.
through asphalt roads. The animals have a
(20-25 cm)
in
bllilt
powerful claws and
in
4-6
length:
their
toes they can
Length head/body: 16.5-28
8-10
in its nightly hunts.
Taxidea taxus
(10-15 cm); height
Weight
amounts of soil
American badger
(42-72 cm);
I
,v\
them
mobility
in tight
tunnels.
body with short legs, long curved foreclaws, and shovel-like hind claws; gray to Flattened
yellowish-brown fur with cream
belly; sides
face white; dark patches behind ears
of
and on
cheeks; white stripe from forehead to nose
Habits
Breeding
Forages at night; does not hibernate; solitary, except for breeding pairs and family groups Litters of
1-5 young born
March or
late
April after gestation period of 7
(including 5.5
Weaned at
for
months delayed
early
implantation).
6 weeks; female sexually mature 12 months, male at 14 months. May live in captivity,
12-14
Dens are the cente of badger usually simple tunnels with
excavated
When
in
badgers are
in
Diet
Normally
silent,
Mainly burrowing
mammals such
reptiles, insects,
Habitat
as pocket
and occasionally some plants
to help keep
more complex. The rejoin the
meadows, and cold
and covered
extensive, nursing
US, and Mexico
still
and
rear the
side tunnels
uncommon
and chambers,
tunnel are dug as
dens have larger
Mounds
contain fur because they are dug
when
the badger
is
material.
Since they are so
in soil.
unknown, perhaps low
thousands Increasing, but
warm. The
main thoroughfare,
mam
outside than normal dens. Population,
birth
sometimes containing grassy nesting Shallow pockets off the
desert areas
Status
soil
are additional side tunnels
latrines
Distribution Parts of Canada,
up outside.
allowing the badgers to pass each other. There
squirrels; also birds,
Treeless regions, prairies,
piled
the wild
but occasional yelps
gophers and ground
is
Soil
sometimes block the
dens used by females to give family are
They are
the den, especially during
will
entrance with loose
branch off and Voice
in
cold weather, they
life.
one entrance.
making the den
months
at
26 years
Multipurpose Dens
in
piles of soil
often spring
molting.
American badgers are uniquely adapted
for
catching underground prey. They dig into
burrows to catch pocket gophers, ground squirrels,
they
food
and many smaller rodents. However,
will also is
take advantage of whatever other
available
and
will
eat
many
small
creatures, including snakes, toads, frogs, birds,
76
SEE ALSO
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;
ur °P p an 1:78,
insects
and
worms.
In
their grubs,
wasps, bees, and
addition they will occasionally eat
Badger Honey 1:82, Wolf, Gray 2:54. Coyote 2:58
WEASELS AMERICAN BADGER
plant material, too, particularly
when
in
the
fall,
they take sunflower seeds, corn, and
coyotes follow badgers while they are hunting, catching rodents that the badger flushes from
Š An American badger
other grains. They also eat carrion and are
burrows. Coyotes help the badgers find
emerges from
known
burrowing and hunting areas, sometimes
its
den.
Its
powerful shoulders and strong claws
make
it
exceptionally proficient
to store food
in
old dens.
Badgers sometimes develop close
new
appearing to encourage them with "chase
me"
and sharing the proceeds of
their
associations with coyotes, tolerating their
play behavior,
presence and even playing, with them. The
joint
hunting
efforts.
at digging.
Plowing the Land Badgers are an important part of their habitat
because they act as miniplows,
literally
the land. Their digging loosens the creates patches
where
soil
shaping
and
different types of plants
can grow, increasing the diversity of prairie species. Their holes are
often used as ready-made
dens by other mammals and as nesting sites by birds such
as burrowing owls.
Badgers have few natural enemies, since they are such ferocious fighters.
Once they
are over a year old
past their vulnerable stage,
probably the greatest threat. run over or die
in
humans
and
are
Many badgers
are
traps set for fur-bearing
animals. Others are poisoned by bait put
down
to control wolves and coyotes. Badger hair has
been used to make shaving brushes, but on the
whole the animals are not hunted
for their fur.
Tolerated Farmers generally tolerate badgers because they eat large
numbers
venomous can
of rodents
and
will also
kill
snakes. However, badger burrows
damage
crops and are sometimes
hazardous to livestock and machinery. Badgers are one of the few larger
mammals
that are actually increasing their
range
the United States. Because they
in
in
treeless habitats, they benefit
logging and other
open up the
human
land.
live
from
activities that
SMALL CARNIVORES
European Badger
Meles meles
Common name
Badgers are
European badger
large, distinctive
Family
Mustelidae
creatures that live in groups of closely related animals called
Order
Carnivora
clans.
name
Scientific
Size
Metes metes
Length head/body: 27.5-31
(70-80 cm);
tail
t
in
at shoulder:
(30 cm)
Weight 18-26
Badgers are great diggers and excavate an
lb
(8-12 kg)
Key features Dog-sized animal with coarse
on
Habits
hair,
grizzled gray
face
belly,
stripes
members of the mustelid family.
in
length: 5-7 in
(12-19 cm); height 12
is
extensive burrow system called a
and long, on back and black
labyrinth of perhaps
white with prominent black
Normally
100 yards (90 m) of
tunnels and galleries. Main setts are the
running backward through the eyes
inactive for long periods in winter, but
sett.
there are about 10 entrances leading to a
short legs
headquarters of the social group, which consists
Nocturnal, occupies a clan territory; often
Breeding
They are the most social
of closely related individuals collectively referred
does
not hibernate
to as a clan. Often they have small "outlier"
Usually 1-4 cubs born around February after gestation period of 10-12 months (including
setts
8-10 months delayed at
implantation).
Weaned
about 4 months; sexually mature at 2 May live to be 16 years in captivity, 10
the wild
visited for a
few days
weeks
or
during the late summer.
Badgers have special adaptations to help
years. in
nearby that a e not occupied continuously
and are only
with digging, notably powerful limbs and big
Voice
Occasional yelps and loud whickering noises
paws, each armed with long, curved claws on
Diet
Almost anything edible found
all
including
acorns,
Habitat
ground
at
worms, small mammals,
roots, fruit,
and beetles
soils
shoulders and forelimbs are specially modified
on slopes
for
earth. Digging
in
Status
to China
Population probably at least Generally scarce, even extinct
but increasingly
common
in
and
done with the broad forepaws,
is
burrowing
most of Europe from
and Spam eastward
is
and loose earth belly
Distribution Widespread
The bones and muscles of the
to provide leverage for shifting stones
Woodlands, farmlands, even suburban areas where there is access to food; prefers welldrained
five toes.
level,
scooped backward under the
and kicked away with the hind
feet.
Britain
and Japan
Creature Comforts 1
.5 million. in
some
Underground
it
is
areas,
parts of Britain
damp
as well. To
generally cool,
make
the sett
and
it
may be
more
comfortable, badgers import large amounts of
bedding -
in
the form of dry grass, bracken, or
'
-
other suitable material. They rake up the grass using their front paws, tuck a bundle between
the forearms and chin, and shuffle backward to the
sett.
Badgers are scrupulously clean animals.
They use a special their
.
I
toilet
area outside the sett so
underground nests do not become fouled.
Nevertheless, the bedding gets soggy after a
few months, and badgers
usually clean
it
out at
the end of winter, leaving a large heap outside.
78
51
1
ALSO
1
i
}
WEASELS EUROPEAN BADGER
The badger's
fur
coarse and sparse, but
is
protects the skin from
damage and does
get clogged with
A
long claws, and
spend
dirt:
falls
away. Badgers
when
a lot of time scratching
they go
especially to get
above ground each evening, the
not
quick scratch with the
the mess
all
it
out of their coat. However, the sparse
soil
much
wiry hairs do not provide
insulation, so
instead of having a layer of fluffy underfur close
keep them warm, badgers
to the skin to
accumulate large amounts of under the
insulating layer
an
fat as
skin. Fat
also useful
is
drawn on over
as a food reserve that can be
winter. Badgers are not true hibernators, but
they do remain inactive underground during long periods of inclement weather, relying on their fat reserves to tide
them over
until
conditions improve.
and
Social Badgers to the
Solitary groups, but they are not social
live in
same extent
as lions, for example.
do not help each other travel in herds or packs.
spends
practically
ground alone.
It
all
of
raise
young or hunt and
Each adult badger its
active periods
is
therefore
developed than that of many monkeys, but
more in
above
hunts alone, travels alone, and
feeds alone. Badger social behavior less
They
highly organized than
large groups
once
which
in seals,
live
a year only for the
purposes of breeding.
A it
is
group
special benefit of living in a
easier to
defend
territory.
is
that
Instead of each
badger defending
own
its
individual
whole
territory, a
group of related animals (the clan)
defends a communal patch of land, which
may be
over 250 acres
(100 ha)
Š With
five sharp,
curved claws on each
European badgers are well adapted for a for food
in
and digging underground
extent.
paw life
(inset),
of rooting
tunnels.
79
I
_
_
Badger Mobility
B
adgers amble around with a
sniff
footed
gait, like bears.
and search
rolling flat-
They slow down to
carefully for food.
When
alarmed, a badger can sprint at 20 miles per
hour (32 km/h), but not for long distances. can also climb, using
its
It
claws and powerful
forelimbs to grip rough stonework or the bark of logs. Sloping trees are often explored, and
badger (3
may be found more than 10
hairs
m) above the ground.
w A cub
Resident badgers tolerate each other, while intruders are chased off.
each other by
is
useful for a
others fur social
to see in the dark, especially in the thick scrub
consists of
and bushes often frequented by badgers. Scent also makes recognition possible at a distance,
territory to
warn
off
Living in a social
badgers
around the
Work
Light
each would have to dig
12 inches (30
its
cm)
in
measure about
diameter. Even a small sett
needs a ton or more of earth to be dug out. a shared sett each
and might never dig much can be handed
it
left
The whole
all.
sett
the generations,
little
work
do except
to
result,
is
common among
bond the members
SEE ALSO Rabb
and
play.
social animals.
of a social
8
each
may be
six
animals, but sometimes
over 20. Each clan usually has a
than the females and consequently
move around more
within the group's area.
Territorial activity
greatest
and
is
is
found, particularly
Breeding sett,
in
the time that most bite
is
among
the early spring
wounds
males.
normally confined to the main
and only one family of cubs
will
produced, with most of the females not breeding.
In
are
some
be
in
the clan
carnivores, nonbreeding
females often act as helpers and
assist in
bringing up the dominant female's family. But
the badger
home
in
only the mother suckles the
young and takes them out
to forage. Badgers
to use helpers,
nonbreeders contribute
little
and the to the welfare of
the breeding group. Males sometimes play with
more time and energy
for feeding, breeding,
lick
part of the system for creating
about
do not seem
clean and perhaps dig occasional
Play
helps
at
the advantages of a complex
extensions As a are
as other animals
down through
burrow system with keep
In
badger can simply use the
same passages and entrance
all
If
and may
dominant male. He and the other males are more active in scent marking their communal
â&#x20AC;&#x201D; hard work for an animal of such
a size, since the tunnels have to
Providing
there
all
ar other
bonds. Normally, a badger social group
territory
group has other advantages.
lived alone,
own burrow
left
badger trespassers.
Many Paws Make
80
groom one
also
nocturnal animal because visual signals are hard
and scent marks and feces are
in a British
enables them to recognize each other. Badgers
The animals recognize
their scent. Smell
forages for food
the cubs, but
do not help feed them. Most cubs
born within the group are fathered by the It
group and
males
in
manage
that
same group However, some boars
to sneak into neighboring social groups
woodland.
feet
WEASELS EUROPEAN BADGER
The badger
and mate successfully with females there. While
most badgers stay with
some
older males
their clan
may go
to
live
all
their
life,
elsewhere,
which helps prevent inbreeding. However, such individuals take a great risk.
Newcomers
often
get savagely attacked by resident badgers sustain serious bite
infected
and
wounds, which may get
and lead to a lingering death.
is
well
adapted for
the jaws have such a strong hinge that they
cannot be dislocated.
A
willingness to eat
vegetable material leads the badger into
unpopular
activities,
such as raiding cereal
crops. Besides eating the grain, they also
sett,
spring, but the
Badgers eat worms, small mammals, beetles,
delayed for
will relish a nestful of
rabbits or birds' eggs. But
members a
baby
although they are
of the order Carnivora, badgers have
broad diet and eagerly dig up a wasps' nest
or root out bluebell bulbs, wild
and even garden bulbs
in
as blackberries, bilberries, a favorite in
also
the
fall.
crunched up
in
arum corms,
pregnancy
difficult to harvest.
in
starts.
first
silky
white
year, usually
fur.
The
facial
The cubs spend about
weeks underground and until
Š As
before normal
they have pink skin covered
stripes are barely visible.
weaned
is
The delay ensures that the
with a thin layer of
and
large quantities.
many weeks
February. At
eight
Beech mast and acorns are
when
development of the embryos
cubs are born at the best time of
the spring. Fruit such fallen apples are
roll in
they are two years old. They mate during the
have a good scratch, and go off to feed.
and they
it
Badgers normally reach breeding age
At dusk the badgers emerge from their
for
grinding up tough nuts and gritty worms, and
Meat and Vegetable Diet
frogs,
varied
The molar teeth are broad and knobby
diet.
the ripening crop, making
and
its
will
not be
fully
they are about 16 weeks old.
carriers
tuberculosis,
European
badgers have come into conflict with farmers,
particularly in Britain. To
combat the
disease, culls
have taken place Britain
and
although their
20 pounds
effectiveness
by the end of their
first year.
in
Ireland,
They grow quickly and can weigh as much as (9 kg)
of bovine
is
in
doubt.
SMALL CARNIVORES
Honey Badger The honey badger
animals Honey badger
Mustelidae
Order
Carnivora
Size
Length head/body: 24-30 length:
The strikingly marked honey badger
8-12
formidable animal. in
(20-30 cm); height
in
Key features
at
animal with short
tail
and
brown elsewhere; head muzzle and small eyes to
Habits
Breeding
on back, black
small with short
not particularly large
it
is
without doubt one
animals, always ready to pick a fight with living creature.
Honey badgers
have been known to attack horses, wild
cattle,
°ot (3.4-m) long pythons, deadly cobras,
-f
1
Nocturnal, excellent digger; usually solitary;
whole packs of domestic dogs, and any other
extremely aggressive
animal they perceive as potential food or a
One
to 4 (usually 2)
young born
at
any time
possible threat. Attacks are often launched
of year after gestation period of 6 months.
quite suddenly from a
Weaning and sexual maturity unknown. May live up to 26 years in captivity, perhaps 10 in
vegetation. The
the wild
Voice
Harsh growls
Diet
Mammals, insects,
up
give
burrow or patch of dense
honey badger
have done nothing to provoke reptiles,
poisonous snakes,
and worms;
Anywhere with
quite readily
will
a perfectly secure location in order to
attack an unsuspecting victim that appears to
when angry
it.
birds,
also carrion, eggs, fruit,
Fearless Attacker
and honey Habitat
a
is
a typically shambling, badgerlike
almost any other
suitable sites for
forests, grassy plains,
dens-
and rocky slopes
The honey badger has
large, strong teeth
and
long claws. While they certainly serve as
Distribution Africa and southwestern Asia
effective
Status
Population unknown, probably a few
explain the extraordinary self-assurance with
thousand Widespread but declining
which the animal throws
weapons, they do not
apparent fearlessness justification,
extremely
is
itself
in
themselves
into
combat.
Its
not without
however, since the honey badger
is
difficult to
kill. It is protected all over with an immensely tough, rubbery skin that is
thick
enough not
to be pierced by
most
including the needle-sharp fangs of
snakes.
means firmly
and
Its
skin
is
that even
by the neck,
bite
its
Despite
SEE ALSO
venomous
the honey badger it
is
which
grabbed
can easily wriggle around
attacker. its
potential ferocity, the
badger generally prefers to mind
82
teeth,
also very loose fitting, if
It
will attack
its
1:76. Badger, European 1:78. Jackal. Black-Backed 2:62
honey
own
not entirely
very difficult to
is
of the world's most relentlessly aggressive
short, sturdy legs with extremely long, strong
claws; fur usually grizzled gray
and has
appearance. However,
15 5-28 5 lb (7-13 kg)
Solidly built
It is
(60-77 cm);
shoulder: 10-12 in (25-30 cm)
Weight
animal
sora capensis
Family
t
its fearlessness is
(ratel)
unjustified, since the
name Mel
tail
a natural aggressor
is
larger than itself with remarkable
ferocity However,
Common name Scientific
much
Mellivora capensis
kill.
WEASELS HONEY BADGER
business and areas
is
seen
rarely
where the species
common.
It
its
den only
its
in
relatively
is still
emerges from
and spends much of
the open, even
in
at night
time digging or sniffing
around for small food items.
Sweet Tooth As
its
common name
badger has
a
suggests, the honey
sweet tooth and
fond of honey.
It
tracks
down
is
particularly
bees' nests
often by teaming up with an unlikely partner, a bird called the African
honey guide. Unlike most
small birds, which stay well
away from
honey badger, the honey guide out the badger, attracting special
Honey guides
call.
its
hungry
a
actively seeks
attention with a
like
honey too, and
they especially love the nutrient-rich
wax
honeycombs made by bees
to store
honey and
grubs. However, the bird
not strong enough
is
to break into a bees' nest on
its
own. Having
discovered a hive, the honey guide
calls for
help.
The honey badger follows the
hive,
breaks
it
open with
most of the honey.
Its
its
bird to the
and devours
claws,
thick skin protects
it
from
the stings of angry bees. Meanwhile, the honey
guide gets
its
reward, feeding on the remaining
broken honeycombs, which are scattered and accessible
now
widely
owing to the badger's
destruction xaf the nest. Other creatures also benefit from the
foraging
abilities.
honey badger's strength and The black-backed
example, pounces on rodents and
jackal, for
reptiles
flushed out by the badger. The badger gains no
advantage from association with the
jackal.
The breeding biology of honey badgers
is
not well known. Animals are sometimes seen traveling
in pairs,
but usually they are
The young are born
in
spring
in
solitary.
the north of the
species' range, but breeding appears to
seasonal to
six
in
much
be
of Africa. Gestation lasts
months, and the young are cared for
less
up in
a
secure den lined with dry grass.
B Although honey badgers find most of their food on the ground, they are
known
to scale tall camelthorn acacias in
search of raptor bird chicks.
83
r SMALL CARNIVORES
Striped
Skunk
Mephitis mephitis
Skunks are one of the few mammals
When
defense.
to
use chemical
threatened, they squirt a repulsive-
smelling liquid at their attacker Scientific
name
ephitis mephitis
Family
Mustelidae
Order
Carnivora
Size
The striped skunk
Central,
Length head/body: 12.5-18 tail
7-10
length:
shoulder 4
in
in
Breeding
lb
(1.5-6 kg)
striped skunks serve the
After a
first
Mainly active at night and at dusk and dawn;
that sees another TKunk will
generally solitary; squirts foul-smelling liquid
dramatic coloring
may swim
necessary
if
62-66 days
mature
captivity,
at
fewer than 3
in
the wild
vegetables,
wooded
Distribution Southern Canada,
U
S
ravines;
,
tail
around the
and
may be
a
tipped with white, and
ears.
The
on the back vary
stripes
length and width, so that an animal
almost entirely black or white or variations in between. There
town gardens
may appear
many
no difference
is
in
in
patterning between the sexes, and the
and northern
markings do not change with the seasons.
Mexico Status
body with
there are often white spots on the legs and
Forest or field edges, patches of brush, rocky
outcrops, and
The
tail.
garbage Habitat
a hasty
variable, but usually
white stripes that extend from the hood to the
Mainly insects; also small rodents, rabbits, fruit,
make
probably
will
white blaze on the nose, a white hood, and
growls, grunts, and snarls; also churring and short squeals; occasional screech or hiss
eggs, carrion,
that the
associated with a
consist of a predominantly dark
Low
birds,
remember
(including
Weaned at 6-8 weeks; year May live 8-10 years
1
are a warning signal.
The markings are
retreat.
as the
unpleasant encounter any animal
repugnant smell and
Three to 9 young born May-June after delayed implantation).
Diet
waspâ&#x20AC;&#x201D; they
white stripes on back; white patch and stripe long, bushy tail
threatened;
markings of
same purpose
on head;
gestation period of
Voice
striking black-and-white
is
Population abundant
Foul-Smelling Spray
A well-known stink.
bad
fact
about skunks
Even their Latin
smell.
The smell
is
name their
is
that they
Mephitis means
one
effective
defense mechanism, since skunks are not
fast
runners, vicious fighters, or clever at hiding.
When
a skunk
is
threatened,
warning display by stamping
warning
body
84
see
also
i
t
Family,
its
is
into a
raising
forefeet
it
will first
its tail
give a
and repeatedly
on the ground.
If
the
not heeded, the animal curves
"C" shape so
The 1:88; Fox, Red 2:64
5 A striped skunk on a log
on a
m
family of their
in a
own: the Mephitidae.
stripes
sexually
North,
from other mammals that
they are frequently classified
Cat-sized animal, with small head tapering
when
live in
the world. Skunks are
in
tail
to a bulbous nose; black coat with forked
Habits
skunks
of the
and southern America and do not
sufficiently different
The Key features
common
most
All
occur anywhere else
(32-45 cm);
(17-25 cm); height at (10 cm). Male larger, but in
female has longer
Weight 3-13
the
is
10 species of skunk.
that
it
its
can point
its
in a field
rests
of
flowers. The white
forked stripe that runs
from
its
head
to its
haunches distinguishes it
from other species.
5T =
WEASELS
anus at ire target
.while
PEC
S*
JKH
keeping a dose e.e on
adversary Theskjn*. then squ hs a ye o.vish
its
ng
ffou;l-sme
norm
sera,,
an us
either side o* the
a*
;>e
.tie :
.he
_
comes th'auc"
mus<
"-e se'=
pouch es or
""uscl; 5'
.2
.
a n.pple
that car oe a~g:ec to mpiove the s<ur< a
can
im. It
hit a target at a distance
to 6.5 feet 1""
times
«era
up
S*xrks are able to spra.
and the
quick successor
in
off
3
car ether oe a tre .apor or a more
shower
uiiected
spra nq ihemse
.
.
scent .vih tre
'
and do not
es.
dh
.vr
m
1
r to ire
sirne
e (0.5
e.es,
temp:
it
sulfur
~
2
•
tr
^
reread
:
r.
-
'
r
xr
.
e .5 ^
gets
-
-
_
e
5 :
The posturing
"-a sprays r
:
ffor
.
r
-
-
t
.
is
t
to
.
^
r
on the Menu
Insects Striped
_
"
it
taxes ^p to -tS hours
ng before the an
T. r
m
iff
and even
causes extreme p it
t
1
<m downwind; and
undress
display
bad eggs,
-_"r a"s ca" s^e
the skunk to rep ace the must
anc
scatta' the
ffrorr.
also sulfur oasec
is
up to
<e the
""as aw oo
peop e oe e.e
as man_,
la
The mus< contains .cat e
compounds.
r
crop els ’"le
off
s<
omn
j"<s are
.ores The_. are
opportun Stic ffeece r s. eat rg almost ar /thing that appears .ague
o' the
r
.
ec
made up
diet s
About ~0 Perce":
ble.
nsects,
off
such as
grasshoppers crickets oeeTes, pees, ard
wasps.
vr a
Ore
off
their favorite
foods
ch they dig up from the so also feed
on sp
s"a
cers,
is,
s grubs,
Striped skunks
earth worms,
clams, crayfish, frogs, saamaroe’s, snakes,
b
rds eggs,
sma mammals,
nuts, roots, gra ns,
carrior
.
berries.
and garbage
,
Most s
ffooo
ts
ocated by sound or sme
nee the s<un<s distance
T aociuon, the an, ma
.ision
s are
is
poor n
too slow to chase
fast-mow mg prey, nstead. the. hunt cats, lying in
victim
..a
a act or stai<ing the r
"a.'
Cu.m pee. es ano
grasshoppers by sprung ng on
them with the ' forepa as
85
Urban Warriors
Females prepare maternity dens
The young are born rban areas provide everything that a
U
skunk needs.
that there
Human mess means
always plenty of garbage to
is
feed on, and where there
is
garbage,
Skunks
They can
and
dig
will also
there are several animals
if
the color patterns are
birth
patches on the
residence, the smell can be overpowering.
gets too close
is
in
likely to
towns.
Any human
be sprayed.
that
dark
Males do not help rear the
skin.
and may even attack or
The three
kill
them, so
kittens are fast-growing: After
six
to eight
old.
about
weeks they can assume the defensive
hunting Skunks are unwelcome
visible as
posture and squirt scent. They are
in
are
females defend the maternity dens aggressively.
up lawns for grubs.
burrows under buildings;
live in
mid-May and
March.
wrinkled, blind, and almost hairless. Even at
kittens
there are usually rats and mice as well.
in
in
at
weeks and follow the mother on
trips
When
weaned
when
they are about two months
out with their mother, they keep
close behind her
in
a single-file
trail.
By August
they have reached adult size and are able to
fend for themselves. They
will
be able to breed
the following spring.
They
will
use their long front claws to dig for
ground
as mice, rats, moles,
beehives and
will
eat the inhabitants without
appearing to be affected by the
known
to
consume the bee
They are
stings.
and probably
larvae
the honey, too. Skunks have a special trick for dealing with poisonous or hairy caterpillars.
Before eating them, they
ground with successfully in
their
the prey on the
roll
forepaws, an
removes the
activity that
irritant hairs
or toxins
the skin. Striped skunks have also been seen
breaking eggs by rolling them between the hind legs with their
forepaws
until
the egg strikes a
stone and cracks open.
A
Skunk's
Way
of Life
Striped skunks are not social animals. They
come together
to breed
in
the rest of the year alone or of mothers
home
and
their
spend
spring, but in
made up
groups
young. Females occupy a
range of 0.8 to
1
square miles
.5
(2 to
sq. km). Their territory will overlap that of
4
many
other females, but they tend to avoid contact
with each other. The males travel farther
much
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;about 8 square miles (20
cover the
home
ranges of
many
86
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;and
females, as
well as overlapping with other males.
mate with many females
km)
sq.
The males
living in their
SEE ALSO Raccoon, Common
range.
1:22
use dens above ground, In
although they do not hibernate, they
and
skunks also break into
squirrels. Striped
summer skunks
selecting hollow logs or rock piles.
grubs or to tear apart the nests of small
mammals, such
In
winter, rest for
WEASELS
Š
Two young
SKUNK
STRIPED
and
striped skunks take in the sounds
smells near their birthplace a hollow log den. ,
sometimes spend the winter
in
the
same
burrow as opossums, woodchucks, or occupy
rabbits, but
different
cottontail
chambers.
Death by Natural Causes In
skunks may
captivity
the wild
for
live
10 years, but
in
more than 90 percent never reach the
age of three. Natural causes of death include starvation disease.
long periods
made
in
underground burrows, often
by woodchucks or badgers.
dig their
own
Some skunks
burrows, but they are not very
long or deep. During winter striped skunks
Š A striped skunk digs for
worms and
favorite
food
grubs,
its
in a largely
insectivorous diet.
den alone or together animals. in
in
will
groups of up to 20
Communal denning
is
range.
It
seems that skunks
usual dislike of
company
will
overcome
to take
Skunks are preyed on by great horned
owls and some other birds of prey
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
all
Mammalian predators only
will
on the verge of
if
enough
to deter
A common
all
hunt them too, but
The smell
starvation.
advantage of
is
but the hungriest hunter.
cause of death
skunks
in
disease. Striped skunks are susceptible to their
which
of
have a poorly developed sense of smell.
more common
the colder, more northerly parts of their
harsh winters, predation, and
in
and
diseases, including leptospirosis
is
many
rabies,
which may be passed to humans. Rabid skunks are often very active
present
in
and aggressive. The
their saliva, so animals
only catch the disease
Humans
if
virus
is
and humans
they are bitten.
many skunk
are responsible for
deaths, including trapping for the fur trade.
Skunks are also
killed
attracted to roads
Skunks
by vehicles, since they are
when
at
searching for carrion.
Your
Service Ithough skunks usually have a bad
b
%. reputation, they probably
good than harm. They
eat a
of agricultural pests, such as
do more
huge number
armyworms,
cutworms, Colorado potato beetles, grasshoppers, beetle grubs, and sguash bugs. They are also
and
rats.
money
in
good
at catching
Skunks save farmers
mice
a lot of
terms of the amount of
pesticides that
would be needed
if
the
hungry skunks were not there.
87
small carnivores
The
Civet
and Genet
Family ivets
C
and genets are
small- to
medium-sized
animals with a catlike appearance. The family
and
Viverridae (civets, genets,
linsangs)
and the
Herpestidae (mongooses) are similar to an ancestral
Family Viverridae: 6 subfamilies, 20 genera, 35 species
carnivorous in
mammalian group, the Miacoidea,
the Eocene period, about 56 to 35 million years ago.
Miacoidea
fossils
genus,
'
Nandinia African palm
PALM CIVETS
civet
What
Is
1
Paradoxurus
3 species,
palm
in
species, small-toothed
palm
common palm
civet (A. trivirgata)
civet
(P.
civet
(P.
many ways,
Civets
hermaphroditus)] golden
palm
civet (P zeylonensis), Jerdon's
species,
1
and linsangs are the
Arctictis
1
masked palm
civet
and
short legs
there are also a
their relatives
number
species, Sulawesi
palm
BANDED PALM Hemigalus Diplogale
1
civet (M.
have long bodies and
compared with
cats.
palm
civet
They also have a longer,
vegetable food, so are
Cynogale 2
species, otter civet (C. bennettii); Lowe's otter civet
civet (C.
owstoni)
A
2 species, spotted linsang (P pardicolorY
,;
Viverricula
3 species. Oriental or
civet
banded
civet's
or stripes.
linsang
Malayan
(V.
indica)
civet
and
Eupleres
(V zibetha), large spotted
generally sandy gray with dark spots
is
tail is
usually
marked with bands or
civet
FOSSA
1
1
Some
masked palm
civet
is
uniform
is
a
species,
The
color.
color except for
in
(V megaspila its
face.
Some
and genet species are
civet
1
species, aquatic genet
species, including
armed with
common
genet (G genettaY. large-spotted
When
in
danger, they are able
The
to spray a stream of vile yellow fluid at an attacker. liquid
2 genera, 2 species
species, falanouc (f
stink glands.
(0 piscivora)
is
nauseating and repellent, and
may
temporarily
blind or cause discomfort to the attacker, so giving the
goudotii)
intended victim a chance to escape. Fossa
powerful claws.
species, African civet (C civetta)
CIVETS 1
shorter, less
such as the binturong, have a coat of a single
(V tangalungaY, large Indian
genet (G hgrina
MALAGASY
coat
The
markings on 1
Oenetta 10
prey, large
different color than the rest of the body.
species, small Indian civet
1
Osbomictis
Cats have
7 genera, 19 species
species, African linsang (P richardsoni)
Civettictis
less specialized killers.
genets have more slender, weaker jaws, comparatively
(P linsang )
Viverra
on hunting
canine teeth, and large, powerful claws. Civets and
small canine teeth,
TRUE CIVETS, LINSANGS, AND GENETS
Prionodon
cats are
lowei
(C.
1
and
viverrids
jaws for gripping struggling
short, strong
1
Poiana
between
of the differences
animal prey for food, while civets and genets take more
(D hosei
Owston's banded
their feline relatives.
linked to their lifestyles. Cats rely totally
Chrotogale
species.
relatively
musschenbroekii
CIVETS 4 genera. 5 species species, banded palm civet (H. derbyanus)
species, Hose's
1
of differences.
larvata)
(P.
species, binturong (A. binturong)
1
closest relatives of
jerdoni)
Many Macrogalidia
herpestids.
a Civet?
more pointed head and face than Paguma
and
viverrids
the cat family. However, although they are similar to cats
binotata)
5 genera, 7 species
Arctogalidia
the skeleton
similarities to
species
1
(A/,
show many
and tooth structure of modern
Civets, genets,
AFRICAN PALM CIVET
that lived
It
may be
that
some
species, fanaloka (F fossa)
genus,
1
of the bold coat markings
found
warning to predators,
the distinctive patterns of a
in civets
serve as a
species
Cryptoprocta fossa
(C
ferox
like
skunk, discouraging them from making an attack.
In
other species the markings help break up the outline of the animal, protecting
88
see also
i
net,
Common
1:92; Civet.
Common
it
by camouflage.
It
is
important
Palm 1:94; Fossa 1:96; Mongoose Family, The 1:98
©
>4
binturong forages for
fruit in a tree.
dwelling species with a strong while picking fruit with
its
tail,
which
The binturong it
is
a tree-
uses to hold onto branches
and compact, and they only walk on
dwelling species generally have broad feet with bare soles, a factor that
paws.
their toes. Tree-
improves their grip
when
climbing.
They use the whole of the foot when walking, for civets
and genets to have such defenses because,
bear,
and use
all
like a
the toes to get a better grip. Feet also
although they are hunters themselves, they are also
vary depending on the type of food taken by a species.
targets for larger predators.
Linsangs, like cats,
Different species of viverrid have different lifestyles
and types of
prey.
Hence there
within the family. Although
some
— such as the true
all
civets
is
a range of
species are
—
body forms
good
climbers,
rarely climb trees to find
food. Such species tend to have feet with well-padded soles that are covered with hairs. Their
paws
are small
themselves and
—
live
almost entirely on animals they
like cats
— have
fully retractile
kill
claws
with protective sheaths. Species that eat a greater variety of food have feet that are less specialized for prey taking.
The form of the teeth
also varies
between
species.
The
meat-eating linsang's molar teeth are sharp and bladelike, similar to those of cats. True civets eat
both meat and
89
AR\ VORES
small
of the
So .~w
owt
fom//y
ihown
*eedng
-acten st>< activities *f~can
on a r*st1<ng
(II.
in
bonded pa-m cnet eatrng •V*v
Ma ayan
3 i,;ord (21 Oneoiji or
common pa m cnrf
scenting the air (41
b>nturong foraging for
fruit
grasping a brand) ivirt
its
prehensile
tail
crvef fJl
white
(51
vegetable matter, and have
broad-crow ned molar teeth that are suitable both for cutting
and
grinding food The paim civets
take mostly vegetable food. Their
molars are even broader, making
them
chewing
less suitable for
meat but better
for grinding
up
vegetable matter
Un ke
which have rough
cats,
tongues that they use to clean, ovets
tongues because
dogs
and genets have smooth
ve dogs This
—
in
bones
lick
the
is
same way
as
— they crush and swallow
:ne bones of their prey and so not need to
do
the bones clean
lick
The form ot the sku
;1
also varies
betyveen speoes Genets have catlike white the skulls of civets are more heavily
skulls built
Palm
civets
have comparatively sturdy
The stand of Madagascar
skulls
is
home
to three unusua
speoes that are found nowhere ese me udma the
Where
Civets
TH e argest
and Genets
number
in
T
rue civet fossils have been
Madras, southern
m
the rocks of the Siwalik
p
>v
d
Hills
members
throughout most of Afnca.
India,
southwestern Europe, the Near
90
ns*,
m
g evidence that they have
preh .tone times Today
FV"
i
’
pantherl se fossa Palm civets
of vivernd species are found in India
•md the Malay Peninsula d covered n a cave
Live
(
u
(
,
and
also
northern India,
ved
in this
v
Asian although there
s
one African speoes The
true cnets a^e mostly confined to As a
Lmsangs are found
n both Atnca and As'3 Genets are found only but
A*nca
one speoes occurs n southwestern Europe Most
region since
:n
and genets
species of civets
live in
forested
of the family are found
areas Thev are found from ram forests to woodlands, n
and Southeast Asia to
woody
scrub and occasionally in savanna Only
spec
of civet
East,
and the Arabian
ere are no ovets or genets
SEE ALSO
India,
genera
and banded palm ovets are
h* 2:10. Dog
m
the Americas
Earn, h
The 2:S0
sma
'Os
manage
Indian civet
speoes
w
ill
live
to
and the
ve
m
drv
open country
common palm
on mountains up
two
civet
to a height of
—the
Some
THE CIVET
Civet Oil
C
source of civet (or musk)
oil,
a scent
making perfume. The word "civet"
used
actually
most
that issues from the glands of
Indian civets, are the ones used
Genet
industry.
animals,
is
and
The
oils.
The
a clear,
fluid, collected
and small
oil
and
civet
oil in
dates back at least to the 10th century
was imported from is
it
Solomon. Civet
Africa by King
believed to have medicinal properties
and has been
and Asian countries Civets
of
animals.
but East African
export large quantities.
and genets use
for scent marking.
means
still
oil,
their
The process
the most important
communication between these
It
is
used to define
territories
generally In
The true
Africa genets occur
and are
particularly
are almost
all
grow
them
are ground dwelling
habitats except desert
in all
living in
or hollow tree.
Some
in
some
Viverridae. There are three species, secretive animals
found only
even build themselves nests up
in
females
civet
and genet
otter civets.
They have smaller
body form,
in
still
tails
good
come together
briefly
a rock crevice, burrow,
may
and
during the breeding
season; but once mating has taken place, they separate,
and the female
raises the
exception to the rule lives in pairs.
is
young on her own. An
the Madagascan fanaloka, which
3
/
The fossa has a catlike head and
retractile
claws for capturing prey
shown here (2)
and the
(1).
Also
are the mongooselike falanouc foxlike
are small,
civet,
Madagascan fanaloka
than other
such as
(3).
civets.
their toes are less
at climbing.
a thick
alone. Males
all
ears, a blunter muzzle, a
the branches.
live
and
of the
forested areas.
in
Lifestyle
Most species of
fully retractile claws.
members
of the rarest
more compact body, and shorter
species, such as the linsangs,
the trees. Apart
have dark rows of spots
all
coat for the winter. Most species forage and hunt for
food at night and spend the day
and
viverrids.
carnivorous and have
webbed, and they are
cold places they
and
civets are a highly varied
adapted to
While resembling otters
In
the
almost entirely
There are also some aquatic species of
during the breeding season to attract females.
7,000 feet (2,100 m).
civet takes
in
or stripes along their bodies. Like the linsangs, the genets
solitary
and by males
Banded
the trees and are generally
in
more doglike than other
Linsangs are
pungent secretions is
time
from the aquatic genet, they
The development of synthetic substitutes
has reduced the need for civet
less
group, but the majority of
oil
used as a cure for sweating and certain skin conditions.
spend
civets
invertebrate prey.
when
paws. The diet of palm civets largely
mammals. Owston's banded
perfume
b.c.,
its
uses to hold onto branches while
trees at night for invertebrates, small lizards,
has an offensive smell to
The use of
diluted.
it
a
(capable
tail
more carnivorous, foraging on the ground and
from captive
humans, but becomes a pleasant scent when purified
The binturong,
consists of fruit, but they also take animal prey.
palm
yellowish-brown mixture of fats
original
which
of grasping),
picking fruit with
the commercial
in
climbers that use their
species of palm civet, even has a prehensile
scent has a subtle, pleasing smell, but true civet species, such as the African, large Indian,
skillful
semiretractile claws for extra grip.
liquid
viverrids.
both tree- and ground-dwelling species. Palm civets are mainly tree dwelling and are
in
comes
from the Arabic word zabad for the scented
perfume
and genets are good climbers, but there are
All civets
and genets are probably best known as the
ivets
AND GENET FAMILY
SMALL CAR,M VQK£S
Common Genet
GzieUC
common genet is
The
Ce"r;;j
the only species ofgenetfound
outside Africa Individuals ,vere kept as pets tv the amici'. creeks and Romans before the i
domestic cat
became popular Family
»e"-ade
.
Order
4
U-rg— '•*» bocv 6-22 r A 3-5 5 or 3 e^gm T6-2C n
S<ze
-
-
-50 err
L -
-8
n
(1
8-20 cm ’
ces
st" -
r
ta
uo<
sam
Africa,
me
sects farming c rc
arc white tip or enger far dovvr spire -rigs
burrg
Act .e
l 're's of ’-4
after
May
/e
up
to
w*t
may orgra
ca.
tip
G ore. tar
on
t
of Spain with Morocco n
may
aiso
20 years
have oeer*
intentionally
“traduced to Euroce by humans n the
me common
Ages,
to
islands
were
genets
definite'/
ip
common
Voce
the Saearc
on-
ta*en there ov people
-genets are s&i
found
iim
Europe,
Vx-ra y ”ev<
occurred as ran north as Be-gium and Germany
'.'cst £>.
Kab«tat
silent. but w-ll hiss, growl, purr and "a/ also cough, whine, or scream
,
'oderts. especially mice also rabbits, izards. fruit, bernes.
semto. -voociand. ^
SCL
*t
_
300
-
Creatures of the Night
and nsects
and rocky
areas,
Common
jp
n
rr
Distnbutxxi E.-ope France and
me berar
Peninsula
and Afnca (except for the Sahara Desert and Congo River Basing •
es* ne.
exua^or abundant
r-e-
UCN
genets are ncctuma
dawn,
dusK.
and most of the n
rest at
some
point
and
w
dunng
Vulnerable
(
ght. They usually
the hours
mer
rock crevices or burrows
Stand subspecies, Widespread and
being active a:
n
occasionally be inactive
morning They spend
Alternative
1
/
they
same
shelter
the eahy
davs tucked away in
dug by other animais.
may use fee
hoi
ows
square
m
es 5 sg
femates tend to be
'ange
may
or
-use
the
day after day for long per-ods
Va-e genets have home ranges 2
darkness
off
sometimes large bracches They often
km n -
much
size
smaller.,
overlap the ranges
off
off
up to
The ranges of
and a male's several
'em a<es Latnnes and scen-t-mark-ng ytes are used by more than one ndiv<dua soiitary-
pa»rs.
92
y
but omy in the southwest. At one time they
b*
Status
A
th
’Oday
Wxe
most a regions excect
once connected
qestator
Sectemoer Weanea at 6 montns. sexually /ears.
that
the southern
per-od of 7 ; aays 5 reedng occurs, yearCure, but mainly Apn to Matt and August
'•ture at 2
urn a-
reached southern Europe oy -crossing the
and bridge
I'iu-
.curg oern
found
others,
umps. and svvms well
cJ rpps.
Breeding
~eerrgs with
is
s.ongo River Basin. The speces
me mgbt arc twi light perccs
soitary out tcierates
t
Sanara Desert and dense forests of the
'•ave
Habits
cutsde Afnca, the common
ge^et s also the most w-despreac genet m
m
iVith
3arK crest
-
species a* ge^et
5-2 kg
*ey features 5ancv c.v
3T mais With
pointed muzzles. As /ve as being the or y
« *
ne-grt at shoudfer
Weight 3-5 b
GE*iE~5 ARE LONG, TWIN CATLIKE
SEE ALSO
*
1:56
Genets ar?
animated but they sometimes
carticuany
dunng
travel- «i
t^e breeding season
"
C
.
E
5
i'»:
SESE'S CC i
'• :
1
1
I*
SMALL CARNIVORES
Common Common name Common
palm
Civet
civet (toddy cat)
Scientific
name
Puradoxurus hermaphroditus
Paradoxurus
hermaphroditus
The
Viverridae
Order
Carnivora
Size
Length head/body 16.5-27.5
common palm
eating
fruit
civet is also known as the toddy cat because of its habit of raiding
Family
tail
F&lm
which ferments
(42-70 cm)
in
16-24
length
plantations in search' of the sweet sap of palm to
make a
mildly alcoholic "toddy/â&#x20AC;&#x2122;
in
(41-60 cm)
I
Weight 6-10
The
lb
(2.7-4 5 kg)
down
and base streak
of
to dark-brown coat with black
back, spots on shoulders, sides,
tail,
face has
on the forehead,
mask
tail tip
of spots
and a
may be white
time
Nocturnal, expert climber, spends
much
2-5 young born mainly between October and December after gestation period Litters of
months Weaned at 6 months; sexually mature at 11-12 months May live up to 25 years in captivity, about 10
in
civet. Instead,
fallen fruit
Latin
it
civets
most spends
It
less
most other species of palm
forages on the ground for
and small animals
only active at
is
It
and spends the day curled up
in
the
name, Paradoxurus hermaphroditus,
scientists is
Diet
Small vertebrates such as mice and lizards,
and
difficult
often confused fruit,
A hermaphrodite
to sex.
The reason why the two sexes are
silent
also insects,
in
the
common palm
can make a male animal look areas,
may
shelter in
Palm
thatched roofs and pipes Distribution Kashmir. Indian Peninsula, and
female Sri
islands of Hainan (China). Sumatra. Sulawesi, Simeulue. Enggano, Kangean Islands, Java
Palawan
(Philippines),
and many other nearby
is
like a
female
civets are solitary animals,
will
only tolerate a male
in
and a
her tree
Lanka to
southeastern China and Malay Peninsula, also
(Indonesia),
civet
that the scent gland, located near the genitals,
and seeds
and wooded
a puzzle to
is
an animal that has both male and female
genitalia
Normally
Forests
of the
reflects the fact that the species
the wild
Voice
Status
one
branches of a tree or the hollow of a trunk The
of 3
Habitat
is
time
in trees
Breeding
trees than
in
night
Habits
palm civet
widespread species of palm
Key features Sandy gray stripes
common
Borneo,
during the breeding season Mating takes place in
June Dominant male palm civets have larqe
territories that
number
overlap the living space of a
of female
islands
palm
civets,
but they
will
generally allow smaller, immature, or elderly
Population abundant. IUCN Vulnerable (subspecies P h hgmcobr A common
males to be present However,
animal
male matures, he
is
a threat to the
male's right to the females usually determines
keep the
territory
when
which
in
young
dominant
A
fight
two males
of the
Dominant males
ranges, covering the
a
the area
whole area
will
patrol then
at least
once
every five to 10 days
Sowing the Seeds Although they take some animal civets eat a
m
*
Java the least
vines
94
SEE ALSO Genet. Common
1:92, Fossa
V96
wide
variety of fruit
common palm
35 different
When
fruit
trees, is
prey,
palm
For example, in
civet eats
the
trees,
fruit of at
palms, shrubs, and
eaten, the hard seeds are
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SMALL CARNIVORES
Fossa
Ca -p to p rocta feim
The fossa resembles a short-legged, dwarfpuma a powerful predator and has a fierce reputation in native Madagascar.
a testament Common name Scientific
name
:
Order
Carr .ora
m-v
The fossa's
Zrycroprocta fern*
Vivemdae
was often
the Fe idae.
t
:
Ler;— nead/body 24-31 in (60-80 cm, engm 24-30 in 60-75 cm height at
14-35
sroc der
Key features Redash-brown
to
tail
occasionally up to
is
daws but ur toes
short, thick,
head with rounaed
weobed and have
Mar
and
active
mostly
Liters of
2-4 young
of 3 >
in
trees
and
is
20 years n
at
flat-footed
family, reflecting simi anties
The genera;
ke bears.
l
paced
s
in
the
mongoose
with that group
view, however,
is
is
that the
bom
after gestation
at
4-6 months; live
probably fewer
a cat Hence
a civet trot lives like
fam
y
Vivemdae Perhaps
result of long isolation
4 years May
captivity,
typical
member
s
it
of the
a skilled
predator; solitary except
months Weaned
mature
body than
its
—which wax on them
in
dunng the breeding season
se» -ai
ike true cats
—fossas wax
too.
puma, but nas
cat family. Fossas have cat! ke
Sometimes the fossa
ears, feet
the
in
the cat farm y
n
classified as a rather special ,es
c moer ana powerful
penod
dassifieo
that
short, retractile claws
noct^ma but can be
y
day* gn:
Breeding
distinctiveness
its
on the
is
a
island of
Madagascar, allowing the species to evolve into
something different from
its
ancestors on the
to at least
African mainland. in
Despite being a
the ferocious predator,
wild
Top Island Predator
Voice
Generally
Diet
Lemurs, small mammals, and
sil lent
rept'les. frogs, snakes,
Habitat
Ram
skills.
rid uding
cats,
meant
n relation to
members of the
•ossa
Habits
with
s.nilar to a sma:
is
neac
a longer
dark-brown coat,
occasionally biack. *ur ca: <e
.
cm)
Weight '5-26 b 7-’ 2 <g 44 lb (20 kg
5
s.mila,=;ties
ts strong predatory nature,
past t
are
diet
cssa
Family
Size
hunting
to its formidable
its
—
Lemurs provide much of its
:
It is
forest
and
‘ossa
Fossas are the top predators
Madagascar and
in
is
~cw
Traatarec
re
a
species,
birds, also
insects
and wooded savanna
have no natural enemies apart from people
largely
They are also Madagascar's largest land
clearance. 4 single arirai
mamma
agile in trees than
occupies an anaa at 4
a trunk headfirst and
sauare rules (IQ to 20
1
more
Fossas are
due
:c forest
a*
Distribution Madagascar
They can run
cats
Status
Population probably only a few hundred,
IUCN Endangered. CITES
jump about 6
down
feet (2
m) between
They
trees.
SO-
need
to
be excellent climbers
in
order to catch
the lemurs (the primitive primates of the
Madagascan
forests) that
half their diet
It is
feature regularly
in
very unusual for primates to
the diet of any animal, since
much
better
climbers than most predator species The fact '
that lemurs are often part of a fossa's diet
shows what an
agile
Fossas are as at they are steal
SEE ALSO
,
zestr-ctcr
1:
2:42
l*
m
and
skillful
home on
hunter
it is.
the ground as
the trees and have been
known
to
chickens and sheep, and take small wild
4
*
-
-,"J
of its habitat s ea'j'rq forest areas toe
make up more than
they are generally smarter and
96
km arc
II
4
—l
small to succor?
sec-re zccuacors.
1
4*
-
pigs Tr-e native cere
e of 'Madagascar consider
thief,
^not an sight.
mgnt
in
visit
mating About a week,
the fossa to be a dangerous and ferocious chicken
allow several mates to
later a
and known offenders are o~er
arrive at the tree to
When
and the resident female
local
the forests, they
cecc e spe r d :he
w
I
often <eep a
her one at a time for
new female wr
mate with the males there will
leave
hire
going throughout the hours of darkless
Unusual Puberty
because they are frightened of being attacked
Dunng puberty
by a fossa while they are sleeping.
strange stage of sexual development: The
Although fossas
camps
for food, they
occasional!',' "aid
do so very
human often
discreetly,
the female fossa goes through a
becomes
clitoris
large
male
similar to the
reputation as a dangerous animal
greatly
colored underparts
at the
orange
exaggerated, and
it
will usually flee
first
male
sght of a human. The mating behavior of fossas
is
different
from that of other vivemds, which usually mate with the one or
two animals
temtones overlapping will
spend
their
several days high
own: A female
m
a tree,
fossa
dunng
which time a number of males group together beneath
it
and
call
up to the female She
will
liquid that
It is
not
penis. Also, the
is
-i
creamy-
become covered
by a bright
known why females go through
side effect of the
and
it
may
simply be a
hormonal changes that occur
trees vim e
emu's. Fcss85 s/xare characteristics
rats but are i trees.
C3 fch
is
now
officially listed
homeland through greatest threat to
demo
as
Endangered by the IUCN. The destruction of
its
wrâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;
more ag e
the, are acve fo
and
<
lemurs,
despite those an
puberty.
The fossa
fossa leaps
between
usuai lv only released by the
this ''masculine" period,
dunng
that have
small
supporting bone and a coven ng of spines
not even waking guard dogs. The fossas is
and develops a
nte<
-v
5
gent end
capable creatures.
forest clearance poses the
its
survival
97
SMALL CARNIVORES
The Mongoose Family _
M either
ongooses are extremeK
ear v carnivores, the Miacoidea active
and aa e
terrestrial
What
form to the
similar in
that
sma
live
qroups or alone With the exception of recent
'
product ons mongooses are
rest-
ha
cted to the Old World
Taste: n Hemisphere, excluding Australasia).
Some
nclud ng the West Indies,
and the Hawaiian
Fiji,
attempts to control loca vermm, such as
rats
Herpestidae 2 subtami es
rounded
and snakes.
1
1
ounces <312
1
pounds
same
nvm
species
Bdeogjle
specie
5
mongoose
paudnosus)
mongoose
Kludi "g bushy-tai ed
mongoose
lacCsonS
vA
cm) and weighs
es
-
inches
002 cm) and weighs
family
is
closely related to the civet
They are sometimes
family.
classified as the
all
Mongooses
family, the \ iverndae
and genets (B crassrcauda);
in
differ
Cynktis
mcluc ng Alex.5 nder
mongoose (C
s
rounded ears that
rarely stick
out above the profile of the
speces dwsrl mongoose
Herpesfes
5
\
speces
,
l»6eo«tTS
s;>\ e-
’
t it»er.
They also
their toes.
differ in their
parvula)
remain on the ground and can be active during either the
mongoose (H ichneumon)]
day or night depending on the species
e ng Egyptian
e’
no
nocturnal, and solitary Mongooses, however, tend to
social
Mf
speces.
or
behavior Civets and genets are generally tree dwelling,
ata)
long-nosed mongoose iH naso)
fthynchogak
little
alexandri),
owes mongoose {D d’bowsi.ii)
NWogale
civets
that they possess nonretractile claws,
webbing between
soecies yellow "icngoose (C oentc
Dokygjtr
from
>acksoni)
(5
mongoose (C ansorgei1
Angola's
just
largest species, the white-tailed
head, four or five toes on each foot, and Crossarchus
total
OfT.i. 70
:
species
AtiUx
Their legs
<5 kg).
The mongoose and genet
’
The
g).
body
of about
long, nonretractile claws.
” inches <43
1
tail
dwarf mongoose, has a
species, the
mongoose measures 40
17 genera, 35 species
MONGOOSES AND MEERKATS
AFRICAN AND ASIAN
a tapering, bushy
and the paws have
length of about
Islands in
and
ears,
to three-quarters the length of the
are short,
1
\
*
are long, thin creatures with a pointed face,
The smallest
been released n other areas of the world,
species have
Mongoose?
a
Mongooses
They are
mammals
Is
nso goose (R melleri)
and
live in
Some
species are
large family groups.
1
’s
an mongoose
(L
Mongoose
fur
long, coarse,
is
and generally brindled
xuhni)
or grizzled (where the individual hairs are colored
Mungoj
Ga >P an mongoose mongoose iM mungo) species
.
XVieumu
l
ParacynKtn Surxitj
’
speces spe<
.oivts
re-tailed
\vt
v.eoes
es Selojs mongoose
(/
r
sgi a ned
back,
{P selous^
mongoose (G species
..sevies
mongoose (G
legs, feet,
elegans.)
mongoose (G
and
tail
or
the rest of the body.
tasciata), giant-striped
species, such as the
stripes that run
No mongooses have
tail tip
Some
may be
their
spots, but
a different color from
species have different color
forms depending on where they
live.
For
example the
gnanddierf)
wow striped mongoose (M
brown mongoose
(S
slender
decemlmeaTa)
m
concolor)
mongoose
soil
mss Meerkai
1:100,
southern Africa is
Mongoose Dwarl
less
1:106.
it
is
red,
found Such variations
color of the area
making the animals hr
in
areas a black form
match the
SEE ALS
usually gray to yellowish brown, but
is
the Kalahari Desert
some
98
A few
and two Madagascan species have
the length of their body
6 speces
op need
•
along their length)
meerkat and banded mongoose, have bands across
albtcauda)
"leerLal iS suncaTta)
Galfdxtn
MungotKTn
banded differently
mongoose
MALAGASY MONGOOSES G+hdt*
garnbianus)]
and
in
usually
and may be important
obvious to predators.
Mongoose, Banded 1:110
in
THE
Some mongoose
mongooseâ&#x20AC;&#x201D; Kenyan
1
â&#x20AC;&#x17E;
nngtailed
subspecies, sniffing the air in a
mongoose
(5):
Selous'
white- tailed
(1);
(4);
mongoose
mongoose with an egg
mongoose
dwarf mongoose adult
(3);
feeding a beetle to a juvenile
mongoose
FAN' LY
species: bushy-tailed
~ongoose posture
typical
MONGOOSE
narrow-striped
Egyptian
(6);
marsh mongoose
(7);
Mongooses have
(8).
phenomenal
a
sense of smell, and they mark their territories
with scent. Social species
mark each other help recognize
same way
the
in
members
to
of the group.
Scents are produced both by cheek and
communicate the
anal glands. Scents will
individual identity of the marker, as well as its
sex
and breeding condition. A
mongoose's eyesight
also generally good;
is
and unlike most mammals, which only have partial color vision,
it is
able to see color.
Although mongooses are carnivores, they
will also
fruit.
eat vegetable matter, such as
The canine and
carnassiai teeth (those
adapted
for shearing flesh) are relatively small for a carnivorous
animal, probably
owing to the number of invertebrates
and small animals unnecessary. The
and
is
generally
in
the
diet,
mongoose
which make carnassials
skull
more robust than
has a long
facial section
determine where the animals
a genet skull.
where the
Where Mongooses The mongoose family solitary species.
The
mounds
Live is
split
between group-living and
social species also
smaller ones, such as the dwarf
They use safety
in
numbers
tend to be the
mongoose and meerkat.
soil is
good
mounds. Most species are
are semiaquatic or tree dwelling.
the day, while solitary species are usuai'y nocturnal, using
and
the cover of night as a defense.
chewing wild melons and digging up
general, solitary species tend to inhabit
group-living species,
den
sites rather
species. In
wooded and
forested areas, while social species prefer
open
plains. For
than habitat
Mongooses
but are
They may also eat eggs
small insects to full-size cobras.
between
terrestrial,
opportunist feeders and take a wide variety of prey from
as protection against
habitat varies greatly
The
may depend on the
predators. Group-living species tend to be active during
Mongoose
African grasslands,
alternative to burrows.
presence of mongooses here
some
On
hard and unsuitable for digging, termite
provide a
availability of
live.
may
fruit.
Species living
communal
in
dry areas can obtain water by
species, such as the
meerkat, forage
in
The
smaller,
dwarf mongoose and
groups and tend to feed mainly on
invertebrates, lizards,
are usually solitary
roots.
and small rodents. Larger species
and feed mainly on
larger prey.
99
SMAJ.L CARNIVORES
Suricata suricatta
A. meerkat sentry
a familiar sight on the southern
is
African savanna, demonstrating the selfless cooperative behavior of this plucky
and
mongoose
toward members of its own pack.
Common name
Meerkat
tailed
Scientific
name
Family
(suricate,
gray meerkat, slender-
Meerkats are the most sociable
mongoose
meerkat)
family.
breeding pair
Herpestidae
may be
may dominate
Order
Carnivora
Size
Length head/body: 12-18 length 6-12
Weight Key features
3-5
3
in
in
(30-45 cm);
in
(15-30 cm); height
in
kg)
Slender, short-legged animal; tan to gray
Social lives in colonies of up to 30, but usually 10-15, animals; sentries posted to
watch Breeding
Two of
for predators while colony
to 5
young born
is
foraging
in
rarely aggressive
pack
in
baby-sitting, tunnel maintenance,
their
meerkat
group members take part
other. All
the various tasks involved
duty.
male and
life,
such as
and sentry
Both females and males without young of
own
will
help guard and provide food for
other meerkats' young.
produce milk even pregnant and
will
if
Some females
will
they have not been
suckle other females' babies.
after gestation period
years
at
Weaned at 9-10 weeks; sexually about 12 months. May live 13 up to 10
in captivity,
in
the wild, but
more commonly 6 Voice
A
Diet
Insects, scorpions,
trills,
growls, and barks
and grubs; occasionally
small snakes, birds,
and mice
Africa,
in
Angola, Namibia, South
some
areas
but most
warmer, wetter months. to take adult food
when
they are about three to four weeks old. Toward
reluctant to share food with each other, they will
Population abundant Not threatened, but fallen in
Young meerkats begin
year,
the rest of the group. While adult meerkats are
and southern Botswana
numbers have
Meerkats breed throughout the
the end of weaning the young begin to follow
Dry savanna, open plains, and scrubland
Distribution Southern Africa
Juvenile Followers
births occur during the
variety of chirrups,
lizards,
Status
often give food to juvenile
group, even
if
will
particular adult
and follow
it.
associate
The adult
quality prey to
its
When
will
follower,
fed, but will also learn
meerkat.
members
they are not their
Each youngster
food from
how
it
own
itself
of the
offspring.
with a
around, begging
pass on
who to
will
its
best-
not only be
behave as a
the young start following, the
juvenile meerkats
from
earlier litters
confused between begging
for
and
arrivals:
giving food to the
new
may
get
food from adults Adolescent
meerkats have been seen to beg food from an adult only to pass litter,
100
may
75 days.
mature
Habitat
been observed
and group members are
toward each
with broken brown bands on back and sides; black eye rings, ears, and tail tip
Habits
packs,
larger than the
at
(10 cm)
lb (1.5-2. 3
packs, which
him. However, no distinct
hierarchies have tail
live in
of the
include several breeding pairs. The female of a
Suricata suricatta
shoulder: 4
They
members
SEE ALSO
-varf
1:106,
it
onto young from the next
or to give food to a youngster, then steal
Mongoose, Banded 1:110
species
MONGOOSES MEERKAT
it
back again. Meerkat
life is
complicated, but
also highly social.
Meerkats have strong, muscular forelimbs with large claws, which
make them
excellent
diggers. Their long, slender, short-legged bodies
underground
are perfect for traveling inside
tunnels. Although they are quite capable of
digging their
own burrows
(or warrens),
meerkats often share dens with African ground
mongooses.
squirrels or yellow
such cases the
In
dens are usually dug by the ground
and the meerkats move
squirrels,
Neither species
in later.
appears to object to the presence of the other
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
in fart,
the meerkats ignore the ground
squirrels altogether.
Underground Refuge Meerkat warrens
an area about
typically cover
16 feet (5 m) across and, depending on ground conditions,
may have up
to three levels, with
the deepest tunnels about 10 feet (3 m) below
may have up
the surface. The largest warrens
90 entrances, but about
more
usual. Within the
1
to
5 entrance holes are
warren a
series of
tunnels connects chambers of about 12 inches
(30 cm) across. Meerkats usually stay within
easy reach of a warren, which
their
is
main
refuge from predators. The temperature
deeper tunnels may vary by only
a
in
degree or
two, making the warrens important shelters
from the extreme desert temperatures above ground. Meerkats spend nighttime within their
warrens
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;the coldest
the hottest parts of inside too.
The
parts of winter days
summer
territory of a
be up to 6 square miles contain five or
six
(1
and
days are spent
meerkat group may
5 sq. km) and will
warrens, occupied
in
rotation.
Meerkats spend from a few days to several
months around one warren, moving on when the surrounding food supply has been used up.
A meerkat territory.
(ÂŁ
pack
Marking of
is
very protective of
its
territories using scent
A male meerkat on guard duty
in
southern Africa. Sentries are posted
from
the Kalahari Desert,
in
high places to
watch out for predators while the group
is
foraging.
101
rc
I c
Leash
rh
v.
e
M
een.ers
m.—
3*r an venomous
w»il
v font
oorena source
r
ner
oe~ sres
roe
rr
—erne*
mongoose
—iiv
~=i
njmans ire _ tee'kars
-owe>e
-
is
~s~
e~raz«
ne
*
arcfer rr
us ..a
rrne *o foraging oe'rra etaors o r
tnrtD
a~?
rnan
rne razK
noaxiaptior o*
skil
rher
tv'iai'-
a so oartcutotk
r.?>
Kers raKe a 0
’etummg rr
numa~ nano
m
~ e
mre;
re—no
" ee*e*
-ag
x
*tf >o.-c :,•
r
-XH.r
n»rwc
oir
~g
**
_ ce: ~rr~ ~g
noozmn-.
;
>5
anmais such
px
ooirtt in
can Lore ne hpn s ^01
treed rnp rcscus
xi
5 *2^
tar~g*o*
rrooe -
arc
gnucs
are^cc
ra*.e
xmg
tfrat
*'
~ais me* for—
oar arouna without a
i~.ar« ,nr esaitoisihBd
rr cr<ig out
mer ~er
me
“xeme'
*0 eaie mg'?-
~»*errc
x rs
pre
me
~ a» a tar
croup
pao*. cffKr
~ae
'
groups and
— lXi ir,a~*
~g>r omr-
a*
—a is
Ziti;i
—
.o-rig 'e1 ae:-
rer
mfetar 3ra:»f
n«^
eguTij
•i
sdaatsied
*02
:
asr
e~'aie5
gox
SEE ALSO
1
armro-igT'
•
‘
<
**> **0 110m
a icmg
"na»
: -
<
*•:
an
2.
*•
n* tiippn;
rer
mpi
npr
nrr
Df>n;
ax ?
—ca
mint 1'i'nr
nr
a*? n./n?
dm r
n#f, c*e*
oaev-stneri
rr
JUrtriziupt
— *r* aes
—a—
pan
rn ~immj\n dopn; f
oare^
•v*~ rarreerr :
*esidemt
racks
'a“"ag5.
a,rc 'e~ae ~egnca5.
“rr— ir*c ra:«
"ense'ies as
rr -esoabishrig
sememes
-"rr*
r ar
w«i
wmr a group
mwkaes ~riri; meexm
treedre an mas
*e-
o»e*
—
1
oai*e r*g
-O’
akamoe
p-.t.n: souirmlk
H’ltma
r*H
mem k
mmmxra
«-tnppmpT
"nice Like
03 ge
anc 00 not
food ~ne g’our
s soal rnae in
it
ne
wil accept
ne e~on
me
hatf an is
no
ekceptions,
izan out o4
mav taka
since
o^mg
o’oa’ to
ae soma
is
t a maerkart gats
gecko n
unroxe T the gecko
o»
*
pa animats "here
oj"o\^ Arnougn
rr 'm:ro«g ~~er
ro
o*av
-rm: soe
~g osrc ~ag5 anr ra«.ng :r. anc ner *e— site. er re
~2cec .e*
own
sea"*, o* a targe
n?» rare the
and
oaa''kats *aar as a
tot
another anima to dig
roasrc 0
—
o>.r.
racks separate iow~*ankmg
“
or*
I
hunting together
,a'
noweve’
out pra\ anr ro noid
as sands
r ookng
rne maerkats
rr
o jsruia?
proramon against pnaoarors out
rrrvioas
down
do
~ongrosas
rur so’ead
ronoa-are
ng ~wc :r?- ©o Oi ne ~g car* a«Geor
ave'\
anane rnar *ood
a^ea rr
are _:sar rr
nreer roes nor
opre
~e~Or'"
-.1
goug
os appioachsa r a
~e ~esras3ng
rare ne> and a*p=5r
i
manna*
osro-rap?
ne no
o>
5 sperrer ?'".t ’n:
ran
- wil ~rr.
— er
a'-
so.rres re ne laoensnar ~na r.av\er
othaT sor.a 5 pe*e‘al'«
- a-a"r 'o ragng orte
”nav Lsuahv alow about a weak re'ne
ia-pa-
panes
~ oe's
-
5.s*er«
roni a —
**>e er-e
ne>’
^i:r
sm-orans anr can withstand sengs
oe_ o
with inre
e
fond
*
v-^eeio,
T
nolens ~g annais ~o~
kil
"ooed to
reza~ne ess savee anr sne was *jlu area or an
Vieaitkars a-e
:©
v-\as
p?-t?n n?vg 5
o~.e"
~mp -anoucr
rrornje nev oie *o severa
nd
genre o*
5 ne
e raov-sore'
in
speed anr
’>
erraaisner:
:
-
Wente-s
jn..ng rreaarrrs
o*
a~e* 'e'STranre up gna<
*
r
or
j~ri
anr rne one *?nae was
ra»<e dirlr.
rak?^ on as
?.s
one '?~aie tolowed
r>-g
:ar4v ra* -^c w'eeo
_ 'a ,ae
snakeis
na~ na-fseues
.ape*
a? arzepre:
r -ne rr
me heir of
its
hour to
worthwhile
MONGOOSES
since geckoes are ’-’e€ riats <v
7>e
smce each
»
ve
coace''a:e
rr
- a
by a
t s
ca
s.>:~c
rs.
—.me
a
t\>
<sy an attacker
.v
c'ecatm
dher
ng grout
oesccttec a
ar
seni»y
gnes an alarm
me pack
spots a predator the
t
call
that ta
1
s
the rest of
to run for cower Veerkats ca~-ct
r-e
a
-v
oe ava
foed ng St farag -g - a grout a
—
a.s
can
-
nd mare food and
teach e r than an —a
s
ace
—eerkat oack
for
forag ng a cne.
member o'
a meerkat group
e;<
coses
stroke
t to
3emg
as
danger
the group but the a
-s
the ns*
-vei
as forac
ts position
or
a female
tac:<
.'.as
see'
-
az-c n
ng
-
a 'group
and havng
mongoose neenatis a
attacks
ndiv 'duals
turns ana sra-e
Meerkats that rema n beh nd bafcy-
aga nst
—as mat
as sra<es
arc
are
so as
n
me'
mer ta
backs ~a< tg the' "a
grcw-'ing
and
spittirg
ta< a
so protecting teeth
me
s
.area
r
stand
ly
or-
a'cr ng.
end and
<e a cat "the meerkats
oo not work and
defense positian
iVtth
mate themselves oax mare
by *aisng
predator, t wi
predators ana 'eat
s t are
rva
~a<a ~ :c
mom a
a
observed
as
defenses Lie the banded
tactics
—
.vn
,v
encounter with predators or other meerkat
a sentry s a cc cere on ze r a- or 1
others
,
me srace rather mar -epirg -er compen ors -~e r me oac< -ad chased t~ me otruders they turned on me die fomale—seeas a
oc<s or tushes a so
r
t
a hght
mpasmg
cable feed ng time
o
-c ae~:s
—such
By perform -g guard out- a sentry meerkat s
gn ports such
even
cctemta threats
te
Sentry Duty
-
*eic
mat during
gangs
sacrificing -a
me
sentnes meerkats na<e other antipredator
~cvdua ,v
of
-fewevep such cens/tm s not tolerated n a
sa-e time Therefore are mare
esst~e
tasks, t
cu- shment for ~e r se-'st tens /c*
meerkat scenes ae* ng cut "or
oredators, are
me
irrgJn
concentrate on -orag ng ana -vatdn for oredators at the
not ea.e to 'set
rr
coulc encourage ar nd vidua to take art- antage
testae n - g- olaaesto ieec n atari ov-gr the forgg
oe'
meerkat team perform such 'se~ ess'
fo-mer mprc'<ed smce guards are
Sc'et- s
-
the
at
:
stca
grauc a* meerkats than by a
-omc
themseses Since nary "erne's of
this atuatiar
graua reduce the danger a-
one meerkat ceng caught
smce
~
guaranteed a cccc -ea
s
Farag ng ar
i
'c and
-
'EE*
t
is
threatened by a
up the dassc mongoose
t -v
-'
mm.', tse or
sensitive
nape of the
and daws faeng
me
ts
bao
~et>
predator Tne
-
-eertat "*eoeh'
*~ as .
i
racy -shlB' i
kr
Z'.rg ar -ail. Weerirats
sra
re -cm soca/
of
re
noncocses arc -enters take turns
r re
csdt
«.
cercm ~g
group duties sum
as
catiy-sittrg arc tur *e
ma
'
‘era *c=
Cus
-
o>/e r
me
*"
:ai
arc "eaC An attack from the sky
Dev‘v
by ar eac e or for cover
away
*
r
f a
om
stare 'g up rrav be placed
*airs
hawk causes
pack
s
the rree r kats to run
attacked
the open,
:n
their warren, the adults will
memseives over the
juvenile
members
throw of the
oack to protect them. Like banded mongooses, *
member
a
w
of the oack
captured the others
is
launch a rescue attempt.
Nursing Care *
a
memoe
’
o T the pack
left
is
may be nursed back
*
a~ack.
1
njured after an to health by the
othe r me'~'oe rs. A femaie meerkat that had
peer caught and njured by an eagle was
oemg surrounded
observed
by ner pack and
-e'oed back to the warren The female had
produced a
and was
tter of kittens
eft with
them
the burrow while the
pack went to forage She was fed
"est of the
-v’n grubs by the other
and was
m
a few days earlier
memoers
of her pack
also helped to stand upright during
me mommg
sunbathing session Thanks to the
s^ooort of the group both the female and her
"er survived invalid care
is
only performed for
adui* meerkats since the loss of a baby
damagmg
to the
group than that of an
J neerlrar grouo basks n Vfe*?nrjts ree<; *c
if
me
me ^aming
sunoame earn iay
is
less
adult.
sunshine.
keec memse/ves
to
correct ootfy temperature.
Sun Worshipping Along
with underground dens and group
nesting, sunbathing plays an important part in
*eeomg meerkats
When mey
a: their correct
leave the burrow,
body temperature
members
sit
or stand
an upngh * position with their stomachs facing the sur
They may then
backs or spread
ie
down and bask on
th emselves over rocks to
their
absorb
heat Dur ng the hottest part of the day, however.
104
SEE ALSO
1 2: ?
in
SK'AA.
CARV.CRES
Dwarf
Mongoose The
tiny'dwarf mongoose
and
scurries
around
He legale par.ula
resembles a short- legged cat
groups seeking small prev.
in
specializes in eating the large insects
invertebrates that are so
MONGOOSES
Z
tne
mongoose
- :S
abundant
wh ch
.
"ore vulnerable
size aiso
i
to predators
than the they
groups Living n a group means
pa
- 4
sma
means they
wry
speoes arc s ore reason
"3
r
a e
3'ge r
m
ive
the re
are
one mongoose
s
r
pac< The dominant
w
mae
numoer
He. a'org with a
watch
msehes or a
the
log.
Dwar* mcrgccses
are
cm rent rc
themsefres against predators. They are
mow’'
o'.er
to srte tretr
near pee or *aso
the
vg ant
extremely
s
^crgooses sun
many
ecuced by the
to keec
dwarf
acect a:
presence of cither. Uke the ^eer<at. dwarf
mongooses oost guards
pair of
'arge
of eyes to watch for oanger and the nsk
to ar_,
of Africa.
a~-e
arger scenes a r e unable to do
However the r sma
in parts
i
*r
allows tre^ to enter the tunnels o* ’'Oder's,
and other
SMALLEST rr’e ''"Cer5 of
i
’a~'
It
aers
n ests.
which outs off potential attackers.
of immature ma:es,
often be seen keeping watch over the pack
from a hign vantage point. such as the top of a b<g rock or high
m
a bush
Pack Hierarchy Dwarf mongoose packs have a
stnct hierarchy
with only one dominant breeding
The
-
pai'
dominant femae or "matriarch" leads the pack,
and only she A. though
rs
ao<e to produce
other fema es
m
young
the pack
may mate,
they ether do not apcear to
become pregnant,
or ther fetuses abort,
rf
do
young are born oead.
In
suoordmate females
hep
stii
they
such cases the
produce milk and win
suckle the matnarch's
members
are involved
ang caring
for the
give birth, ther
young
AJ
m grooming,
young when the
!
oack
baby-srtting. rest of
group s out foraging After the dominant
wh ch
are usually the oldest
pack, the youngest
highest
rank
m
ran*
in
members
members
the pair,
of the
are the next
any age group the females
more ngnry than the males '
106
SEE ALSO
1
MONGOOSES DWARF MONGOOSE
Group Hunting
dwarf mongooses can spend more time looking
Dwarf mongooses also forage as
a group.
Because they hunt prey by chasing and
pouncing and not by
stalking, they
individual
is
do not
not hampered by the presence
of others. Foraging
in
a
group also provides
protection against predators. The dwarf
mongoose has developed to keep
wide
a
group movements, and warn against danger.
Dwarf mongooses have taken group feeding a step further than
for the
many
other species,
is
When
there are a
source, a dwarf of
its
lot
hornbills' presence.
of hornbills at the food
own members on is
the hornbills arrive
in
guard at
is
air
vents,
of hornbill, such as the yellow-billed, red-billed,
rise
among
The
birds feed
the packs on insects disturbed
by foraging mongooses and
keep watch for predators.
The
birds
are particularly effective at
spotting attacks
from the
When
air.
they see a
predator, they fly
up into the
mongooses
is
calls
and
trees. Their actions alert
to the danger so they can
their escape.
predator
make warning
The
hornbills
wT
too small to be a
the
make
even cat when a
risk
to themselves.
ch additional curve lance means that the
their den, they
and the mongooses
appear almost immediately.
hornbills.
If
the morning before the
often forming partnerships with several species
and von der Decken's
for
mutually beneficial:
mongooses have emerged from the
all.
some competition
food, the arrangement
down
get
mongoose pack may have none
Although there
call
for
particularly important
mongoose guards who might not
enough food without the
variety of calls
contact with others, coordinate
in
and eating rather than watching
danger. The relationship
require stealth, so the foraging success of any
one
for food
If
the
mongooses
before the hornbills arrive, they
will
the hornbills before they start foraging.
wait for
SMALL CARNIVORES
Indian Gray
Mongoose
Herpes tes edwardsii
Mongooses have a reputation as snake
Common name
killers that is well deserved, but the Indian gray mongoose, like most predators, generally prefers less
mongoose
common
Family
Order
name
mongoose, common Indian gray mongoose,
(Indian
mongoose,
Scientific
dangerous
Indian gray
The Indian gray mongoose
common
Although
Bengal mongoose)
ground,
Herpes tes edwardsii
Length head/body: 16-18
16-18
in
(40-45 cm);
in
(40-45 cm); height
shoulder: up to 8
in
Weight 2.2-4 Key features Gray
tail
Unlike
good
2-4 young born
nest.
mammals,
at
about
at 2 years.
8-10
in
threatened, she
1
May
another
live
the wild
birds,
and
itself.
species, the Indian gray
and males and
yearâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;the
or thin
West
woodland
islands of
them
alone.
will carry
them
her
in
mouth
Newborn mongooses have
hair,
to
a fine
but they are blind for several
to catch their
mongooses
own
trips
for a
few
where she teaches
food. Although
are instinctive foragers
and the the mother's role
Japan
A common
young
kittens are born in a well-hidden
mother on hunting
their
Indies, Hawaii,
Population abundant
their
weeks but then weans them onto adult food. Once weaned, the young mongooses follow
some
and eggs
Ryukyu and Tonaki Status
digs for
The mother suckles her young
days.
lizards;
site.
covering of
Distribution From eastern and central Arabia to Nepal, India, and Sri Lanka. Introduced to Malaysia. Mauritius, the
an old
the mother feels her young are
If
after gestation
Weaned
in captivity,
Open country
it
occurs at any time of
mothers to care fo r
Mongoose
insects, snakes,
Habitat
den that
climber; hunts during
Angry chatters and chirrups Small
a
in
in
males search for other females, leaving the
period of 60 days.
Diet
active during
is
females only form pairs for breeding. After
5 lb (1-2 kg)
month, sexually mature
Voice
It
a solitary animal,
is
matingâ&#x20AC;&#x201D; which
Litters of
or
some mongoose
to light-brown coat, finely speckled
Solitary; agile;
20 years
mound
mongoose
(20 cm)
the day
Breeding
walls.
at
with black
Habits
time on the
its
also a skillful climber, able to
is
the day and spends the night either
Carnivora
length:
an agile animal.
spends most of
ascend trees and scale
Herpestidae
termite
II
it
it
is
skills
to her
in
young
is
passing on her hunting vitally
animal
future survival.
and hunters,
important for their
Once the young mongooses
are
able to hunt for themselves, they will leave their
mother
to find a territory of their
own.
Stealth Tactics
mongooses
Indian
some
are
more
active killers than
related species, such as the
meerkat or
dwarf and banded mongooses, which mainly forage for small invertebrate prey. The Indian
gray
mongoose
takes a higher proportion of
vertebrate prey, such as
rats, birds,
and
Hunting prey requires a high degree of stealth,
108
SEE ALSO Meerkat 1:100; Mongoose, Dw^rf
1:
1
06.
and could be a reason why
Mongoose, Banded 1:110
this
lizards. skill
and
species
prey.
MONGOOSES
is
solitary.
group would disturb
Traveling as a
larger prey
and hence reduce hunting success.
the ground and turning over rocks and stones. is
killed
the neck or head.
by a bite to the back of
Mongooses
fond of eggs. They break the the egg
in their
between
their
front
back legs
of the
The mongooses'
such as mice and
at a rock or wall.
mongoose genus
their snake-killing ability.
immune
sensitive to size.
it
suffer
receive them.
known
mammals
from snakebites a duel
will
less
of a similar
why mongooses
is
between
mongoose the mongoose strikes
and
their diet
ability to
rats
kill
kill
dangerous
pest species
make them popular
species, including the Indian gray,
mongoose
for
venom, they are
to snake
than other
In
in
killing
pets.
have
help reduce snake and rat numbers. But the
Herpestes,
Although mongooses
However, the main reason
do not
However,
attack.
been introduced to areas around the world to
such as the Indian gray, are well
are not
mongoose
snakes and their tendency to
it
Killers
Members
may be overcome by
although mongooses are capable of
Some
Snake
down
since there are easier things to catch.
by holding
paws and throwing
be worn
eating snakes, they rarely feature
are particularly
shells
will
MONGOOSE
by the mongoose's stamina. Even constrictor
the speed of a
also forages for insects by sniffing
Fleeing prey
snake
Eventually, the
species such as pythons
prey, the Indian gray
As well as vertebrate
mongoose
agility.
INDIAN GRAY
that they rarely a snake
and
a
avoid the snake's
by using a combination of speed and
whatever
is
it
an opportunist feeder, catching
can
been introduced
find. In it
many
areas
where
it
has
has attacked the local fauna,
often with disastrous consequences.
A mongoose
Its
fondness for eggs has also contributed to the decline of
some
the Caribbean islands
numbers
and
birds,
its
introduction to
may have reduced
of green turtles,
whose eggs
on sandy beaches. Caribbean ground useful
in
keeping
down
the
are laid lizards,
insect pests,
have
also declined since the introduction
of
mongooses.
killing a
Uttar Pradesh,
cobra
in
India.
Mongooses are
renowned snake
killers.
The author Rudyard Kipling wrote about a
duel between a
mongoose named tikki-tavi
and
Rikki-
a cobra in
The Jungle Book.
SMALL CARNIVORES
Banded
Mongoose Banded mongooses
Scientific
thcii large den, often
name Mungos mungo Herpestidae
Order
Carnivora
The banded mongoose
Length head/body: 12-18 tan length:
6-12
shoulder: 6
I.
in
groupsâ&#x20AC;&#x201D; in
(30-45 cm);
mongoose
(15-30 cm); height at
in
(15 cm)
in
Weight 3-4.5
(1-2 kg). Male slightly heavier
lb
brown
to black; black-tipped
tail
Up
mature
at
10-12 months. May
up to about 12 years
in captivity,
5-10
in
up
in
Mainly invertebrates, particularly termites and beetle grubs in open grassland and various
mongoose
more
such as beetles and
forested areas;
some
vertebrates such as lizards, snakes,
eggs and some
small
and mice;
leaf
poking
litter,
Range of habitats from forested or cultivated areas to dry scrub and open grassland
Distribution Africa south of Sahara Desert, but not
mongooses smash
beetles,
dung
catapulting rocks.
An
them between
individual
when
in
the
make such
it
is
not inclined to
finds a
food supply, a mongoose
excited twitters that
it
have attracted the attention of others, then
try to
up to 0.5 square miles
does happen,
between two
it
(1.3 sq. km).
own
territories,
found
in
territories,
usually
mongoose dens
are
termite mounds.
A den on
times by two different packs. at the
larger
Mongoose, Dwarf 1:106
same den on
pack
it
and both packs
boundary may occasionally be used
up
When
tends to be at the boundary
run away. Most banded
1:100,
who
grab a share.
so meetings between packs are rare.
/
soon
will
Each group of banded mongooses uses a territory of
risk
large eggs by
their hind legs at
mongoose
share food. However,
will
and
balls, snails,
Packs usually stay within their
Mm
by a
led
and turning over stones and dung
search of prey. Banded
southwestern Africa
Population abundant Not at
group
noses and front claws
their
particularly interesting
fruit
River Basin or
as a
tough objects such as large millipedes and
and churrs
leaf litter invertebrates
SEE ALSO
the
senior female. They busy themselves scratching
the
Diet
110
in
individual characteristics.
into crevices,
Chirps, twitters,
Status
with dwarf
live
Voice
Congo
Banded mongoose
pair.
Banded mongooses forage
wild
Habitat
has three or
Busy Foragers
4 young born after gestation period of 2 months. Weaned at about 1 month;
snails in
typically
packs of up to 40 members, but
between
to
sexually
pack
lives in
1 5 and 20; each pack has a dominant male and 3 or 4 breeding females
Breeding
A
the whole
in
females. Instead, rank appears to be based on
age and Active only during the day; social: erritorial
family.
social hierarchy, as
back;
usually
the biggest
females do not necessarily outrank males
usually brownish-gray, but color varies with habitat; dark-brown bands across
Habits
large social
lives in
than a single breeding
Key features Coat
feet are dark
fact,
an old termite mound.
four breeding females and several males, rather
than female
.
They return at night
prey.
Banded mongoose
Family
Size
busy gangs that scurry
live in
around looking for small
Common name
Mungos mungo
will usually
the
If
a territory at different
two packs
same
turn
night, the
chase off the others.
to
MONGOOSES BANDED MONGOOSE
Mongoose packs have territory
several
and may use one
in
months
the group
their
for anything
single night to a couple of
The breeding
dens
from
at a time.
all
'
at three to four
of the pack
weeks
cycles of females within a
pack are synchronized so that
den
a
the young are
out foraging. The young leave the
is
old,
in play.
weeks
old
Once they
the kittens
and are
join the rest
about
five
begin to accompany
will
the adults on foraging expeditions.
born within a few days of each other. This reduces the
risk
to any one. mongoose kitten of
being caught by a predator:
If
births
were
spread out over a longer period of time,
find refuge in a termite
newborn mongooses one by one. Another
a
may be one
of
number of dens
scattered over the pack's territory
the
need
and used when arises.
for predators to pick off the
advantage of simultaneous
births
that
is
all
for cover
the
reproductive females are producing milk at the
same
time,
and the
any female, not
kittens
may be
just their mother.
suckled by
Hence
mothers are free to go and look for food turn while the
females. Other involved
in
in
of the pack are also
caring for the young.
An
mongoose
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;whose is
to run
â&#x20AC;&#x201D; banded mongooses may club mobbing
together and take part
in
During such attacks
members
all
bunch
closely together
heads
raised.
The
attacks.
of the pack
and advance with
resulting growling
their
and
snapping mass can give the impression of a
young are nursed by other
members
Numbers
only response to potential predators
it
would be easy
It
in
Unlike the smaller dwarf
Š Banded mongooses mound.
Safety
adult male
usually remains as a baby-sitter while the rest of
single large animal.
The displays can be so
impressive that they intimidate large dogs and
other predators such as jackals, eagles, and vultures. But
banded mongooses may
also
mob
harmless animals, such as bushbucksand geese, if
they seem to pose a threat.
on the defensive, in
it
When
a
pack
is
bunches up with the young
the center. Protection of fellow group
members may even extend individuals. For
example,
to rescuing captured
when
mongoose was caught by an into a tree to
the pack
a
banded
eagle and taken
be eaten, a dominant male from
was observed
to climb the tree
force the eagle to release
its
catch.
and
SMALL CARNIVORES
of Species
List
The following
lists all
Gulo
species of
M.
G. gulo Wolverine; circumpolar, in
small carnivores, including their
N.
distribution
America and Eurasia
(Part)
I.
L.
SUBFAMILY PROCYONINAE
Bassariscus
B astutus
Lutrogale
L
polecat); semiarid regions of Africa
islands; N. Africa
nngtailed
cat);
W.
U.S.
from
-Oregon and Colorado south and throughout Mexico B sumichrasti Cacomistle; C America
Nasua
N
nanca White-nosed
coati; S.E.
Arizona, Mexico, C. America,
W. Colombia, and Ecuador
N
Nasuella
Mountain coati, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Colombia Procyon P cancrivorus Crab-eating raccoon; olivacea
W
Costa Rica to N Argentina P gloveralleni Barbados raccoon; Barbados P msularis Tres Marias raccoon; Maria Madre Island, Mexico
P
Common raccoon; Canada. US, C America;
lotor
S
introduced
in
parts of Europe
M. foina Stone marten (beech or house marten); S. and C. Europe
SUBFAMILY POTOSINAE
Bassaricyon Olmgos
B alien/ Amazonia B beddardi Guyana B gabbi C America and N South America B lasius Costa Rica B pauli Panama Potos P flavus Kmkajou, E Central and S America from S Mexico to Brazil
W
SUBFAMILY AILURINAE
Ailurus fulgens Red panda, Himalayas to
China
P.
to N. Nigeria
V.
Eira
E barbara Tayra; C and S. America, Trinidad
africana Tropical weasel;
c u/a Little gnson,
C and .
N
New
Zealand eversmannii Steppe polecat; steppes and semideserts of Russia, Kazakhstan, and Mongolia to China
M M
felipei Colombian weasel; highlands of Colombia
M
(huron).
C and
S America from Mexico to Brazil
capensis
and
S.
China,
clawless otter; 1
of the
Congo Sea
Islands
SUBFAMILY ELLIVORINAE
Mellivora M. capensis Honey badger; Africa from Cape to Morocco in west and Ethiopia, Sudan, and Somalia in east;
Basin
otter; Kurile
and
Gulf of Alaska, reintroduced into parts of former range along Pacific
SUBFAMILY TAXIDIINAE
Taxidea
S.W Canada and
Sumatra
L
felma Marine otter; coast and
Conepatus Hog-nosed skunks C. c hinga Andes skunk, Argentina,
and Peru
longicaudis Neotropical river
humboldtn Patagonian skunk; S.
C.
Chile, Argentina
leuconotus Eastern hog-nosed skunk, E. Texas, E Mexico
and S. America from Mexico to Argentina provocax Southern river otter;
C mesoleucus Western hog-nosed
Argentina, Chile
C
lutra
skunk; S U.S semistriatus
S
Lutra
European
river otter
(Eurasian river otter), Eurasia south of tundra line,
reintroduced
Paraguay, Peru
Bolivia, Chile, C.
otter, C.
L
N.C. U.S. south
Mexico
SUBFAMILY MEPHITINAE
canadensis North American river otter (Canadian otter); Canada, U S including Alaska coastal islands of Chile
L
to
and Russia
Lontra
confined to a few declining populations in E Europe and Spain lutreolma Indonesian mountain weasel, high altitudes of Java and
taxus American badger; from
T.
coast of N. America (notably
L
Arabia to Turkmenistan,
Nepal, and India
Aleutian Islands, Alaskan coast,
L.
Myanmar
M. marchei Palawan stink badger; Palawan and Busuanga N.E. of Borneo
En hydra E. lutris
badgers
5째N from Senegal
absent only from desert regions of Namibia A congicus Congo clawless otter; African forest; streams and rivers
European mink,
mgripes Black-footed ferret, western prairies of N America; was rated extinct in the wild, but maintained in captivity and being
Cape
to Ethiopia south to the Cape;
California)
kathiah Yellow-bellied weasel;
China
Africa south of
L
112
Lanka, S.E. Asia,
Aonyx
A
N America from about 50째 north to Panama extending through northern S America along Andes
locally
Ferret
javanensis Teledu (Malaysian or Indonesian stink badger); Borneo, Sumatra, Java, and N. Natuna
Indonesia, Borneo, Palawan
frenata Long-tailed weasel;
lutreola
Melogale
M. everetti Everett's ferret badger; Borneo M. moschata Chinese ferret badger; China, Taiwan, Assam, Myanmar, and S.E. Asia M. orientalis Oriental ferret badger; Java, Bali, and S.E. Asia M. personata Indian ferret badger;
A. cinereus Short-clawed otter;
Africa; introduced to
W
Metes M. metes European badger (Eurasian badger); N. Europe up to S. Scandinavia, European Russia up to Arctic Circle south to Palestine east to Iran, Tibet, and S. China
Amblonyx
Islands, S.
in
China and
Indochina to Thailand, and
My da us
India, Sri
S.
Sumatra
India, Nepal,
not semideserts of Kazakhstan and Mongolia, Mediterranean region, or
Hog badger; Peking
A. collaris
SUBFAMILY LUTRINAE
M
S America
peregusna Marbled polecat;
Peru, Brazil altaica
M
Galictis
and Sudan
steppe and semidesert from S.E. Europe (Romania) east to W. China, Palestine, Baluchistan
N Myanmar
SUBFAMILY MUSTELINAE
banded
Poecilogale P albinucha African striped weasel; Africa south of Sahara
Japanese islands
Mountain weasel; forested mountains of Asia from Altai to Korea and Tibet M. erminea Stoat (ermine or shorttailed weasel); N America and Eurasia south to about 40째N, including Ireland and Japan, but
M
libyca North African
weasel; semidesert fringes of the
Vormela
zibellina Sable; N. Asia,
Himalayas,
Weasel Family
Gnson
(Sierra
(Appalachians)
M
naturalized throughout
Sahara from Morocco and Egypt
N America to California Nevada) and W. Virginia
SUBFAMILY MELINAE
Arctonyx north throughout
Poecilictis
Fisher (Pekan or
Virginian polecat); northern
M.
Siberia, Korea, China,
Europe, C. and E. Asia, and southern S. America
to Bolivia
FAMILY MUSTELIDAE
vittata
now
otter;
Borneo Pteronura P brasiliensis Giant otter; in all countries of S. America except possibly Chile, Argentina, and Uruguay
M. vison American mink (eastern
Japan, Korea
M
European
Smooth-coated
lower Indus, India, S.E. Asia, Myanmar, S.W. China, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra,
to Indochina
Nilgiri
W. Asia M. melampus Japanese marten;
M.
E.
Japan, and Taiwan M. strigidorsa Back-striped weasel; Nepal east through N. Myanmar
marten (yellow-
N. Europe,
M. pennanti
sibirica Kolinsky;
Russia to
perspicillata
Iraq (Tigris River),
mink); originally N. America, but
Mountains of S. India M. martes Pine marten; C. and
M
G
Scandinavia to Urals
M.
C. Asia
Nilgiri
throated marten);
E
Mexico
G
Denmark and
M. gwatkinsi
introduced in New Zealand M. nudipes Barefoot weasel; S.E. Asia, Sumatra, Borneo M. putorius European polecat; Europe except most of
Mustela and
P maynardi Nassau Island, Bahamas P minor Guadeloupe raccoon; Guadeloupe P pygmaeus Cozumel Island raccoon, Cozumel Island, Yucatan,
S.
marten; S.E Asia to Korea, Java, Sumatra, and Borneo
N.
Asia
C
M. americana American marten; northern N. America to Sierra Nevada and Rockies in Colorado and California M. flavigula Yellow-throated
to
nasua Ringtailed coati; S America east of Andes south to N Argentina and Uruguay
N
patagonicus Patagonian weasel; pampas of Argentina and Chile
and Egypt e$st
across Asia north of Himalayas;
-
Martes
Ringtail (civet, miner's, or
about 40째; Europe from
sumatrana Hairy-nosed otter; Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia
including Azores, Mediterranean
Lyncodon
Raccoon Family
Arctic to
L.
striatus Zorilla (African or striped
t
south of Sahara
FAMILY PROCYONIDAE
weasel); N. America from
Atlantic seaboard (except Ireland),
Ictonyx
Order Carnivora
weasel (European
nivalis Least
comfnon
N
Africa
Spot-necked otter, Africa south of Sahara, absent from desert areas like Namibia maculicollis
,
Nicaragua
Amazonian skunk;
Mexico, N Peru,
E
Brazil
Mephitis macroura Hooded skunk,
M
S
M
W
U.S.
mephitis Striped skunk,
S Canada,
U
S.,
N Mexico
OF SPECIES
LIST
Peninsular Myanmar, Malaya, Sumatra, Borneo, Sipora and
Spilogale Sported skunks Western spotted skunk;
5. gracilis
W.
U.S. to C.
Mexico
S.
S.
Pagai Islands
Sumatra, Java; introduced to
W.
S.E.
W
Civetticcis C. tivetta
C.
FAMILY VIVERRIDAE
and
Genetta
Nandinia
G
palm civet twospotted palm civet from Gu nea including Fernando Poo island to S. Sudan in the north, to Mozambique, E. Zimbabwe, and C. Angola in south 1
:
(Mozambique genet, Hinton's Mozambique. S. Democratic Republic of Congo,
genet'; N. Angola,
N.W. Zambia,
Thailand, Malaysia, Indochina,
-toothed palm
Forest genet; southern part of
Sumatra, Java, Borneo, RiauLingga Archipelago, Bangka,
genet);
Cape
Afnca G. victoriae Giant genet (giant forest genet); Uganda, N. DRC Poiana
civet; India,
Nepal, Tibet, China north to
Taiwan, Flainan,
P.
Myanmar, Thailand, Malaya,
Paradoxurus
China, Malaya,
Sunda
Nusa Tenggara
Islands) as far east
as Timor, Philippines P.
jerdoni Jerdon's palm S. India
(Palm and
Java, P.
Indochina, Sumatra, Java, Borneo, (Lesser
civet;
Nilgiri Hills,
Sri
DRC
V.
civet,
Myanmar, Thailand, formerly
SUBFAMILY HEMIGAUNAE
S.
Chrotogale C. owstoni Owston's banded civet (Owston's palm civet); north of
the coastal distnct and W. Ghats of
V.
Indochinese peninsula
Sulawesi, Karlinata, Bangka, Buru,
Ambon and Langkawi
Islands,
Philippines
N. Vietnam Diplogale
V.
palm
â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Mount
civet;
Borneo,
Dulit to
3,900
civet;
Myanmar,
Thailand, Indochina, Malaya,
ft
S.
China
Viverricula
Hemigalus derbyanus Banded palm
zibetha Large Indian N. India, Nepal,
(1,200 m) H.
civet,
Riau-Lingga Archipelago, Borneo,
Sumatra, Borneo, Malayan and Indochinese Peninsulas C. lowei Lowe's otter civet;
Sarawak
ground
tangalunga); Malaya, Sumatra,
bennettii Otter civet (water civet);
and
mongoose;
China, Nepai, Assam, Myanmar,
Hainan, Sumatra, Borneo,
FAMILY HERPESTIDAE Mongoose Family
Philippines
H. vittkollis Stripe-necked
SUBFAMILY HERPESTINAE
mongoose; Ichneumia
Atilax A. paludinosus Marsh (water
mongoose
:
mongoose Gambia east
to Ethiopia south to
I.
Afnca
S.
albicauda White-tailed mongoose;
W. African
crassicauda Bushy-tailed
forest regions
and S.W.
Liberiictis
L kuhn: Ubenan mongoose, Ubena Mungos M. gambianus Gambian mongoose, Gambia to Nigena
M. mungo Banded mongoose,
Nigena to N. Angola, C. Kenya,
Afnca south of Sahara, except Congo and S.W. Afnca
Uganda
Crossarchus C alexandn Alexander's mongoose (Congo mongoose); DRC, Uganda, Mount Elgon, Kenya C. ansorgei Angolan mongoose; N. Angola, S.E. DRC C. obscurus Kusimanse (dark mongoose, long-nosed mongoose); Sierra Leone,
Paracynictis P.
W
Cameroon C. penicillata
meerkat);
Yellow
S.
mongoose
(red
selousi Selous's
mongoose
(gray
meerkat'; southern Afnca from
Angola to northern
S.
Africa
Rhynchogale R.
mellen Meller's mongoose; DRC, Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia.
S.
C.
and
N.
Mozambique
Suricata 5.
Cynictis
S.
Sn Lanka
Africa; S. Arabia
mongoose; Mozambique, Malawi, Zambia, Tanzania, Kenya B. jacksoni Jackson's mongoose; C. Kenya and S.E. Uganda 8. nigripes Black-legged mongoose; S.E.
S. India,
Sub-Saharan Afnca except C. and
Bdeogale
suricatta Suricate (meerkat, gray meerkat, or stoksterjey Angola, Namibia, S. Africa, S. Botswana
Africa, Namibia.
SUBFAMILY GAUDIINAE
Angola, Botswana
Galidia
Dologale dybowskii Pousargue
mongoose
s
(Dybowski's or African tropical
G. elegans Ringta led
mongoose;
Madagascar
savanna mongoose); N.E. DRC, C. African Republic, S. Sudan,
Galidictis
W. Uganda
(Madagascar banded mongoose), Madagascar G. grand idieri Giant stnped mongoose; desert of S.W. Madagascar Mungotictis M. decemlineata Narrow-striped mongoose; W. Madagascar Salanoia S. concolor Brown mongoose, E. Madagascar
Helogale
Dwarf mongoose;
H. parvula
Ethiopia to northern
S.
Afnca west
H.
brachyurus Short-tailed
mongoose; Malaysia, Sumatra, Java, Philippines
ed wards: Indian gray mongoose; and C Arabia to Nepal, India, and Sn Lanka H. (Galerella) flavescens N. and C. Namibia, S. Angola H. fuscus Indian brown mongoose; H.
E
tangalunga Malayan civet (Oriental or
D. hosei Hose's
Indochina, Malay
Peninsula to Penang
Cynogale C.
S. India;
S.
Herpestes
megaspila Large-spotted
js; S.
H. un/a Crab-eating
Madagascar
to N. Namibia
Viverra
Lanka
swa
C. Namibia
Indochinese peninsula, Taiwan,
D.
pardicolor Spotted Iinsang; Nepal,
of
zeylonensis Golden palm civet;
Borneo
Assam, Sikkim, N. Myanmar, Indochina Osbomictis O. piscivora Aquatic genet (fishing genet or Congo water civet); Kisangani and Kibale-lturi districts
Travancore, and Coorg) P.
richardsoni African iinsang (oyan);
Cote d'Ivoire, Gabon, Cameroon, N. Congo, Fernando Poo Island
Nepal, Assam, Bhutan, Myanmar,
Kei Islands,
S.
Prionodon P Iinsang Banded Iinsang; W. Malaysia, Tenasserim, Sumatra,
palm
civet (toddy cat); India, Sri Lanka,
Ceram,
region of
Sierra Leone,
Sumatra, N. Borneo, S Andaman Islands; introduced to Japan
S.
Africa
(blotched genet or tigrine genet);
(Celebes)
Thailand,
W.
G. tigrina Large-spotted genet
Paguma
Common
region;
spotted genet); C. Africa, with restricted range in E. Afnca G. thierryi Vlilier's genet (false
Natuna islands Macrogalidia M. musschenbroekii Sul awes oalm civet (giant civet or brown palm civet); N.E. and C. Sulawesi
hermaphroditus
Cape
G. servalina Servaline genet (small-
Bilitung. N.
P.
Africa, C. Africa, S. Africa
(except
ferox Fossa;
C.
B.
G. maculata (formerly G. pardina
,
Flopei, Shansi,
Common
johnstom Johnston's genet
W.
Sn Lanka H. (Galerella)
Tanzania
(Lehmann's genet); Libena
palm rivet); Assam, Myanmar, Tha and, Malayan and Indochinese peninsulas, China (Yunnan civet (three-striped
Madagascar
Cryptoprocta
Peninsula, France, Palestine G.
rivet);
SUBFAMILY CRYPTOPROCT1NAE
Africa (north of Sahara), ibenan
Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Paiawan
Masked palm
S.
genet isma IIspotted genet or European genet);
G. genetta
India, Nepal,
larvata
Malagasy
Cape
sangu neus Slende" mongoose; Afnca south of Sahara H. smith ii Ruddy mongoose: India,
fossa Fanaloka (.Madagascar or
F.
Fiji
H. 'Galerella)
Angolan genet
of the Sahara except for ra n forest; S. Arabian Peninsula
Arctogalidia
goudotii Falanouc; E.C. to N.W.
E.
:
G. angoiensis
Arctictus
binturong Binturong ibear cat Bhutan, Myanmar,
Eupleres
Fossa
abyssr ca Abyssinian genet
ian Islands,
gray mongoose, S. Angola, Namibia, S. Afnca
Madagascar
G. felina Fei.ne genet: Africa south
SUBFAMILY PARADOXURINAE
P.
and
Ethiopian highlands, Somaiia
N. binotata Africa"'
Sma
Africa to KwaZulu-Natal,
Hawa
H. (Galerelia) pulverulentus
SUBFAMILY EUPLERiNAE
Namibia n south
SUBFAMILY NANDINIIAE
A. trivirgata
north through
Transvaal, N. Botswana,
and Genet Family
N.
A
E.
in
Indies,
naso Long-nosed mongoose; S:e Nigena to Gabon and DRC
H.
Islands
African over; Senegal east
to Somalia
Civet
S.
Sn Lanka, Bhutan; introduced to Madagascar, Sokotra, and Comoro
SUBFAMILY VIVERRINAE
and C. U.S. to E. Mexico and S. pygmaea Pygmy skunk; S.W. Mexico
mongoose;; N. Arabia to China ana Malay Per nsula;
Ball,
-Hainan, Taiwan, Indochina, India,
putorius Eastern spotted skunk;
5.
China, Myanmar, W. Malaysia,
Thailand, Sumatra, Java,
S. India,
G. fascia ta Broad-striped
mongoose
Sn Lanka
ichneumon Egyptian mongoose (Ichneumon); most of Afnca except Sahara, C. and W. African forest regions, and S.W. Africa; Israel, S. Spam, and Portugal
H.
H. javanicus (includes H.
auropunctatus Small Indian )
civet;
V.
indica Small Indian rivet (rasse);
mongoose
(Javan gold-spotted
113
SMALL CARNIVORES
Glossary Words
small capitals refer to
in
other entries
in
the glossary.
Adaptation features animal that adjust
it
to
its
may be produced
environment;
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
by evolution
of an
camouflage
e.g.,
Adaptive radiation when
(e
g
,
closely related animals
members
of a family)
have
other so that they can survive
in
different niches
grown animal
fully
that
Amphibian any cold-blooded .ertebrate of the class
in
Amphibia,
on land but
typically living
the water, e
g.,
and newts
frogs, toads,
Anal gland anal
anus or on either
it
Aquatic
that conveys specific information
by pines, spruces, and cedars
to others, usually to
of teeth especially adapted to
Corm underground food
the
shear with a cutting (scissorlike)
storage bulb of certain plants
visual or vocal elements, as in
Crepuscular active
threat, courtship, or greeting
edge;
living in
Arboreal
living
water
among
the
branches of trees
Arthropod animals with
mammals
in living
unique to
is
a
total
them
weight of
living material
used as a food source by
cutting
scavengers
trees for timber or to create
down from
open space
generation
a blind sac in the
for activities such as
animals
fingerprinting," a technique that
and
Delayed implantation when
allows scientists to see
the development of a fertilized
related to
large intestines. In
herbivorous
mammals the
is
it
end of the cecum appendix;
often
egg
site of
on
bacterial action
is
it
cellulose. is
in species
The
the
with a
is
suspended
period before
Domestication process
taming and breeding animals to
Births ere thus delayed until a
provide help and useful products
may
favorable time of year
for
function
Den
Dorsal relating to the back or
Cellulose the material that
constructed, used for sleeping,
forms the
giving birth,
retain
an antibacterial
walls of plants
cell
is
laid
that,
hard material that
some
down
mammalian
species
cementum
and
of individuals
numbers in
Ecosystem for
of
all
types of tooth
in
upper and
or
each
for
lower jaw are given. The
teeth to be found
International Trade in
typical
leaves of
molar (M). The
number
the total
example
in
the
name
nowhere
final
for Carnivora
A is
M3/3 = 44
also
and armadillos only
one
in
else
Estivation inactivity or greatly
decreased
of
skull.
is
for
small geographical area,
activity
during hot or
dry weather
Estrus the period
when eggs
Endangered Species. An
13/3,
Dentition animalâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
set of teeth
ovaries,
Desert area of low
rainfall
available for successful mating.
trade to
Cl/1, P4/4,
are released from the female's
and she becomes
Estrous females are often
permitted levels through a
dominated by
also (verb) to hide food for
system of licensing and
plants such as cacti
future use
administrative controls. Rare
Digit a finger or toe
"receptive" to
of food,
in
their
agreement between nations that restricts international
Cache a hidden supply
is
in
canine (C),
(I),
and
toothless, but
used as group
Endemic found
figure
(P),
whole system
a
plants, animals,
anteaters, sloths,
CITES Convention on
teeth lying behind
which
Edentate
which the
half of the
and Scats
Feces
environment interact
summarizing the dental in
Droppings see
raise
young, or for winter shelter
arrangement,
the upper surface
young;
Dental formula convention
under a microscope, can
a
and
to give birth
be counted to estimate the age
mouth used
raising
humans
spinal part of the body; usually
also (verb) the act of retiring to a
den
annual layers
in
a shelter, natural or
premolars and molars
and shrubs
of
reduced cecum the appendix
premolar
trees
is
completes normal pregnancy.
the order: incisor
Browsing Ceding on
who
for example,
the wall of the uterus and
the canines, consisting of
independence of young
whom,
particular offspring
Cheek teeth
through nesting to
analysis "genetic
which male was the father of
for a variable
implants into
it
from courtship,
territory),
handed
generation to
the junction between the small
digestive tract
the temporary storage of food
formation
is
DNA
opening out from
cycle of reproductive activity pair
contains the
living things;
all
genetic code that
numbers are always presented
(and often establishment of
specially
adapted
referred to as "in heat" or as
males
Callosities hardened, thickened
animals and plants are assigned
Digitigrade method of walking
Eutherian mammals that give
areas on the skin (e
to categories: (for instance
on the toes without the heel
birth to babies, not eggs,
touching the ground. See
rear
callosities in
Canine
some
g,, ischial
primates)
a sharp stabbing
(tootf
Appendix
1, 2).
See Volume
Cloven hoof
Canopy
formed from two
ont
-
jous (closed) or layer in forests
1
foot that toes,
produced by the intermingling
Congenital born with
< <
and
a
Plantigrade
pouch on the mother's
Dispersal the scattering of
Extinction the process of dying
each
young animals going
out
within a horny covering
of branches of trees
them without using
is
page 17
tooth usually longer than rest
broken (open)
114
down and removing
growing crops or grazing
Cheek pouch
entire
(deoxyribonucleic acid) the
substance that makes up the
main part of the chromosomes
alongside the
Breeding season the
DNA in
of
Biped any animal that walks on See Quadruped
lower molar
Deforestation the process of
two
legs
displays
winter (or the dry season)
teeth. In
variation within
of
Carrion dead animal matter
coats the roots of
Biomass the
members
can involve
species;
Carnivore meat-eating animal
crabs and insects
species
same
Diurnal active during the day
by trees that lose their leaves
Cementum
and the
Cursorial adapted-for running
premolar and
first
relatively
conspicuous pattern of behavior
twilight
in
Deciduous forest dominated
jointed outer skeleton, e.g.,
Biodiversity a variety of
the
involved are the fourth upper
very large;
sac) a gland
opening by a short duct either just inside the
side of
mountainous areas dominated
Carnassial (teeth) opposing pair
Cecum
has reached breeding age
breeding
organs from arteries to veins
Display any
and
Carnivora, and the teeth
a
evolved differences from each
Adult a
Coniferous forest evergreen forests of northern regions
arrangement
coloration
group of
Capillaries tiny blood vessels that convey blood through
mdition animal
is
to
live
in
which every
and the
away from where they were
dies,
born and brought up
forever
belly
last individual
species
is
lost
GLOSSARY
Eyeshine when eyes of animals
Gestation the period of
Inbreeding breeding among
(especially carnivores) reflect a
pregnancy between
closely related animals (e.g.,
beam
of the
is
of light shone at them.
caused by a special
layer (the
tapetum)
It
Gregarious
back
of the eye characteristic of
baby
birth of the
Grazing feeding on grass
reflective
at the
egg and
fertilization
many
living
together
in
loose groups or herds
nocturnal species and associated with an increased in
Harem
see
ability to
the dark
in
a
group of females
same
the
territory
living
and
cousins) leading to
Larynx voice box where sounds
Incisor (teeth) simple pointed
Latrine place where feces are
teeth at the front of the jaws
left regularly,
used for nipping and snipping
added
Indigenous
Leptospirosis disease caused by
living naturally in a
introduced
of closely related species that
plants (grazers
often also look quite similar.
thus herbivores)
on
Heterodont
Also used as a group
Volume
and
for
are created
region; native
dentition specialized
mammary glands
reduced survival rates
Herbivore an animal that eats
names always
in
offspring
genetic composition and
consorting with a single male
Zoological family
milk
weakened
Family technical term for group
and browsers are
Lactation process of producing
not an
(i.e.,
often with scent
leptospiral bacteria in kidneys
and transmitted
species)
via urine
Insectivore animals that feed insects
and
Mammary
similar small prey.
name
of
for
glands
characteristic
mammals, glands
for
animals such as hedgehogs,
production of milk
premolars, each type of tooth
shrews, and moles
Marine
within a species consisting of
having a different function. See
Interbreeding breeding
Matriarch senior female
parents and their offspring
Homodont
between animals of
member
Feces remains of digested food
Hibernation becoming
end
in
page
1
"idae." See 1
.
Also, a social
body
into canines, incisors,
1
group
inactive
body
different
of a social group
Metabolic rate the
within a single
species or varieties
the sea
living in
rate at
family or strain; interbreeding
which chemical
temperature to save energy.
can cause dilution of the gene
within animals, including the
Feral domestic animals that
Hibernation takes place
pool
exchange of gasses
have gone wild and
special nest or den called a
Interspecific between species
and the
Intraspecific between
from food
expelled from
as pellets,
in
often with scent secretions
live
in
a
hibernaculum
independently of people Flystrike
winter, with lowered
Homeothermy maintenance
where CARRiON-feeding
of
and constant body
same
individuals of the
activities
in
liberation of
Metabolism the chemical
species
Invertebrates animals that have
activities
temperature by means of
no backbone
turn food into energy
and
have
eggs
laid their
a high
burrows or
other true
(or
internal processes; also called
bones) inside their body,
underground tunnels
"warm-blooded"
mollusks, insects,
Frugivore an animal that eats
Home
crabs
living in
main part of the
fruit as
range the area that an
animal uses
diet
in
the course of
Fur mass of hairs forming a
normal periods of
continuous coat characteristic of
Territory
mammals
Homodont
Fused joined together
the teeth are
activity.
dentition in all
its
See
which
IUCN
and
place to another
and back
again, usually seasonal
Molars
International Union for the
large crushing teeth at
Conservation of Nature,
the back of the
mouth
responsible for assigning animals
Molt process
which mammals
and plants to
shed
internationally
agreed categories of
similar in
appearance and function
within animals that
Migration movement from one
e.g.,
jellyfish,
table
rarity.
hair,
in
usually seasonal
Monogamous
See
below
animals that
have only one mate
Gape wide-open mouth Gene the basic unit of heredity
unbranched prongs projecting
Juvenile young animal that has
environment
enabling one generation to pass
from the head of cloven-hoofed
not yet reached breeding age
Musk mammalian
on characteristics to
animals. Horns have a bony core
its
Horr s
offspring
Generalist an animal that
is
capable of a wide range of activities,
Keratin tough, fibrous material
Hybrid offspring of two
The 1
made
related species that can
species.
Volume
Kelp brown seaweeds
not specialized
a
plural
page
closely related is
genera. See
closely
interbreed, but the hybrid
is
in
a
at a
time
mountain
scent
Mutation random changes
with a tough outer covering
group of
Genus
Montane
a pair of sharp,
of keratin like fingernails
respiration
energy
Fossorial adapted for digging
flies
occur
in
genetic material
that forms hairs, feathers,
and
Native belonging to that area
protective plates on the skin of
or country, not introduced by
vertebrate animals
human
assistance
sterile
1
IUCN CATEGORIES EX
Extinct,
when
there
is
no reasonable doubt that the
last
VU
EW
when
Extinct in the Wild,
a species
is
known
only to
LR
outside the past range. Critically
DO
Endangered, when
extremely high
risk
a species
is
facing an
of extinction in the wild in the
immediate future.
Lower not
survive in captivity or as a naturalized population well
CR
Vulnerable, the wild
individual of a species has died.
NE
in
Risk,
satisfy
when
a species faces a high risk of extinction in
the medium-term future.
when
the
been evaluated and does CR, EN, or VU.
a species has
criteria for
Data Deficient, when there
is
about a species to assess the
risk
Not Eva U ated, IUCN cr t eria. |
not enough information of extinction.
species that have not been assessed by the
j
EN
Endangered, when extinction
in
the wild
a species faces a very high risk of in
the near future.
115
SMALL CARNIVORES
when
Natural selection
Placenta the structure that
an embryo to
animals and plants are
links
mother during
its
Roadkill animals traffic
weather) to ensure survival of
Plantigrade walking on the
Rumen complex stomach
the
soles of the feet with the heels
in
touching the ground. See
digesting plant material
and bad
fittest
New World
the Americas; Old
by road
killed
Ruminant animals
vegetation and later bring
Australia)
have more than one mate
Niche
part of a habitat occupied
by an organism, defined of
all
aspects of
Nocturnal
Nomadic fixed
in
terms
single
mating season.
Monogomous animals have a single
its lifestyle
animals that have no
Population
a distinct
Old World non-American
New World
again ("chewing the cud" or
Terrestrial living
"rumination") to
Territory defended space
assist
its
the
in
stomach
group of
species or
all
either by adjustments to
with scattered trees and low
metabolism or by moving
warm
rainfall, usually in
Scats fecal
areas
pellets, especially of
Posterior the hind end or
carnivores. Scent
deposited with the pellets as
Omnivore an animal
Predator an animal that prey for food
vegetable
Prehensile grasping
Opportunistic taking advantage
fingers
of every varied opportunity that
Premolars teeth found
arises, flexible
Opposable
behavior
fingers or toes that
can be brought to bear against others on the in
same hand
or foot
order to grip objects
Order
a subdivision of a class of
animals consisting of a series of
the female's ovary prior to
dominated by shrubs plants usually with
Promiscuous mating often with
one stem
many
Secondary forest
made up
it
on or
in
on two
Range
takes to
a "pair bond"
body
all
fours (a biped walks
legs)
the total geographical
area over which a species
is
distributed
Receptive when a female
of another
birth
Reproduction the process furry coat of a
for the next
Pelt furry coat, often refers to
Retina
ent
fur
produced by
is
(in estrus)
breeding, creating
mammal
Pheromone
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;woody
more than
or shrub-
covered lands of the
far north
fine hairs
skin
and underneath the outer
coat of
stiff
trees that
mostly HERBIVORES
Uterus
Siblings brothers and sisters
of
womb
in
new
offspring
backbone
produce
reptiles), usually
fertile
offspring
May
include
beam
with a skeleton
made
( see above) of certain carnivores,
softer cartilage
especially otters
Vibrissae sensory whiskers,
is
in
parts
where the climate
too harsh for trees to grow all
Subspecies a
locally distinc
usually
on snout, but can be on
areas such as elbows,
t
birth to active
laying
young
such as barking and croaking
from the normal
Zoologist person
workings within plants and
withdrawn, as
animals
animal bodies, e g
typical cats,
digestion.
Keeping a warm-blooded state
is
in
of
the claws of
which can be folded
slightly
appearance of the
species live
species;
often
back into the paws to protect
mutual benefit more successfully
from damage when walking
than either could
on
its
who
Zoology the study
together for their
live
rather than
eggs
Symbiosis when two or more
a
eyes
or
Vocalization making of sounds
differ
called a race
at the
tail,
eyebrows
Retractile capable of being
shone
sometimes
Viviparous animals that give
parts of At
south of the Sahara Desert
group of animals that
of bones, but
Physiology the processes and
is
a
mammals,
(e.g., fish,
Spraint hunting term for scats
lying
a tapetum, a reflective layer
when
Vertebrate animal with
look similar and can breed to
Sub-Saharan
light-sensitive layer at
underneath
belly or
of an animal (opposite of dorsal)
courtship
species, e.g.,
Ventral the
Species a group of animals that
of the world
of
generation
the back of the eye
same
individuals within the
light
physiology
which embryos
mammals develop
causing eyeshine
mammal
and horses;
as pigs, deer, cattle,
and recognize them
a part of
mammals
hairs in
animals to enable others to find
,
forming a
Ungulate hoofed animals such
Steppe open grassland
ready to mate
skm removed from animal as
Tundra open grassy
on cleared ground
between
animal that
Parturition process of giving
Pelage the
one
Social behavior interactions
Parasite animal or plant that lives
of a species from
dense, woolly mass close to the
is
have been planted or grown up
of
acids. Essential in the diet
male and a female together
is
interpret
Underfur
that includes monkeys, apes,
mates, not just one
rate
testicles are
and ourselves
walks on
mate, marriage
and
of skin within
Scrub vegetation that
its
behavior that keeps a
beyond the time
Scrotum bag
Primate a group of mammals
Quadruped an
bond
location to another
located
of animals
fertilization
Pair
members
Pride social group of lions
Protein chemicals
Ovulation release of egg from
Scent chemicals produced by animals to leave smell messages
which the male
ammo
1
front
in
and reduced metabolic
Translocation transferring
markers
territorial
between sunshine and shade Torpor deep sleep accompanied by lowered body temperature
often
of molars, but behind canines
related animal families See
page
or
is
for othe s to find
Volume
1
kills live
tail
a relatively
tropical grasslands
behind another structure
that eats
on land
Thermoregulation the maintenance of
the animals of that species
almost anything, meat or
page
1
11
Olfaction sense of smell
continents. See
GENUS, FAMILY, ORDER, Class,
and phylum. See Volume
back from the stomach to chew
Savanna
animals of the same
order of
in
constant body temperature
breeding season
continuously
The categories,
SPECIES,
it
one
in
structure, origins, or behavior. â&#x20AC;˘
that eat
digestion by microbes
mates
a male
with several females
home, but wander
only
mate
Polygynous when
active at night
a
groups
similarities in their
increasing broadness, are:
Polygamous when animals in
found
ruminants specifically for
Digitigrade
non-
refers to the
classifying organisms into
according to
American continents (not usually
World
the branch of
biology concerned with
pregnancy, allowing exchange of
(including predation
Taxonomy
beside rivers and
living
chemicals between them
challenged by natural processes
116
Riparian lakes
own
studies
of animals
FURTHER READING AND WEBSITES
Further Reading General
MacDonald, D
Mammals, Cranbrook, G., The
Mammals of
Southeast Asia, Oxford
New
The Encyclopedia of
,
New
Barnes and Noble,
York, NY,
2001
J.
Nowak,
and Redford,
F.,
Chicago
M., Walker's
R
Mammals
of the
The
K. H.,
MD, 1999
Baltimore,
IL,
1999
Skinner,
The Behavioral Guide to
D
African
Mammals,
,
D.,
J.
University of California
Specific to this
Buskirk,
and Smithers,
R.
volume
The
H. N.,
and and Conservation,
W., Martens, Sables,
S.
1994
Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY,
of the Southern African
Subregion, University of
Pretoria, Pretoria,
South Africa, 1990
Strahan, R
The
Madagascar,
Mammals
of
Reed
Pica Press, Sussex, U.K.,
and
L.,
Bates, P P
Mammals of Arabia,
J. J.,
,
New
Dennis, N., and Macdonald, M., Meerkats, Struik,
Mammals
The
of Australia,
Holland, Australia,
1998
South Africa, 1999
The
Sevenoaks, U.K.,
Gittelman,
L
J
and
Ecology,
1999
,
Carnivore Behavior,
Evolution, Cornell University
Press, Ithaca, NY,
Whitaker, Harrison, D.
1975
CA, 1991
Press, Berkley,
Garbutt, N.,
Physiology, Oxford
Fishers: Biology
Mammals Estes, R
of Mammals: Their
Press,
Neotropics, University of
Chicago,
Press,
Anatomy and
Life
University Press, Oxford, U.K.,
World, The John Hopkins University Eisenberg,
The
Z.,
J
University Press,
York, NY, 1991
Mammals of the
Young,
Field
J
National
0.,
Audubon
Guide to North American
Mammals,
Alfred A. Knopf,
New
1996
Society Griffiths,
York, NY,
H
I.,
Mustelids
Modern
in a
World, Backhuys, Leiden, Netherlands, 2000
1996
1991
Jackson, P, Weasels, Badgers, Civets King,
C M., The Handbook of
Zealand Mammals, Oxford
New
University Press,
Oxford, U.K., 1995
Wilson, D.
E.,
The Smithsonian Book of
North American Mammals, Smithsonian Institution Press,
Mongooses, and
Switzerland and Cambridge, U.K., 1990
Washington, DC, 1999
MacDonald, Kingdon,
African
J
,
The Kingdon Field Guide to
Mammals, Academic
Press,
San
Wilson, D.
E.,
and Reeder, D.M.,
Species of the World.
Institution Press,
MacDonald, D
,
Mammal
Collins Field
D.,
The Velvet Claw, B.B.C
Books, London, U.K.,1992
A Taxonomic and
Geographical Reference Smithsonian
Diego, CA, 1997
and
their Relatives, IUCN,
Washington, DC, 1999
Neal,
E.,
Poyser,
and Cheeseman,
C.,
Badgers,
London, U.K.,1995
Guide to the
Mammals of Britain and Europe, Collins, New York, NY, 1993
Harper
Useful Websites General
http://www.nmnh.si.edu/msw/
http://www.iucn.org Details of species
http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/ University of Michigan
Museum
of Zoology
and
their status; listings by
Mammals
list
on Smithsonian Museum
site
the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, also
lists
IUCN publications
Specific to this
volume
animal diversity websites. Search for pictures
and information about animals by family,
common name.
and
class,
Includes glossary
http://www.panda.org World Wide Fund
newsroom, press http://www.cites.org/
IUCN and CITES by
scientific
species, or
listings.
name,
reports,
http://www.carnivoreconservation.org/
for Nature releases,
(WWF),
government
common name.
Location by
links,
recent books,
etc.,
on carnivore
ecology and conservation
campaigns
http://www.defenders.org/
Search for animals
order, family, genus,
News,
http://www.aza.org
Active conservation of carnivores, including
American Zoo and Aquarium Association
wolves and
http://www.ultimateungulate.com
http://www.wwfcanada.org/en/res
Guide to world's hoofed mammals
links/pdf/projdesc.pdf
grizzly bears
country and explanation of reasons for listings
http://endangered.fws.gov
Carnivore conservation
Information about threatened animals and plants
from the U.S.
Fish
and
Service, the organization in
Wildlife
American
in
the Rocky
Mountains
Website of the Wildlife Conservation Society
http://www.5tigers.org
charge of 94
million acres (38 million ha) of wildlife refuges
http://www.wcs.org
http://www.nwf.org
Comprehensive information about
tigers
Website of the National Wildlife Federation
117
Set Index A bold number shows
the volume and
page numbers
relevant
Common names
in
bold
(e
g
.
page numbers
animals
(e
g
parts of the set
in
Page numbers information
refer to the
:
B.
1
88
:
8.
aijfeus
.4
calabarensis 4: 106
— locate
—
parentheses e g., At-a-Glance boxes.
1: (24)
bandicoot 10
gazella 3: 9 A. pusillus 3: 9, *16-17
large short-nosed
trivirgata
Shan Lop Nur Nature
Resen/e 5: (102)
:
65
aardvark 1: 10. 5: (10), (12); 9 : 64, 65, (66), 67, 78-79 African 9 65 aardwolf 2: 102, 103, 110-111 Abrocoma bennetti 8: 30 Abrocomidae 8: 31 acacia 6: 87 Acinonyx A jubatus 2: 10, 26-29 A rex 2: 29 Aconaemys fuscus 8: 30 :
acouchi 7: 12
alpaca 5 92, 93. 105, (106) ambergris 3: 89 Amblonyx cinereus 1: 32, :
70-71 American Sign Language 4: 13. (16), 27 Ammodorcas darkei 6: 62 Ammotragus lervia 6: 62 angwantibo 4: 106, 106
Anomaluridae 7: 12, (19) anteater 1:9, 14, 9 64-67
84-85 Acrobatidae 10 (76) 10: 74,
:
6:
86-87 Aepyprymnus rufescens 10: 48 Aeromys tephromelas 7:
Africa, national parks/reserves 2: 16. 31, 5:
34
Afrotheres 5: (10) Afrotheria 9 : 10
agouti
W.
7: 8,
12, 14, 8:
28
42 43
8:
spotted (common) 8: 42-43
10: 27,
40-41
d'jr r jlture 1:
30
40-41 swainsonn 10: 27 antelope 5: 10, 11, 12, 13; 6: 60-63 American pronghorn 2: 26, 6: 63 four-horned 6 60, 62
pygmy roan
46, 2: 21, 28,
44, 69. 77. 79
A / dae
:
20
2 : 82 98-101 ,
10
:
Ailurus fulgent 1: 20. 3Q-31: 2: (99)
alarm
4 46. 57, 89, 100,
calls
:
6: 79. 7: 53.
albino 8: (84)
A
bu's-laphus 6 62 Ik htpnslcinn 6: 62
A
A akrs ai<
anrinrsom 6:
1
1
1
A aid-, shlrasi 6: 15 Allenopithecus ngroviridis A 1
Alopcr lagopus see Vulpes lagopus
118
fusca 4: 72.
74-7S
into 2
cinereus see cinereus i
nnr/it
US
1:
Amblonyx 32
nigrkeps 4 72 A trivirgatus 4: 77, 84-85 ape ape family 4: 12 13 :
Barbary see macaque, Barbary red see orangutan into nila 7
Aplodontidae
Apodemus
7:
12. 28,
A. laniger
4 96 :
sylvaticus
10 porcinus 6: 10 axis 6:
5: 74,
75,
58-59 olive
mangabey
4 10-11 :
sacred (hamadryas) 4 40, :
42 43,
4
5:
archaeocetes
59 3:
56
:
1: 32, 34,
35,
honey
9:
82,
7:
beetles,
free-
9 82, (83), 84-85, 86, 100-103 hairy big-eyed 9 85 hairy-legged vampire 9: 94 hammerheaded 9 80, 86 horseshoe 9 80, 87 house (Mexican freetailed) 9 82, (83), 84-85, 86, 100-103 :
:
vampire)
(false
9 82. 98-99 Kitti's hog-nosed
1:
1:
32,
82 83
1Q-111
B acutorostrata 3 1Q6-1Q7
little
brown
:
1
Mexican (83),
beluga 3 55, 80-83 bettong burrowing 10: 48, 51 Tasmanian 10: 8 Bettongia lesueur 10: 48 bilby 10: 44 45 :
greater 10: 27, 44, 45 lesser 10: 27, 44
binturong 1: 88, 89, 90, 91 biomedical research see medical research bipedalism 4: 10
wood
60, 62,
6:
6_4
69
67
68
B bonasus
6: 62,
66
blackbuck 6: 61 62 Blarma brpvicaud.i 9 28,
LQ 111
free-tailed
6:
Bison B bison 6: 62, 64 62 B bison athabascae 6: 68
:
30-33
:
55,
76-77
6: 62, (66),
9: 83,
104-105 long-eared 9
2:
62
American
long-tongued 9 86 :
beira 6: 60,
:
9 :
13
12,
bison
1 1,
86
long-nosed
lesser
83
see coypu
dung
9 108
lesser bulldog
83
28-29
swamp
86
greater horseshoe 9:
guano (Mexican
:
:
:
Palawan stink 1: 32 Balaena mysticetus 3 55, 1
vampire)
giant
:
horseshoe 9 106-107
Indian ferret 1: (7
82
:
lesser
78-81
2:
Canadian (American) 7 28, 29. 30-33 Eurasian 7 28, 29 mountain 7: 12, 14, 28, (29) mountain beaver family
98-99
(11), 9: 38, 80.
European
Malaysian sun
native Australian see koala
:
:
2: (60)
koala see koala
:
funnel-eared 9: 87, 87 greater false vampire
vampire
grizzly 2: 82, 83, 92,
American 7 28, 29, 30-33 beaver family 7 28-29
Indian greater false
5: 74, 86-87 badger 1: 34 American 1: (2, 76-77
dancing 2: (97) "dawn bear" 2: 82
sun 2: 82, 83 Beatragus hunteri 6: 62 beaver 7 8, 9, 70, 11,
:
42-43. 54-57 Babyrousa babyrussa
9
2: 9, 5:
spectacled 2: 82,
:
40,
:
98
American black 2: 82, 90-93 Andean 2: 82, 83 Asian black 2: 82, 83 bear family 2: 82-83 big brown (brown) 2: 82, 83, 92, 94-97 brown 2: 82, 83, 92, 94-97
sloth 2: 82,
:
4: 40,
:
:
:
(false
1
98
:
polar 2: 9, 82, 84-89 3 83 skunk see wolverine
diadem roundleaf 9: 86 disk-winged 9 87 Egyptian fruit 9 86 Egyptian rousette 9: 92-93 false vampire 9: 82, 98^99 fisherman 9: 108-109 free-tailed 9: 87 fruit 9: 58, 80, 81, 86
tailed)
4: 40, 43,
Balaenoptera
7
Appaloosa
96
A. occidentalis 4:
Axis
1
panda see panda,
:
1
29
:
:
introduced
9
94-97
Brazilian (Mexican) free-
Daubenton's 9 87
SO; 5: (97); 8: 72
:
yellow (savanna)
32
1:
A
m anus 6:
es gigas 6:
capensis
Aotus
1
•
A
Aonyx
:
a akes 6: io. 14-19 A akes akes 6:
a
:
:
pallid 9:
108-109
98
1:
Avahi
savanna 54=51
ants 9 64, 66, 69, 76
little
:
43. 58-59
60
84
vampire
false
bulldog (fisherman) 9 87,
:
12,(15), 24-25,
34, 38, 40,
A A
Alcelaphus
9,
American 9: 86 American American
9 82, (83), 84-85, 86, 100-103
mammals
Australia,
long-tailed see
:
:
10, 14; 7: 12, (37);
tailed
6: 62, 110-111 Antilocapridae 6: 63, 110 Antilope cen/icapra 6 : 62
6
76-77
geoffroyi 4: 72,
86-87 baboon 4: 8, 40, 42, 42-43 Chacma 4 56-57 gelada 4: 40, 42, 43, 62-63
96-97
:
1: 8,
jacksoni
bear
astutus 1 20 sumichrasti 1 20
brown 9 87 84 bat families 9 86-87 Bechstein’s 9: 80-81
belzebuth 4: 72
babirusa
62
B.
:
hamadryas
antlers
20-2 1
B
62
:
:
Ateles
A A
1
12; 8:
:
Bdeogale B crassicauda
20 20
:
frontalis 9: 21
A A
:
94-97
9: 84, (85),
B janetta 8: 56 B suillus 8: 56
9 80-87
12, 13
Antilocapra americana
111,8: 51,
55. 99 see also communication
A
62
Antidorcas marsupialis 6: 62,
:
:
vampire
pipistrelle
African slit-faced 9 82,
:
royal 6: 60,
Ailuropoda melanoleuca
bat
57
A. albiventris 9: 12,
A. algirus 9
gabbii Bassariscus B.
B.
Asian wild 5: 56-57 Asiatic 5: 42 5:
Bassaricyon B. allem 1
B.
aye-aye 4 96, 97, 102-103
sable 6: 62 Tibetan 6: 62
2: '99)
Ailurinae 1
6: 60, 62, (63),
6: 60,
6:
(29)
i
110-111 8:
:
At lax paludinosus aurochs 6: 63
stuartii 10: 27,
pronghorn
4
42. (44) African 5: 42
thumbless 9 87
Bathyergidae 7 Bathyergus
:
5:
:
spectacled 9: 87
:
108
98-99
spear-nosed 9 84, 87
:
barnacles 3 57, 92, 102,
A. africanus 8: 12
:
Agouti A paca 8: 30 A taczanowskn Agoutidae 7: 12
66; 6: 52 Arvicola terrestris 7:
:
:
:
102
A. macrourus 8: 12
dusky 10: 27 sandstone 10: 27 Antechinus
A A
black 8: 8-9 Central American 8: 30
common
brown
64
Atherurus
agile 10: 41
34,
9:
Artiodactyla 1: 70; 5: (10), 12,
A
:
Antechinomys laniger 10: 27 antechinus 10: 11, 25, 20, (25), 27
36
three-banded
artiodactyl 1: 8; 8:
Atelerix
9 65. 66
silky
66
domestic
short-nosed spiny see echidna, short-beaked
62 Addax nasomaculatus 6: 62 Aepyceros melampus 6: 62. adda>
74-77
65,
:
86-87 World false vampire 82, 87 World leaf-nosed 9: 87 World sucker-footed 9: 87 rousette 9: 86 sheath-tailed 9 87 slit-faced 9: 87 9:
9 110-111 white-winged vampire 9 94 see also flying fox;
:
:
southern naked-tailed 9: 65,
ass
banded see numbat giant 9: 64, 65, 68-71 marsupial see numbat
Acrobates pygmaeus
74-77 nine-banded 9
87
9:
Zealand short-tailed
whispering (long-eared)
:
:
9: 65,
Aspilia
animal farming 2: (97) anoa, lowland 6: 62 :
red 8: 30
65
long-nosed (nine-banded)
:
10 27 rufous spiny 10 27 Seram Island 10 27 striped 10 27 western barred 10 27 banteng 6: 62 bark stripping 8: 24 Raff ray's
lesser fairy 9:
72
4 72
:
:
64-67
9:
giant 9: palliate 4:
:
:
:
A. seniculus
(northern) 10 46-47 long-nosed 10 27 mouse 10 27 northern 10 46-47 northern brown (northern) 10 27, 46-47 pig-footed 10 27 rabbit-eared see bilby :
:
New Old 9 Old Old
:
common 9 65
A
25,27
8-9
:
88
armadillo
A
:
golden 10 27
3 98 Arjin
4 97
(10). 24.
:
eastern barred 10: giant 10 27
Arctonyx collaris 1: 32 Argentinosaurus huinculensis
names
100;
:
A
1:
9: 86 mustached 9: 87 New World leaf-nosed
mouse-tailed
:
bamboo 2 98-99,
:
Arctogahdia
bonaerensis 3 1 07 musculus 3 : 55,
98-101
1
:
A
Arctocephalus
Animals that get mam entries in the set are indexed under their common names, alternative common names, and scientific
8
06 4 106
Arctocebus 4
set.
:
in
in
the
in
103 point to illustrations of other than the main entry.
2
,
entry
9 78—79)
,
Archaeonycteris 1: binturong
Arctictis
aardwolf) mean that
mam
the animal has an illustrated Underlined page numbers (e g mam entry for that animal. Italic
followed by the
is
(e g., 1: 52, 74).
9:
82,
84-85. 86, 100-103
Blastocerus dichotomus 6:
10
SET INDEX
bubber
34
3:
72 84 85
58,
89, 91, (101)
bluebuck 6: 63 boar wild 5: 74 76-79 boat traffic 3: 50, 51, 65. 79, 103 bobcat 2: 10, 38-39. 40 body temperature 1: 9-12 control of 5 (17); 9: 24, 67, :
72. 82, (90; 10: 69 desert amma's 5 95-96 see also hibernation; :
bontebok
6:
grunmens
6:
argentata see Mico argentata C. geoffroy 4: 86 C. humilis see Mico C.
C. prevosti 7:
:
derbianus 10 14 philander 10 14 Caluromysiops irrupta 10 : 14 C.
93
72
9 12 Arabian (dromedary) 5: 92,
8: (84)
forestation in 4:
90-91
breaching 3: 96, 96-97, 103, 104. 109 breeding K strategists 7: 14 8: 21 R strategists 7: 14 selective 5 (43), 74; 6: 63 synchros zed 3: 20—2 :
6:83, 88; 7: 57 8: 79; 10: 41 see also captive breeding; reproduction; inbreeding;
6
7:
18 ,
100-103 camel family
:
:
:
’2'
dromedary
one-humped (dromedary) 5 92, 93, 94-99. 102' :
two-humped
:
Buphagus africanus
6: (73)
Burramys parvus 10: 74 burrows 7: 26-27; 9: 44-45, 67. 10: 99 ground destabilization 7: 49, 50, 59 8: 29, 57, 66-67; 9: 77; 10: 99
5 92, 93, (98), 100-103 camelids 5: 92-93
Camelus
100-103 C.
:
:
:
dromedarius 5 92, :
(
bactrianus 5 : 92,
Canis C. familiaris C. latrans C.
80-81
2: 50,
2
:
50, (53)
C.
106-107 1 06
C. ibex 6: 62,
C. ibex caucasica 6: C.
ibex cylindricomis 6:
C
catatonia 10: .20) cattle 1: 15; 5: 9. 71
1
06
humped zebu
6:
ibex nubiana 6:
Capreolus capreolus
1
6: 10,
63 79
6:
C
aperaea
39
8:
38-41
C. tschudii 8: 39 Cavndae 7: 12 Caviomorpha 7: (8); cavy 7 11. 12. (14) Brazilian 8: 39, 41
cavies 8:
and
62
sumatraensis 6: 62, 108 Caprolagus hispidus 8: 64 Capromyidae 7: 12. 8: 31
Capromys pilorides 52-53
8: 30,
30
:
:
:
:
2
:
(23). (29),
:
:
captivity 1: 22, 29, 65; 3: 59,
65, 71. 74; 4: 27, 78, 6 : 42-43, 58, 66, 91; 9: 21; 10: 83
capuchin 4: 10, 72, 83 4: 72,
73
Ceratotherium
:
simum
5: 28,
30-35
28-33;
5:
9
4:
1
cercopithecines 4: 40, 42, 43
Cercopithecus C aethiops 4: 44-47
C cephus 4: 40 C neglectus 4: 40 9, 10,
12
:
20
coati,
ringtailed
Coelodonta 5: 28 coendou see porcupine, tree 8:
1
mexicanus
8: 12,
26-27
4
:
41^12
40,
colobus 4 10, 40 40-42, 68-69, 69. 75 Angola (black-and-white) ,
4 40, 68-69 :
:
:
68-69
37
red 4 41^12,
68 4 40 western red 4: 40 :
7:
1
:
68-69 Colobus 4: 40
18
5,
48-49
7: 34,
Chiroptera 1 10, 9 : (86) Chiroptes C. albinasus 4 72 C. satanas 4: 72 :
C C.
angolensis 4 40, 68-69 satanus 4 40 :
:
colugo 1: 10, 7: (37); 8: 108-111 Malayan 8: 109, 109, 110, 110-111 108-109,
Philippine 8:
62
109, 110
commensal animals
45
chital 6: 10, 13.
Chlamydia psittac 10: 95 Chlamyphorus truncatus 9: 65 Chlorocebus aethiops 4 40 Choloepus C. didactylus 9 65 C. hoffmanni 9: 65
:
:
7 : 53, 101; 8: 16, 42, 51, 9: 61;
10:
alarm
80 calls
98 88
African palm
1:
banded palm
1
91 civet family
88 :
88, 90, 90,
7:
8: 51, 55,
57, 89,
53. Ill;
99
9 40,
cristate
:
48-51 Conepatus chinga
1: 32 mesoleucus 1 32 coney see pika, American Connochaetes C. gnou 6: 62, 82
C.
Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
:
American Sign Language 4: 13, (16), 27 see also songs Condylura
109
4 46,
6:
:
40
14
(24), 44. (49), 79;
:
chozchori 8: 29 Chrotogale owstom 1 88 Chrysochloridae 9 : 9 Chrysocyon brachyurus 2: 50 Chrysospalax trevelyani
7:
communication 1: (23); 3 (83); 4 (56). 74, 79, 85, 99-100; 5: 13, 15, 19,
:
African 1:
:
white-epauleted black ^lack-and-white) 4 40
30
48 Chironectes minimus 10: 14
1:
20, 21 1:
coatimundi see
Chinchillidae 7: 12
civet
1: 19,
30
8:
28
4 42 black-and-white 4 40,
CITES see Convention on International Trade in
40-41
94-95
:
tridecemlineatus
40 C. torquatus 4: 40 Cercopithecidae 4: 40
23
C. prehensilis 8:
Spermophilus
C. galeritus 4:
7:
black
8:
5:
88
rangiferina 6:
clompers 5 58 C amis aticeps
13
12,
chinchilla rat 8: 31
chiru 6:
88
Clethrionomys gapped
C.
Citellus tridecemlineatus see
nanus 10: 74 Cercocebus
Oadonia
satanic black
eastern
88, 91
1:
Civettictis c/v-efta 1:
colobines
short-tailed 8:
chulengo
concinnus 10: 74
Cervidae 6:
4: 11
common
9:
Cercartetus 10: 74
C
8
:
southern mountain 8: 10-11, 30 cavylike rodents 8: 8-1 Cebidae 4 72, 84 Cebuella pygmaea 4 86 Cebus 4 72 C apella 4 72 C capucinus 4 72 C. olivaceus 4: 72 cellulose 4: 41, 75; 5: 11-12, 70; 6 8; 7 103; 8 49
C.
captive breeding 1: 45, 47, 54,
brown
rock 8:
6:
Siberian 7:
:
C.
:
30
8: 28,
Owston's banded palm 1: 90, 91
Coendou
10
chipmunk
yellow-toothed
otter 1: 88, 91
:
Chilean 8: 30, 31
28-31
:
ringtailed 1: 28-29 w'hite-nosed 1 20, 29
chemical poisoning see
common
relatives
:
mountain
36-37 8: 28, 31
88 88 large spotted 1: 88 Lowe's otter 1 88 Malayan 1 88, 90 masked palm 1 88 Oriental 1: 88, 90 1:
large Indian 1:
coati
:
Chinchilla lanigera 8: 30,
:
C. crispus 6:
major 4: 96 medius 4 96
6:
90 palm
coalitions 2:
36-37 fur 8: JO)
Cephalophus 6 62, 80 C. dorsalis 6 62 C. monticola 6: 62
Capricomis
29
China, Imperial Hunting Park 6: 44, 45 chinchilla 7: 72; 8: ’0, 28,
63
Indian 1:
:
Cheirogaleus
water
:
civet oil 1: (91)
pygmy see bonobo
(^63; 8: 62
:
06 C ibex sibirica 6: 106 C ibex walie 6: 106 C.
12
:
C. ibex ibex 6:
:
C.
golden palm 1 88 Hose's palm 1: 88
small Indian 1:
chamois 6: 62 European 6: 108 Pyrenean 6: 62 charms 3 61; 8 67; 9 : 79 cheetah 2: 9 10 26-29
C.
90,
small-toothed palm 1: 88 Sulawesi palm 1: 88
3
chimpanzee
1
:
106
22-23 subspinosus Chaetomys o' 7:
catarrhines 4:
domestic see guinea pig Patagonian see mara Peruvian 8: 39
Caperea marginata 3: 55 Capra C. aegagrus 6: 62
:
chewing the cud
80-81 mesomelas 2 50, 62-63 simensis 2: 50
59, 100; 4: (17), 87,
caniventer 10: 14 fuliginosus 10: 14
48-49
6
30-33
Cetacea 1: 10 5: 10 cetaceans 3: 54-59 Chaeropus ecaudatus 10 27 Chaetodipus penicillatus
king 2:
88
1:
94-95
90.
:
6: 10. 26,
Catagonus wagnen 5: 88 catamount see puma
common
:
27 eaphus
pollution
:
:
2: 50, C.
canadensis nelsom 6: 26 canadensis roosevelti 6:
C.
common palm
Jerdon's
chevrotain 5: 8; 6: 10 greater Malay see deer, greater mouse Indian spotted 6: 10
:
2 50, 58-61
90-91, 98. 101; 5 26, 65, 6 91 7 15
C.
saber-toothed 2 : 1 sand 2 10. 13 tiger 2 10, 12 wildcat 2 10, 13,
lupus 2: 50. 54-57 lupus dingo (C. dingo)
c 20, 21 Caenolestes 10: 14
:
leopard 2: 10, 13 miner's see raccoon, ringtail
:
dingo
Cabassous unicinctus 9: 65 Cacajao 4: 72 C calvus 4: 72. 80-81 C. melanocephalus 4: 72 1:
:
C. porcellus 8: 30,
(55), (59), 71;
cacomistle
:
Cavia
100-103 Canidae 1: 20 C.
:
cattle rearing 4:
:
38-39
106-107 Demidoff's 4: 106 110-111 bushbuck 6: 62 bushmeat trade 4: 27, 32, 40, 53, 61, 85; 5 87; 6 59. 66. 72 bushpig 5 74, 75 4:
golden 2 10, 13 blackfooted 2 : 10, 13 cat family 2: 10-13 domestic 2 9, 10, (12). 49 European v. dcat 2 12 jungle 2 10, 13 Asiatic
humpless 5 92,
C. bactrian us
C.
27
Chaga's disease 8: 27 chain chorusing 5: 71
:
:
:
see also tunnels
bush baby
(Bactrian)
C.
27
canadensis nannodes 6:
8:
31 Castoridae 7 12, 28 cat 2: African wildcat 2 : 12
i.98)
:
92, 93,
5:
94-99. 102
C.
bubble netting 3: 104 bubonic plague 7: 14, 76-77 Bubulcus ibis 6 (73) Budorcas taxicolor 6: 62, 108 buffalo 1: 15 African 6: 60, 62, 70-73 see also bison. American Bunolagus monticularis 8: 64
:
C.
28
:
92-93
5:
domestication 5
C. ferus
13
bromei ads 4: 90 browsing 5 12, 13, 38; 6 9 brumby see mustang Bubalus B. depressicomis 6 62 B. mindorensis 6: 62 Bubastis 2:
98
92, 93,
5:
94-99
10, 11
:
8,
:
Bactrian
interbreeding
mound
5
93. 94-99. 102
.ariegatus 9: 65, 72-73 branding, freeze branding
brocket, red
:
camel
torquatus 9: 65
breeding
:
C
B.
,
36 36
C. notatusisi 7:
Cervus C. canadensis 6: 1 0, 26-29 C. canadensis manitobensis 6:
:
castoreum 7
36
mgrovittatus 7 :
9
capybara fa r ms 8: (50) caracal 2: 10 II G avaning 9: 39 caribou 6: 10, '2, 20-25 Carnivora 1: 10, IS; 2: 8 carnivores 1: 10 large 2: 8-9 small 1: 18-19 teeth 1: 15 'Carterodon sulcidens 8: 30 Castor 7 28 C. canadensis 7 28, 30-33 C. fiber 7:
10 48 Caluromys
Bradypus
Brar
86
4:
Caloprymnus campestris
~!2
Brachyteles arachnoides 4: B.
goe P
8: 8.
:
Callithrix
C.
Brachylagus idahoensis 8: 64,
C
Callimico
72
4:
capybara 7 8 '2, 28 10. 28, 48-51
72
4:
Callosciurus
74-75 62
38
personatus 4: 72 torquatus 4: 72
14-15
boto see dolphin, Amazon Bovidae 6: 9, 60-63 bovine tuberculosis 1:81 brachiation 4:
moloch
C.
Callorhinus ursinus 3: S
avanicus 6: Boselaphus tragocameius 6: 52 6.
C.
C.
62 Borhyaenidae 10: 26, 36 Bos B. frontalis 6: 62 6.
white-faced 4: 72
C acchus 4: 86, 92-93 pygmaea see Cebuella pygmaea
34-35
4: 12,
weeper
Callicebus
humilis
torpor
bonobo
Caenolestidae 10: 16
C.
:
C. taurinus 6: 62, 82-85 conservation 1: 47, (59), 75; 2: 33, 55. (88), 100; 3: 15, 19, 4 35, 5 26, 39, 63 6 25, 64, 7 45, 77 9 85; 10 (77), (95), (101) see also protection :
:
:
:
:
:
1:
88-91
119
SET INDEX
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) 1: 17 convergent evolution 9: 10, 1:
D. D. D.
26
10:
27
Dasyprocta punctata
8: 30,
42-43
03
1
Dasyproctidae
72
7:
Dasypus novemclnctus 74-77
desert 8: 64, 67, (93) Dice's 8: (93)
eastern 8: 64, 90-93 Mexican Guerrero 8: (93) New England 8: (93) Omilteneor 8: (93)
dasyure
swamp
short-furred 10: 25, Dasyuridae 10: 24, 36
8: (93)
puma
cougar see
coyote
1:
77
coypu 7: 72; 44—47
58-61
2: 50,
8: 9,
1
31,
1,
South American 8: (46) Craseonycteridae 9: 86 Craseonycteris thonglongyai 9:
102,
2:
108-109 23-24, 41, 72,
105, 8: 18-19; 9: 85, 91
Crossarchus alexandri
C,
ansorgei
1 1
:
:
Cryptomys C. damarensis C. C.
98 98
56 hottentotus 8: 56 mechowi 8: 56 8:
Cryptoprocta ferox
1:
5: 8, 9, 10, 12 barking see muntjac black musk 6: 10 black-tailed (mule) 6: 10,
34-37
7:
108, 110-111
C. vah 7: 1 08 Ctenomyidae 7: 72, Ctenomys C. frater 8: 30 C. validus 8: 30
culls 3: 15,
8:
Chinese water
10
6:
9
66; 8: 81, 10: (95) alpinus 2: 50
mouse
marsh
6: 10,
6: 10,
48
musk
.
6:
10
62 dimorphism, sexual 3: 87 dingo 2: 50, 80-81 10: (30), 37 Dinomyidae 7: 72 Dinomys branickii 8: 30 dinosaur 3: 98 Diplogale hosei 1 88 Diplomesodon pulchellum :
tufted
28
raccoon see also
Cynictis penlcillata
Cynocephalidae Cynocephalus
8:
C.
variegatus 8:
C.
volans 8:
1
see also habitat destruction 8: 29, 31 Bridge's 8: 30 mountain 8: 30 dehydration 5: 95-96 Delphinapterus leucas 3: 55,
degu
65 1: 98 108
Cyclopes didactylus
1
9:
80-83
09
09
C.
bennettii 1:
88
:
56-59
D Dactylomys dactylinus
8:
30
D tatei 10: 74 D trivirgata 10: 74 Dama dama 6: 10, 40-43 Damaliscus D. lunatus 6: 62,
Dendrohyrax
3:
69
D
88-89
8:
1
;
66-67 Dermoptera
3: 55,
3: 55,
1:
70; 8:
108
1:
Dugong dugon
3: 55, (61)
Indus' 3: 55, (61)
La Plata 3: 55, (61)
common
long-beaked (spinner)
forest 6:
76-77
common
69
dunnart
Kangaroo little
80-81
80-81
27
38-39 27 38
Island 10:
Dusicyon australis
76-77 56-57, 77
spotted 3:
white-beaked
38 38
3: 71
white-sided 3: 71 river 3: 55, (61)
2:
12
Echimyidae 7: Echimys pictus
50
10:
10: 105,
12, 8:
8:
30
przewalskii) 5: 42,
54-55
105
long-nosed 10: 105, 110
short-beaked 110-111
1
27
85 Enhydra lutris 1: 32, 72-75 Eohippus 5: 42 Eomanis waldi 9: 64 Equidae 5: 42 Equus E. asinus 5: 42, 57 E. burchelli 5: 42, 46-51 E. ca ball us 5: 42, 58-61 E caballus przewalskii (E.
E 1: 14; 8:
1
see also moose Nino 3: 22 Emballonuridae 9: 87 embryonic diapause
red-cheeked 10: 27
rollover (spinner) 3: 55,
Yangtze
52-53
6: 62,
Duplicidentata 8: 61
3: 55,
102 02
10: 12- 13, 57, 63, 69,
long-tailed 10:
echidna
1
71, 73,
river 3: (61)
short-beaked common 3: 69 short-snouted spinner 3: 76
7:
El
10:
Gilbert's 10:
quercinus 7:
Tule 6:
fat-tailed 10: 25,
white-sided 3: 55, 70-71 pink (Amazon) 3: 55, 60-61
melanurus
E.
Siberian 6:
02 46-47,
6: 62,
10:
4,
Manitoba 6: 27 Merriman 6: 26 North American 6: 12 Rocky Mountain 6: 26-27 Roosevelt's 6: 27
1
80
common
E.
Irish 6:
3: 47,
duiker bay 6: 62 blue 6: 62 bush (common)
1
elk 6: 10, 26-29 eastern 6: 26
102 102
10, 3:
5:
Eliomys
5: (12)
:
59
22-27
4: 40, 42 dromedary see camel, dromedary
:
9: 59,
Elephas maximus
Draculin 9: 97
D. sichuanensis 7:
hourglass 3: 71
3: 55,
North African
woolly 7: 102 douroucouli see monkey, Northern night
52-53
9: 59,
short-eared 9: 59, 59 Elephantulus rozeti 9: 59
102
dugong
15
62-63
Setzer's mouse-tailed
.
5: 14,
golden-rumped
102
D. nitedula 7:
76-77
40-43 Pyrenean 9: 7 7, 40, 52-53 Russian 9: 40, 42, 43, 53
102
Oriental 7: 103
68-69 71
14-1
elephant shrew 1: 10; 9: 10, 58-59 black and rufous 9: 59, 59 checkered 9: 58-59, 59 four-toed 9: 59, 59
102, 102
D. lanigerl
3: 71
spinner
9: 9, 11,
60-61
Risso's 3: 71
bennettianus 10: 48 goodfellowi 10: 48,
desman
:
Pacific
68-69
02 D. arboreus 8: 1 03 D. dorsalis 8: 103 D validus 8: 1 03 Dendrolagus D.
Dactylopsila
1 98 54-59
Fraser's 3: 71
Ganges
savanna
Dromiciops gliroides 10: 14 drought 4: 63; 5: 34, 94 drug testing 4: 13, 93
bottlenose 3: 55, 66, 72-75 clymene 3: 76
3:
D. delphis 3: 55,
lowei 1 88 Cynomys ludovlcianus 7: 34, C.
8: 30,
5:
14-15
forest 5: 14,
masked mouse-tailed
7:
22-27
family units 5: 15
Dryomys
Amazon
long-beaked
Delphinus D. capensis
Cynogale
70; 3:
1:
elephant family
02
drill
dog
patagonum
dusky
86
78-79
50
2:
73, 75, 81, 90; 5: 20, 6: 49, 51, 9: 23, 91
9:
50-53
2:
prairie
spotted waigeou
Cyanophenus
78-79
5: 14, 15, 16,
circus elephants 5: 24, (24)
106-107
7:
10, 5: 8, (10),
1: 10,
(
,
26 Asian
102,
garden 7: 102, 102-103 hazel 7: 102, 103,
7:
1
0,
12 ) African 5: 14, 15, 16-21. 11
spectacled 7: 102 spiny 7: 103
wild) 2: 9, 50, 53,
common
cuy see guinea pig
elephant
104-105
7:
1
44-45
102-103 7: (14),
6:
electrocution 4: 67
dormouse family
2: 9, 50, 53,
domestic 2: 9, 50, (53) painted hunting (African
4: (17), 27, 32, 37, 61, 69,
74 12-13, 82-83 74
Elaphurus davidianus 6:
Roach's mouse-tailed
53
2: 50,
small Sulawesi 10: 10:
9
1: 15; 5:
dolphin
76-77
(hazel) 7: 102,
Japanese
76-77
Elaphodus cephalophus
103, 106-107 desert 7: 102, 103
1
76
6: 60, 62,
6: 62,
Lord Derby's (giant) 6: 62,
garden 7: 102 Chinese 7: 102 Chinese pygmy 7: 103
common
32
1:
13
5:
common
12, 13, 15,
1,
104-105
5: (10)
sde also brocket deer parks 6: 1 3, 42-43, 47 deforestation 1: 21, 31, 48, 51, 71; 2: 58-59; 3: 61,
1
barbara
eland
giant
forest 7:
24-25
7:
Dologale dybowskii
(36)
7:
Eira
fat (edible) 7: (14), 102,
32-35
6:10
10:
17, 19
7:
104-105
Eimer's organs 9: 45, (50)
48 vanheurni 10: 48
madeayi
edible
rufescens 10: 27
egret 6: (73) Eidolon 9: 86
Asiatic
Salt's 6:
Dollchotis
13
6: 10,
48 luctuosa 1 0: 48
African 7: 103
dog family
30-33 38-39 60
48
10:
dormouse
62
Kirk's 6: 60,
pampas
6: 10, 12, 13,
E.
10:
hagem
28, 32, 37,
8,
ecotones 6: 86 Edentates 9: 64, 64 egg-laying mammals
Dorcopsis
18-23
78-79
6: 10, 13,
62
6:
48
white-striped 10:
D.
dik-dik
bush
6: 10, 12,
dorcopsis gray 10:
Dorcopsulus
14
D. virginiana 10: 14,
5: (45)
44-45
Dorcatragus megalotis
D.
muntjac see muntjac musk 6: 10
red roe
wild 5:
D.
Didelphis
wild) 2: 9, 50, 53,
6: 10, 72
22-23 80-81, 92-93, 99, 106, 109, 110-111 echymipera, Clara's 10: 27 Echymipera E clara 10: 27
donkey
D.
African wild
common
10:
36-39
Virginia
dog
Echinoprocta rufescens 8: 1 Echinops telfairi 9: 24 Echinosorex gymnura 9: 12, echolocation 9:
(72) see also cat, domestic;
African hunting (African
72
white-tailed 6: 10, 13, 18,
ground 10: 74 mountain 10: 74 peleng 10: 74
28,
dicoumarol 7: 75 Didelphidae 10: 14, 16 common see opossum,
mouse see chevrotain mule 6: 10, 34-37
spotted
spotted (spotted) 10: 12-13, 82-83
5:
Diprotodontia 10: 25, 75, (94) diseases 1: 26, 87 rodent-borne 7: 14 distemper 3: 41 canine 2: 79 Distoechurus pennatus 1 0: 74
lesser
105-106, 107; 38-39, 40,
(45), (98),
domestic
diastema 7: 10, 7 7; 8: 60 see also reproduction dibatag 6: 67, 62 dibbler 10: 27 Dicerorhinus sumatrensis 5: 28
Dtpodomys ordn
sika 6: 12
cuscus 10: 76, (77) admiralty 10: 74 bear 10: 74
85
73,
5: (43),
dog, domestic
10: 12-13, 57, 63, 69, 71,
fallow 6: 10, 12, 13, 40-43 greater mouse 6: 10,
Siberian
50
cursorial animals 2:
63
3:
Diplomys labilis 8: 30 Dipodidae 7: 72
44-45
Cuon
whale pods diapause, embryonic
deer and relatives 6: 10-13 dwarf musk 6: 10
Pere David's
43, 45, 67; 6: 32,
57
2: 50,
dialects^of
9:
6: 10,
domestication 2: 53; 6: 25, 63; 8:
;
50-51 hog 6: 10
88,
Cryptotis parva 9: 28 Ctenodactylidae 7: 12, 108 Ctenodactylus
gundi
102-103
103
48-49 Himalayan musk
96-97
C.
32-33
Daubentonia madagascariensis 9:
dhole
74
dolphinaria 3: 71,
27, 28-31
D. albiventris 10:
D. hallucatus 10: 27,
91; 6: 13, 78, 81, 7: 100,
C.
27
Dasyuromorphia 10: 24 Dasyurus D. albopunctatus 10: 27
4: 96,
Desmana moschata 9: 40 Desmodus rotundus 9: 94-97 devil, Tasmanian 10: (24),
Dlceros bicornis
deer
107 Crocuta crocuta
cria 5:
5:
9: 65,
broad-striped 10: 27 narrow-striped 10: 25, 27 red-bellied 10: 27
DDT
38
crop raiding
6:
Dasykaluta rosamondae
62
8: 51,
coruro 8: 29, 30 cotton bollworms 9: cottontail 8: 62
120
korrigum
D.
coonskins 1: (23) coppicing 7: 106
coprophagy
88 lunatus lunatus 6: 88 lunatus tiang 6: 88 lunatus topi 6: 88
D. lunatus
pygargus 6: 62 dassie, rock see hyrax, rock Dasycercus cristicauda 10: 27
40; 10: 36, (52)
coon hunting
88
D. lunatus jimela 6:
31
52-53 56-57 £. przewalskii 5: 42, 54-55 £. quagga 5: 48 E. zebra 5: 42 Eremitalpa grand 9: 40, 56-57 Erethizon dorsatum 8: 2, 20-25
£
grevyi 5: 42,
£.
hemionus
5:
42,
1
SET INDEX
Erethizontidae 7: 72; 8: 12
Erinaceidae 9:
9,
Erinaceus E. concolor 9:
europaeus ermine 1:112
14-19
see also deforestation fossa 1: 88, 90, 97, 96-97 4: 100
see also stoat Erythrocebus patas 4: 40 Eschrichtidae 3: 92
92-97 estivation 7: 19, 9: 13, 21
Ethiopia, geladas in 4:
Arctic 2: 50, 70-73. 87;
108-109
australis 3:
7: (14)
55 eucalyptus 10: 95-96, 96 Eulemur 4: 96 glacialIs 3:
E.
bat-eared
2: 50,
76-77 53
Blanford's 2: 50, blue Arctic 2: 71, (72)
E.
coronatus 4: 96
Cape
E.
macaco
E.
mongoz
corsac 2: "cross fox" 2: 64, fennec 2: 50, 52, gray 2: 50, 52
96 96
4: 4:
Eumetopias jubatus 18-19 Euoticus E. elegantulus 4: pallidus 4:
E.
3: 9,
06
Eupleres goudotii 1: 88 Euroscaptor parvidens 9:
Eutheria 10: (10)
evolution
convergent
mammals
bengalensls caracal
F.
catus 2: 10
15-16
10
2:
chaus 2: F concolor
1
2: 10,
lynx 2. 10,
42-43
64
2:
swift 2: 50, 52, 68-69 white Arctic 2:71, 72 freeze branding 8: (84) 7:
40-41
F.
rufus 2:
F.
serval 2:
F.
silvestris
F.
temmincki
F.
tigrinus
'
1
2:10
yaguarondi 2: 1 Felovia vae 7: 108 Fennecus zerda see Vulpes zerda ferret
1:
5:
1
45
black-footed
1:
32, 34, 35,
46-47 see implantation/ fertilization; reproduction
fertilization
50-51 farms 3: 65
fisher 1: fish
;
8:
20
fishing 3: 12, 15, 19, 37, 43,
105
106
107
thick-tailed 4: 106,
Thomas's
4:
Zanzibar 4:
69, 71, 77, 79, 105
flehmen 5: (11), 62, 65 flood water 4: 80 flying fox 9: 80, 86 Indian 9: 88-91 food poisoning 7: 74 food sharing 9: (96)
26
western
G
4: 36,
4: 1
06
1
G. senegalensis 4:
06
1
G. zanzibaricus 4:
06 30
1
Galea musteloides 8: Galemys pyrenaicus 9: 40,
52-53
2, (2
Graphiurus ocularis
Area little 1:
32,
7:
99
4: 8, 10, 40, 42, 43,
guiara 8:
kordofan 6: 52 Masai 6: 52, 54 nubian 6: 52
guinea pig domestic
54
56
8: 10, 30,
38-41
38-39, 39, 40
8:
wild 8: 28,
Gulo gulo
39-40 32, 56-57
Thornicroft's 6: 52, 53
desert 7:
West
felou 7: 108, 109, 109
Galidia elegans
1
Giraffidae 6:
6:
98
National Park 5: 34
62
G dama
gleaning glider
9:
feathertail 6:
62
G. teptoceros 6: 62 G. subguttarosa 6:
thomsoni
6:
62
94-95
1:
13 108, 109
7: 12,
gundi family Lataste's 7:
(1
5)
G. sabrinus 7: 61 G. volans 7: 34,
Gazella
G.
52-53
Glaucomys
98
G. grandidieri 1:
Garamba
gerenuk
giraffe-gazelle see
98
:
Gir Forest Reserve 2:
G. fasciata 1:
gaur
African 6: 52
gundi
60-61
84 (pygmy) 10: 74,
77, 84-85 greater 10: 74 mahogany 10: 74, (77) pygmy 10: 74, 77, 84-85
mzab
7:
108-109
hedgehog
10, 14; 8: 12;
1: 9,
9: 8, 9, 11
African 9: 12, 13
pygmy
9: 12,
9:
12
collared 9: 12
Daurian
9:
12
desert 9: 12, 13 dwarf (African pygmy) 9: 12.
20-21
eastern European 9: 12 four-toed (African pygmy)
20-21
7: 108, 109,
9: 12,
7:
109 108,
13
short-tailed 9: 12, 12 9: 12,
12
hedgehog family
9:
12-13
Hugh's 9: 12, 13 long-eared 9: 12, 12-13
Madagascan
9:
North African
25
9: 12,
13
western European 14-19
white-bellied (African
pygmy)
9: 12,
20-21
Helarctos malayanus 2: 82
Speke's 7: 108, 109, 109 Gymnobelideus leadbeateri 10: 74, 88-89 gymnure 9: 12, 13
shrew
1
Hawaiian Islands National Wildlife Refuge 3: 31 hawks, bat 9: 84
9: 12,
109
North African 110-111 Saharan 7: 108
Hainan
62
hairy 9: 12, 22
30
black 8: 41
reticulated 6: 52, 53,
hare hunting 8: (89) hartebeest 6: 62
9: 12,
giraffe family 6: 52-53
Galictis
32 1: 32
49,
wild 5: 93
guenon 44
8: 62, 64,
74-79
Asian
34
groundhog see woodchuck guanaco 5: 92, 108-109 .
American
pika,
20-21
50, 59; 8: 29, 57, 66-67;
54 54-57
64
African
32
9: 77, 10:
tippelskirchi 6: 52, 5: 11, 12, 6:
102
103
5:
1:
7:
ground destabilization
thornicrofti 6: 52
8:
mouse see
sustainable 3:
grass see sea grass grazing 5: 12, 13, 30, 31, 6: 67, 89 Great Gobi Strictly Protected
54
64-67 66
8:
hispid 8: 63, 64,
Lichtenstein's 6:
dryas 10: 14
Galeopithecidae 8: 108 :
26
G. agilis 10: 14
54
(Arctic) 8: 74,
harvesting 3: 28; 6: 18 controlled 3: 12, 16
Rothschild's 6: 52, 54, southern African 6: 52
G. cuja 1
1 ),
Camelopardalis 6: 52 G. Camelopardalis capensis 6: 52 G. Camelopardalis peralta 6: 52 G. Camelopardalis reticulata 6: 52,
64
82-85 hare family
snowshoe
Gracilinanus
60
demidoff 4: 106, 110-111 G. thomasi 4: 1 06 G,
1
G. Camelopardalis
giraffe
Galagoides
2,
26-27
(21),
G. Camelopardalis
06
1
G. gorilla gorilla 4: 12,
grison
8:
polar (Arctic) 8: 74, 82-85 Smith's red rockhare 8: 64
beringei 4: 12, (21)
G. gorilla diehli 4:
G
80
Patagonian see mara
20-25
52
8:
Jameson's red rockhare 4: 8, 12,
G. gorilla 4: 12, (21)
6:
86-89
8: 62,
see pika, American
64
Giraffa
antiquorum
4:
Greenland
G. beringei diehli 4: 12, (21)
angolensis 6: 52
simus
haplorhines see primates, higher hare 8: 61 Arctic 8: 74, 82-85
greater red rockhare 8: 63,
apes in 4: 50 Gigantoplthecus 4: 12
G. Camelopardalis
96 96 96
4:
European
4: 12, (21)
G. beringei beringei 4:
Gibraltar,
aureus
H. griseus 4:
Cape
Gorilla
38-39
84-85
brown
20-25 22-23
4: 12,
western lowland (21), 26-27
rothschildi 6: 52,
gallery forests 4: 101
fleas 9: (18)
37
lar 4: 36,
G. Camelopardalis
Galidictis
3: (74)
fishing nets 3: 22, 30, 50, 59,
kloss 4: 36, 37,
Syrian (golden) 7:
Hapalemur
calling
silverback 4: 13,22,
G. Camelopardalis
06 106 1
G. gallarum 4:
G. vittata
cooperative, by dolphins
forestry operations 5:
106
Galago G. gabonensis
10
F.
fermentation
4:
0,
2:
4:
54-57
margarita 2:
44-45 10, 38-39 10, 46-47 2: 0, 48-49
36-37
gibbon family
G. Camelopardalis
F.
1
mountain
crested black 4: 36
G
4:
26-27
7:
pocket 7: 12, 18 western pocket (northern
Cross River 4: 12, (21), 26 eastern 4: 12, (21) eastern lowland 4: 12, 13, ( 21 )
galago Demidoff's dwarf see bush baby, Demidoff's Gabon 4: 106
06
18
7: 17,
goral 6: 62, 108 gorilla 4: 8, 10, 12, 13
G. Camelopardalis 6: 52,
Senegal 4: 106 Somali 4: 106 southern needle-clawed
pardalis 2:
56
18, 19
H.
gopher
horned 7: 12 northern pocket
crested 4: 37
(lar)
lynx pardinus 2: 40, 41
F.
8:
9: 10; 10: (1 1),
108
30
8:
hamster 7: 11, 15, golden 7: 84-85
H.
Gondwanaland
4: 36,
white-handed
F.
1
(lar)
(72), 75. 3: 12, 16; 4: 40,
1
108-109
6: 62,
pocket) 7: 26-27
37
36, 37, 46, 61, 90; 9: 43, 10: 22, 65, (80) see also skin trade
63
6:
mountain
31-32, (31)
4:
60-63
6:
domestic
92-93
G. tigrina 1: 88 Geocapromys brownii Geogale aurita 9: 24 Geomyidae 7: 72
Muller's 4: 36,
Garnett's 4:
1
88,
12-13, 35, 41, 44, 69, 85; 7: 33, 41, 97, 8: (10),
Halichoerus grypus 3: 42-43 hammer stones 1: (74);
gnu
goat
38-39 34
see also deforestation habitat preservation 4: 51 habituation 4: (23)
wild 6: 62 1:
64, 68-69, 87, 93; 2:
F.
2:
Genetta G. genetta
10: 27, (77), (95)
see also wildebeest, blue
(common) 92-93
38-39 moloch 4: 36, 37
northern needle-clawed
F nigripes
88-91 88
85, 9l;
9: 33, 62, 63,
Globicephala melas 3: 55,
white-tailed 6: 82 1:
large-spotted 1:
common
46-47 9: 87
lynx canadensis 2: 40, 41 lynx lynx 2: 40, 41
F.
92-93 genet family
88,
1:
Mongolian 7: 88-89 gerenuk 6: 62, 98-99 gibbon 4: 8, 10, 12
53
Ruppell's 2: 50,
Samson
Furipteridae
2:10
F.
F.
1:
92-93
88,
European (common)
88,
59, (66); 7: 25, 63, 107;
104-105
Glyptodon 9: 66 G. panochthus 9: 64 gnawing 7: 10, 16-17, 64
88, 91 1:
gerbil 7: 13, 15 bushveld 7: 13
F
farmland, expanding Felis 2: 10
1:
65, 91; 6: 20, 47, 49, 51,
see dormouse, edible
glutton see wolverine
98
50,
1: 9; 2:
70
fur trade 1: 22, (23), 51, 54,
Madagascan 1:91,97
aquatic
62
18,
red
2: (72); 8:
facial expression 4: (56), 100 falanouc 1: 88, 97 fanaloka 1: 88
6:
Georychus capensis
fur farming 1: 22, 35, 54, 55,
of rodents 7: 72 extermination 6: 64-66
F.
68-69 (59), 64-67
35, 87, 96, 101; 5: 26, 63,
102
66-67
50, 52,
10
1:
F.
50
Funambulus pennantu
9: 10, 40,
10: 36, (52)
of
65 74-75
2: 35,
Glirulus japonicus 7: Glisglis 7: 102,
4: 40, 42, 43,
kit (swift) 2:
40
Eurotamandua 1: 9 Euryzygomatomys splnosus 8: 30
gemsbok genet 1:
1:
53
island gray 2:
06
1
gelada baboon 62-63
44, 79, 3: 83; 4: 24,
Glironia venusta 10: 14
glis
small-spotted
53 50, 53
2: 50,
Indian 2: 50, 1
.
Tibetan 6: 67, 62
common
fox
63
Eubalaena E.
Fossa fossa 1 88 fossorial animals 7: 18, 65 Fouchia 5: 28 fovea 4: 1 07 :
Eschrichtius robustus 3: 55,
62
6: 67,
110 :
habitat destruction 1: 62, 64;
gliding marsupials 10: (76)
94-95 97,
6:
H
76, (76),
.
slender-horned
Thomson's
26
gorillas in 4:
62
6: 67,
goitered 6: 67, 62
gallery forests 4: 101
1
sugar 10: 74, 86-87 88
47
5:
dama
90-91 elephants in 5: 22
9: 12,
E.
gazelle
forests in Brazil 4:
1
Heliophobius 7: 9 H. argenteocinereus 8: 56 Flelogale parvula 1 98, :
106-107 Flemibelideus lemuroides 10:
74
Hemicentetes semispinosus 9:
24
Hemiechinus H. aethiopicus 9:
H. auritus 9: 12, H. collaris 9:
1
12-13
1
121
SET INDEX
Hemigalus derbyanus 1: 88 Hemitragus jemlahicus 6: 62 herding, predator avoidance 5: 10 Herpestes H. edwardsii
Hydrochaeridae 7 12 Hydrochaeris hydrochaeris
108-109 1 ichneumon 1: 98 naso 1: 98 Herpestidae 1: 88 :
Hydromys chrysogaster 1
02
H antmeae 8: 03 H brucei 8: 03 1
1
03
Heteromyidae 7: 12 Hexaprotodon libenensis 5: 66 hibernation 2: 87-88, 93, 97, 100, 7: 19, 51, 54-55, 107. 9: 13, 18, 27, 82, 1 1, 10: 111
104, 105,
1
Himalaya Mountains 1: 30 hippo see hippopotamus Hippocamelus
H H
antisensis 6:
38-39 Hyemoschus aquaticus 6: hyena brown 2: 102, 103, 103 hyena family 2: 102-103 spotted striped
H H
hippopotamus family 5:
63
giant forest
5: 74, 75,
74 red river 5: 74 see also warthog homeothermy 1: 9-10, 14
Hommidae
Homo
8: 103,
Cape
horse
1: 15, 5: 8, 9,
11, 12,
Camargue 5:
domestic
1
rock (rock) 8: 103,
tree 8:
1
8
:
8:
42
17
12, 8:
58 feral see mustang horse family 5: 4J 4$ Mongolian wild 5: 42,
H H H
12,
(8),
:
6: 62, 1.Q6
wild) 5: 42, 45, 54-55 racehorses 5: (43)
nubian
'Mongolian wild'
42, 45, 54-55 wild (mustang) see 4
h
mustang
h
102
10: 48, 51, 52,
107
K
•
tonyz striatus
1:
32
Cuban
8: 30, 52.
5J Desmarest's Cuban (Cuban)
K
2: 82. (86), 93, 3:
K
8: 30,
i''''
4:
22, hi.
29, 33,
'id.
93;
13, 66. 70, 8: 57, 59,
eared 8: 30
10 H 8:
:
101
A
8
West Indian
see also reproduction imprintinu 6: 83 1: (59), 2:
1
Indricothenum 5: Indri mdri 4: 96
8.
8:
30
28
(10), 77. (77),
92-93
92 93
7:
62 K leche 6: 92 K vardonu 6: 62 Kogia K breviceps 3: 55 K s imus 3: 55 korrigum 6: 88 Kruger National Park 2: 31 kudu greater 6: 78 19 kulan see ass, Asian wild kultarr 10: 25. 21
L.
conspicillatus 10:
L.
hirsutus 10:
langur
arcticus 8:
L.
californicus 8: 64,
L.
europaeus
48
12-13, 4: 40,
36
14
65
collared 7: 9
Norway 7: 66, 90-91 lemmus lemmus 7: 90-91 96-97 97 96, 96
96; 4:
1:
black 4:
4: 96,
105 97 4:
96
96 97
flying 8:
4:
96
96 96
bamboo 4:
4:
96
4:
greater dwarf 4:
96
96
hairy-eared dwarf 4:
96
97
Milne-Edwards's sportive
97 mongoose 4: 96, 96 mouse 4: 97, 97 pygmy mouse 4: 8, 96, 97 4: 96,
red ruffed 4: 104, 105
96, 97,
9,
ruffed 4: 96, 104-105 sportive 4:
97
weasel sportive 4: 96 western woolly 4: 96
Lemur
catta 4: 96,
98-101
Leontopithecus L
6:
caissara 4:
88
/
chrysomelas 4: 88 hrysopygus 4: 86. 88
L
rosalia 4: 86,
L
i
leopard
88-91 30-33
2: 9. 10. 13,
black 2: 30, 31 clouded 2: 9, 10 2: 10, 13.
34-35
Lepilemur i
40
106-107 4:
106
slender 4: 106, 106
108-109 1 06
4: 106,
love charms Loxodonta
61
3:
L.
africana 5: 14, 16-21
L.
cyclotis 5:
charms
14
8: 67, 9:
79
Lutra
58-63
L.
lutra 1: 32,
L
mac uIicollis
L
sumatrana
1:
1:
32 32
Lutreolina crassicaudata 10: 14 Lutrogale perspicillata
1 32 Lycaon pictus 2: 50, 78-79 Lyncodon patagonicus 1: 32 lynx 2: 10, 12, 38, 40^1 :
:
8:
76-77
Canadian Eurasian 2
2: 40,
40
41
2: 41
Iberian 2: 40, 41
M Macaca
M M M M
luscata 4: 40, 48-49 nigra 4: 40. 52-53 \ilenus 4:
40
sylvanus 4: 40, 50-51 macaque 4: 8, 40, 42, 43, 66 Barbary 4: 40, 42, 5 0-51
black 4: 40, 52-53 Celebes (black) 4: 40, 52-53 4: -10, 47,
lion-tailed 4: 40,
48 49
41
Sulawesi crested (black) 4: 40,
52-53
Macrogahdia musschenbroekii
96 mustelinus 4: 96
edwardsi
albigena 4: 40
L
Japanese
melanistK 2: 30. 31
snow
9: 8,
68
logging 1: 51, 77, 2: 21; 6: 20 Lonchothrix emiliae 8: 30 Lontra L canadensis 1: 32, 64-67 L. felina 1: 32 Lophiomys imhausi 7: 66
lucky
96
bamboo
indri 4: 96,
12. 22,
4:
giant sloth 4:
mouse
92, 93, 93,
5: 12,
slow
dwarf 108
fork-marked
greater
Caribbean ground 109
Loris tardigradus 4:
eastern woolly 4: 96
golden
98-99
pygmy
4: 97,
fat-tailed
55, (61)
Litocranius walleri 6: 62,
loris 4:
Coquerel’s dwarf 4: 96 4:
18-19
puma
vexillifer 3:
L 'aterrimus 4:
brown 4: brown mouse crowned
6: 82; 8:
Lophocebus
black-and-white ruffed 4: 104,
:
locomotion, plantigrade
2: 72, 7: 13, 17,
bamboo
88 88
Asian 2: (15) Barbary 2: 17 mountain see
92
6:
lemming
dwarf
1:
104-107 Lobodon carcinophagus 3: 9, 36-37 lobtailing 3: 96, 109
Laurasia 9: 10
lemur
1:
llama
10: 74, (101)
lassa fever 7:
banded spotted
1:
10: 74, (101)
krefftii
1: 98 whale 3: 57, 92, 102, 108 Limnogale mergulus 9: 24 lice,
lizard,
Lasiorhinus
L
kuhm
Lipotyphla 9: 10
64-67 Malabar 4: 40
L. latifrons
80-81
86-89
8: 64,
88
leverets 8: Liberiictis
Upotes
48
1:
74-79
8: 64,
82-85
Lestodelphys hath 10: 14 Lestoros inca 10: 14
14-19
42
4:
Hanuman
L
122
L.
lion 1: 15: 2: 8-9, 9, 10, 13,
104-107
5: 92,
96-1Q1
ellipsiprymnus
K kob
82-83
guanicoe 5: 92, 108-109 L. pacos 5: 92, (106) Langorchestes
ringtailed 4:
ellipsyprymnus 6: 92-93
34 6
39. 8: 109, 9: 61, 77, 83,
glama
gray
ellipsiprymnus defassa 6:
1:42, 49
inbreeding
77
ellipsiprymnus 5: 75. 6: 62,
86 &Z. 97
ing partnerships 2: (60)
hutia 7: 12. 8: 11. 31,3/ Brown's 8: 30
2:
americanus
linsang 1: 89, 90, 91 African 1: 88, 90
lagotricha 4: 72,
:
implantation/fertilization.
Chilean 6: 10 Peruvian 6: 10. 12-13 human 4: 10-11, 17
66-67
western gray 10: 60, (62) kangaroo rat 7: 13, 17 bannertail 7 18-19 Ord's 7 24-25
92-97 kob 6: 62 Kobus
106
6: 62,
63 tree (Goodfellow’s tree)
koala 10:
walia 6: 106, 106-107 hneumia albk mda 1: 98
impala
Bennett's tree 10: 48 eastern gray (gray) 10: 48,
:
106, 107
Siberian 6: 106,
5:
.
6:
red 10: 25, 27
8: 62; 10: 8, (10),
keystone species 5: 26, 6: (68); 7 32, 93 khur see ass, Asian wild kiang see ass, Asian wild kinkajou 1: 20, 21 klipspringer 5: 8, 6: 60, 62
I
.iipine 6:
little
kangaroo 48-53
20 Kerodon rupestris
16-19
cristata 8: 12,
Przewalski's (Mongolian
kaluta,
8:
1
48
Lagothrix L. flavicauda 4: 72
lechwe
keratin 5: 10, 29, (37); 6: 60,
8-11, 28, 55
afncaeaustrahs 8: brachyura 8: 1
ibex
K
Karroo desert
Hystrix
5: (43)
jaguarundi 2: 10, 12 javelina see peccary, collared jerboa 7: 12, 17 jird see gerbil
Kannabateomys amblyonyx 8: 30
8:
Hystricognathi 7
60-61
L.
Lagidium peruanum 8: 30 iagomorphs 1: 10, 8: 61-63 Lagostomus maximus 8: 30 Lagostrophus fasciatus
Lariscus insignis 7:
:
103 yellow-spotted 8: 105
10. 11,
36-37
2: 10,
red 10: 11, 48, 54-59. 60,
04
western tree
draft 5: (43),
I
104-105
Hystncidae 7
5:
103
Matadi 8: 103 rock 8: 105, 106-107 southern tree 8: 102-103, 103
11
62
ancestral 1:
dawn
60,
65
60-63 Goodfellow's tree 10: 48, 6-67 gray 10: 48, 53, 60-63
104-105, 105, 106-107 eastern tree 8: 103
sapiens 1 : 14, 4: 12
9, 56,
8:
obliguidens 3: 55, 70-71 obscurus 3: 71
41,
53,
Bruce's yellow-spotted
honeybees 7: 1 honey guide, African 1 : 83 hoofed mammals 5: 8-13 Hoplomys gymnurus 8: 30 hornbill 1: 107 horns 5: 29, 31. 36-37, (37), 40, 41, 6:
36
102-105
Ahaggar
10
4:
lepidus 7: 36
8: 68,
5:
66 80-81
black 2: 37
:
84-85
pygmy
jaguar
10 48, 72 Hypsiprymnodontidae 10: 48 Hyracoidea 1: 10, 5: (12), 14 Hyracotherium 5: 42 hyrax 1: 10, 5: (10), (12), 14,
hog
83;
8: 62, 64, 66,
5: (11),
Hyperoodon ampullatus 3: 55, 90-91 Hypsiprymnodon moschatus
62
hirola 6:
13
9: 12,
H. spadiceus 7: 34,
H equmus 6: 62 H leucophaeus 6: H niger 6: 62
antelope
black-tailed 8: 64,
H. suillus 9: 12, 12
Hippotragus
1:
62-63
jackrabbit
sinensis 9: 12, 12
H
L
L.
black-backed
2: 50,
Hylopetes
hippotigres 5: 52
cruciger 3: 71
L.
jackal
alien 8:
L.
3:71
albirostris
L.
64
L.
acutus 3: 71
L.
L.
Jacobson's organ 2: 12;
hainanensis
Lepus
Lama
jaca see guinea pig
84-85
5: 74,
L.
8
1:
leptospirosis 1: 87; 7: 14
Lagenorhynchus
10:
72
J
36
Hylomys
66-67 pygmy 5: 66, 66-67, 67 Hippopotamus amphibius 5: 66, 68-73
for the Conservation of
see also tusks poaching 5: 20
H lar 4: 36, 38-39 H moloch 4: 36 H muelleri 4: 36 H syndactylus 4: 36
66, 66, 67,
5:
68-73
macrourus 10: 27, 46-47 pagurus 8: 30 IUCN see International Union /.
Isothrix
ivory
Hylochoerus meinertzhageni
common
Union for the
leprosy 9: (76)
Lepticidium
8: (41)
see also medical research Lagenodelphis hosei 3: 71
I.
104-107
5: 8, 9, 10;
8-1
10, 9:
ivory 3: 26, 5: 14, 20, 26,
Hylobates H concolor 4: 36
1
1: 8,
67 7: 15, 66, (75), 83, 86;
Nature
102, 103,
2:
60-61
3: 55,
Conservation of Nature (IUCN) 1: 16 introductions 1:18, 22, 43 lomys horsfieldi 7 36 Isoodon auratus 10: 27
102-103,
2: 102,
H. klossh 4:
48
8:
insectivores
108-109
103,
bisculus 6: 10
hippopotamus
Ima geoffrensis
Leporidae (leporids) 8: 60, 64,
laboratory animals 4: 40, 87;
:
1
1
H. c hapim 8:
9
7:
Hydropotes inermis 6: Hydrurga leptonyx 3: 9,
58-59 1
47
3:
L
4: (10)
International
Hydrodamalis gigas
Heterocephalus glaber Heterohyrax 8:
48-51
8: 30,
infanticide 1: (13); 2: 24;
interbreeding 2: 59, 6: 75, 107, 10: 41
:
H H
8: 56,
Hyaena H brunnea 2: 102 H. hyaena 2: 102, 104-107 hybridization 2: 59
4:
1:
88
SET INDEX
Macropodidae Macropus
10: 48,
M. martes 1: 32 M. pennant/ 1 50-51
50
60-63
64-65 M. rufus 1 0: 48, 54-59 Macroscelidea 1: 70; 9: 58 Macroscelides proboscideus
59
body
M. lagotls 10: 27, 44-45 M. leucura 10: 27 Madagascar, carnivores in
Madoqua M. kirku 6: 62 M. saltlana 6: 62 Makalata armata 8: 30
mammals
diversity of 1: (1
15-16 14-15
1:
1),
1:
8
origin 1:
reproduction
mammoth 5: Mammuthus manatee
12-14
1:
8
46-47
1: 70; 3:
:
5: (10), (12)
Amazonian
47
3:
47
West African
3:
West Indian
3: 46, 47,
60-61
4: 40, 42,
Mandrillus
M. leucophaeus 4: 40 M. sphinx 4: 40, 60-61 mangabey 4: 40, 42, 43 agile 4: 40, 42 black 4: 40, 42 gray-cheeked 4: 40, 40, 42 white 4: 40, 42
mangrove swamps 4: 71 Manis gigantea 9: 65 M. temminckn 9: 65 pi. tricuspis 9: 65 mara 8: 8, 30, 32-35
M
Marmosa mexlcana 10: 14 murina 10: 14
marmoset 92-93
4: 86,
86
87 marmoset family 4: 86-87 pygmy 4: 86 Geoffroy's 4: 86,
silvery 4:
86
M. dorothea 10: 14 M. fuscatus 10: 14 7: 76, 35,
36
alpine (European) 7 34, :
52-53 European
52-53
7: 34,
Marmota 7: 34 M. marmota 7 34, 52-53 M. monax 7: 34, 50-51 :
marsupials 1: 70; 10: 8-13 Australian carnivorous 10:
24-27
other plant-eating
74-77 marten 7: 36 American 1: 48-49 American pine (American) 1: 48-49 pine 1: 32, 35 10:
yellow-throated
Martes americana
M M
1:
32,
flavigula 1:
hispidus 8:
3: 56 Messelobunodon 1: 8
mesonychids
Metachirus nudicaudatus 10: 14 Metatheria 10: (10) miacid 1: 9 Miacoidea 1: 38, 98 mice see mouse
86
1:
32
Microcebus M. coquereli see Mirza
Microchiroptera 9: 80, 86 Microgale M. melanorrachis 9: 24 M. parvula 9: 24 Microperoryctes longicauda 10: 27
M
:
48-49
32
:
Japanese 9: 54 Juliana's golden 9: 40, 43 marsupial 10: (10), 26, 27,
40-43
9:
27
43
molehills 9:
8:
rat 7: 15, 18, 65; 8: 9
56
:
100-101
11, 16,
:
Allen's
swamp
4: 40,
41
black-handed spider 4: 72, 76-21 4: 72,
74-75
1
76-77 cheek-pouch 4: 40, 42 4: 72,
common
57 lesser blind 7: 100-101 Mechow's 8: 56, 57 mole rat family 8: 56-57 8: 56,
14; 7: 13;
1: (11),
Namaqua dune
58-59 8:
56
7 9; 8 56 southern dune 8: 56 mollusks 3: 25 Molossidae 9: 87 :
Monachus
:
schauinslandi
30-31
82-83 De Brazza's
42-43
4: 40,
40 4: 40
golden leaf golden snub-nosed 4: 40 green (vervet) 4: 40, 42,
:
44-47 guenon (vervet) 44-47
Hanuman
:
4: 40, 42,
langur 6: 13
83 Humboldt's woolly 82-83 leaf 4: 40, 40-42
4: 72,
:
:
Angolan
1:
98
banded
1:
78-79, 98, 1:
98
98
bushy-tailed 1: 98, 99 Bengal (Indian
common
108-109 gray (Indian gray)
108-109
Egyptian
98, 99, 99, 1:
98,
1:
.
shaker
7: (69)
18
64
singing 7: (69) spiny 7: 65, 8: 11, 12 three-striped marsupial
10 25, 27 waltzing 7: (69) :
western harvest 7: 80-81 West Indian key 8: 1
white-footed (deer) 7: 64,
82-83
wood
7: 13,
78-79
mouse-hare see pika mouselike rodents muktuk 3: 85 mulgara 10 27
7:
Mungos
72 72, 75
spider 4: 8, squirrel 4: 72,
M. gambianus 1 98 M. mungo 1 18-19, 98, 110-111
4:
:
:
78-79
swingers 4: 72 thumbless 4: 40
vervet
4: 40, 42,
Mungotictis decemlineata 1
44-47
yellow-tailed woolly 4: 72
3: 55,
1: 70; 10:
104
8: 12
9: 9, 11, 12,
9: 12
98
13
46-47 46-47
6: 12,
Chinese
98
monotremes, spiny
:
Muntiacus M. cri nitrons 6: 10 M. muntjak 6: 10 M. reevesi 6: 46-47
muntjac
domestica 10: 14 kunsi 10 14
Dinagat
16-19
:
84-85 Monotremata
108-109
7:
Japanese southern night
moonrat 1:
7: 12,
pygmy
multituberculates 7: 10
Monodon monoceros
108-109
snow see macaque,
99
Indian (Indian gray)
Indian gray
(vervet) 4: 40, 42,
:
98
giant-striped 1:
1:
-i
Monodelphis
106-107. Ill
Gambian
4: 72, 73, 84-85 northern night 4: 1? / 84-85 Old World monkey family 4: 40-43 72 owl (northern night) 4: 72, 73, 84-85 patas 4: 40, 4 7, 42, 43 proboscis 4: 40, 41, 70-71
woolly 4: 72
Indian (Indian gray)
108-109 1:
84-85
northern (northern night)
44-47
103-104, 110-111 broad-striped
gray) 1:
72-73
night (northern night) 4: 72,
savanna
(wood)
78-79 marsupial 10 (25), 27, 40 meadow jumping 7: 16 mole 7: 65 mouse family 7: 64-67 New World 7 14, 64, 65 Nicaraguan harvest 7 80 Old World 7: 14, 65, 65 pencil-tailed tree 7: 65 pig mouse 8: 38 plains 7: 65 :
4: 10, 72,
4:
long-tailed field 7: 13,
rhesus 4: 42
98
1:
1:
long-clawed marsupial 10 27
grivet (vervet) 4: 40, 42,
73,
Cozumel Island harvest 7: 80 deer 7: 64, 82-83 desert 7: 65 desert pocket 7: 22-23 field (wood) 7: 13, 78-79 hairy harvest 7: 80 harvest 7: 64 house 7: 13, 14-15, 65-66, 68-71 jumping 7: 17, 19 kangaroo 7 17
red howler 4: 72
Alexander's
brown
78
woolly
(Humboldt's woolly) 4: 72,
family
Angolan
3: 9,
:
squirrel 4: 72,
New World monkey
silvery
:
Costa Rican harvest 7 80
cloaked see colugo
Ehrenberg's 7: 18 giant
coarse-haired pocket (desertpocket) 7 22-23
(black-handed spider)
long-haired spider 4: 72
giant 8: 57
64
birch 7: 17
leapers 4: 72
57
8: 56,
72
7: 70,
African climbing 7:
mantled howler 4: 72 mustached 4: 40, 4 7
dwarf
106-107
monte 10
del
Damara 8: 56, 57 dune 8: 57
Microtus agrestis 7 92-93 migration 3: 82, 85, 87, 93-94, 103, (105), 109; 5 18, 109; 6 : 17, 23, 37, 84-85, 96, 101, 7 91,
milu see deer, Pere David's
6:
Moschus
(16)
howler
57
common
1:
:
Moschidae 6: 10 Moschiola meminna
99
44-47
see also shrew mole
1:
102, (103),
morrillo 8: 51
dusky-leaf 4:
48-51
common
:
99
98, 101
common
42-43 mole family
common
9: (83), 1
Grant's desert golden 9:
M. murina 10: 27 Micropotamogale M. lamottei 9: 24 M. ruwenzorii 9: 24 :
moose disease 6: 1 Mormoopidae 9: 87
98,
Central American spider
10-11,
mongoose
coquereli
M. murinus 4: 96 M, myoxinus 4: 96 M. rufus 4: 96
1
40 Grant's golden 9: 56-57 hairy-tailed 9 40, 42
9: 9,
5: (10)
8: 10, 56, 57,
M. humilis 4: 86 Micoureus M. alstom 10: 14 M. constantiae 10: 14
6:
1
mouse
naked 4:
shiras 6:
brown howler
40
Cape 7: 70; 8: 56 Cape dune 8: 56 30
1:
99
98,
Bolivian squirrel 4: 72
golden
44-47
40, 42,
blind 7 : 12-13, 15, 18;
:
1
golden mole family 9: 40-43
monkey
7:
Mesocricetus auratus 7 86-87
98 99
1:
14-15, 77
6:
eastern 6:
northwestern
Pousargues
9: 56-57 European 9:
Balkan blind (lesser blind)
30
family
:
73 14-19.
21-22
1:
yellow
9: 12,
6: 10, 12,
Alaskan
98-99
1
22-23
1
M. berezovskii 6: 10 M. chrysogaster 6: 1 0, 50-51 M. fuscus 6: 10 M. moschiferus 6: 1 mosquitoes 6: (22) mouflon 6: 62, 63
African 7 : 72; 8
8:
1:
9: 12,
Mindanao
moose
narrow-striped
monito
mole
mermaids 3: 53 Mesechinus M. dauricus 9: 12 M. hughi 9: 12 Mesocapromys auritus
M/co M. argentata
10: 9: 9, (10), 11
Persian 9: 40, 43 small-toothed 9: 40, 43 star-nosed 9: 40, 42,
88-89
mongoose
coast 9: 40, 41 desert (Grant's) golden
10:
M. macroura 1: 32 M. mephitis 1: 32, 84-87 Meriones unguiculatus
lesser 9:
98 98 long-nosed 1: 98 Madagascan 1: 98 marsh 1: 98, 99 Meller's 1: 98
white-tailed 1: 98,
northern marsupial 10: 43 northwestern marsupial
Microcavia australis 8: 30
Marmosops
marmot
98, 99,
Melogale personata 1 32 Melursus ursinus 2: 82 Menotyphla 9: 10, 58 Mephitidae 1: 32, 84
Mesomys
1:
greater
Liberian 1:
Selous' 1: 98, slender 1: 98
11, 40, 41, 42, (42)
82-83
:
mole
Jackson's 1:
ringtailed
Mirza coquereli 4: 96 moldewarp see mole,
giant golden 9:
100-105 Megachiroptera 9: 80, 86 Megaderma lyra 9: 98-99 Megadermatidae 9: 87, 98 Megaptera novaeangliae 3: 55, 102-105 Megatherium 9: 64 Metes metes 1: 32, 78-81
7
common
98, 99,
Mephitis
48-51
4:
:
:
Caribbean (West Indian) 3: 46, 47, 48-51
dwarf
41; 9: 91 Chinese 5 37
Mellivora capensis
8
5:
(97), 100, 6: 107, 7: 63, 8:
99, 100-105 slender-tailed (meerkat)
70 major groups 1:11
evolution
parts for 2: 21, 33,
1: 19,
32
3:
European
6: 51; 7: (31)
gray (meerkat) 1:19, 98,
8-17
1:
changing species
M M
M. leonina
t
meerkat 1:19, 100-105
96-97
32-35
:
see also laboratory animals;
medicine
Macrostylus 9: 86 Macrotis
mandrill
:
97
9: 77,
32, 35, 35,
1:
52-55. 62 7: 99; 9: 53 European 1: 54, (55) Miopithecus talapoin 4: 40 Mirounga M. angustirostris 3: 9,
trade medical research 4: 13, 32, 63, 78, 93; 7 15, (75); 8 (41 Y
surgery
90,
mink 1: 35 American
:
M. parryi 10: 48 M. robustus 10: 48 M. rufogriseus 10: 48,
1:
ringtail
masseter muscles 7 16-17, 64; 8: 12, 72 Massoutiera mzabi 7: 108 Mazama americana 6: 10 meat trade see bushmeat
M. fuliginosus 10: (62) M. giganteus 10: 48,
9:
miner's cat see raccoon,
:
6:
hairy-fronted 6: 10 Indian 6: 10
Reeves's 6:
46-47
Murexia M. longicaudata 10 27 M. rothschildi 10 27 :
:
123
SET INDEX
Muridae Murinae
65
7: 72, 7:
muriqui 4:
Neotragus
14 72
N. netscheri 8:
N. timminsi 8:
9:
7: 71
Mustela M. erminea
40-43 36
frenata 1: 32,
lutreola 1: 54, (55) nigripes 1: 32, 46-47
36-39 pu tori us 1: 32, 44-45 vison 1: 32, 52-55 mustelids 1: 32-35 nivalis 1: 32,
M. javanensis 1: 32 M. marchei 1 32 Myocastor coypus 8: 30, 44-47 :
Myocastoridae 7: 72; 8: 31 myoglobin 3: 1 1, 87 Myoictis melas 10: 27
Myomimus M. personatus 7: 102 M. roachi 7: 102 M. setzeri 7: 102
Myomorpha Myoprocta
7: (8)
30
exilis 8:
Myosciurus pumilio
Myosorex
Mexican mouse 10: 14, 77 murine mouse 10: 14
27 yvonneae 10: 27
34
9:
Myrmecobiidae 10: 24 Myrmecobius fasciatus 10: 27, 34-35
Myrmecophaga 9: 65,
tridactyla
68-71
Mysateles prehensilis 8: 30 Mystacinidae 9: 87
54 myxomatosis 8: 72, 93 Myzopodidae 9: 87 Mysticeti 3:
N Nandinia binotata 1 88 Nannosciuris exilis 7: 36 Nannospalax leucodon :
N.
narwhal
3: 55,
108-109
noise pollution 3: 88, 95
noolbenger see possum,
Virginia 10:
honey
water 10:
43 N. typhlops 10: 27, 42-43 Notoryctidae 10: 24, 26
wood
N. caurinus 10: 27,
10: 13, 24, 25, 26,
34-35 coypu nyala, mountain 6: 62 Nyctereutes procyonoides 2: 50 Nycteridae 9: 87 nutria see
pygmaeus
1
06,
4:
77; 2: 10,
72,
44-45
98 O. himalayana 8: 94 O. princeps 8: 94, 98-101 O. pusilla 8: 94 Ochotonidae 8: 60 Octodon bridges 8: 30 Octodontidae (octodonts) 7: 72; 8: 29-31
Octodontomys 8: 30 octodonts
gliroides
7: 72; 8:
29-31 30
Octomys mimax 8: Odobenidae 3: 8 Oddbenus rosmarus 24-29
70-71
N. larvatus 4: 40,
N. narica 1:
Odocoileus
hemionus Odontoceti
6: 10,
3:
34-37
0, (36)
1
54
58-59
1:
national parks/nature reserves 2: (15), 16, 31; 5: 34,
(102),
103
Neamblysomus julianae 9: 40 nectar 4: 105
Olallamys edax 8: 30 olingo 1: 20, 21 onager see ass, Asian wild Ondatra zibethicus 7: 96-97
Onychogalea
O O
fraenata 10: 48
unguifera 10: 48
opossum
1:
87
9:
Nemorhaedus goral
28
6: 62,
Alston's
mouse 10: 14 woolly mouse
10: 14
American
108
10:
14-17
Neofelis nebulosa 2: 10
bare-tailed woolly 10: 14
Neomys
black four-eyed 10: 14 black-shouldered 10: 14,
fodiens 9: 28
Neophascogale 10: 27
lorentzi
Neophoca cinerea 3: 9 Neotoma lepida 7: 84-85
16,
62
9: 65,
6: 62,
white (Arabian)
dammah
brown four-eyed
6: 62,
62 62
Otocyon megalotis 76-77 Otolemur
10: 14
bushy-tailed 10: 14
1
4:
34-35 12, 28-33
lesser (red) 1: 20, 21,
1:
2: (99) 20, 21, 30-31 :
:
2: (99)
panda bear see panda, giant pangolin 1: 70; 9: 64-67 African 9: 66 armored 9: 64 Asian 9: 66 giant 9: 65, 66 ground 9: 64-65, 65 tree 9: 65 panther
puma
1
1: 18,
giant river
Parascalops breweri 9:
Paroodectes
patagium 86
1:
35
river
(North
American river) 1: 32, 64-67 sea 1: 19, 32, 72-75 short-clawed 1: 32, 70-71 smooth-coated 1: 32 9:
1: 1
32,
1,
35
24,
25
25
Ruwenzori 9: 24, 25 ounce see leopard, snow
7: 34 Petrodomus tetradactylus 9: 59
P persephone 10: 48 P xanthopus 10: 48, 70-71 Petromuridae 7: 72; 8: 31 Petromus typicus 8: 30, 54-55 Petropseudes dahli 10: 74 pets
1: 22, 29, 35, 45, 95, 109, 2: 75; 4: 53, 78, 81,
83, 85, 87, 88, 101, 7: 15, (69), 83, 86, 8: 39, 42, (72), 9: 13, 21 see also cat, domestic; dog,
domestic Phacochoerus aethiopicus 5: 74
P africanus 5: 74, 80-83 Phalanger 10: 82
1:
40
9
Patagonia 5: 108 Pecan 5: 88 P tajacu see Tayassu
5: 5:
brush-tailed 10: 26, red-tailed 10: 25,
88, 89, 89 88, 89, 90-91
88-89 white-lipped 5: 88, 89, 89 Pectinator spekei 7: 08 peccary family
27
27
Phascogale
P calura 10: 27 P tapoatafa 10: 27 Phascolorarctos cinereus
92-97
Phascolosorex P doriae 10: 27
P dorsalis 10: 27 pheromones 7: 66, 70
P groenlandica 3: 9, 44-45 P. sibirica see Pusa sibirica P vitulina 3: 9, 40-41 Phoca rctos hookeri 3: 9 Phocidae 3: 8
Phocoena phocoena 78-79
5:
1
Pedetes capensis 7: 20-21 Pedetidae 7: 12 Pelea capreolus 6: 62 penguin 3: 38-39 Pentalagus furnessi 8: 64
Peramelemorphia 10: 24 Perameles
3: 55,
Pholidocercus 1: 9 Pholidota 1: 70; 9: 64 Phyllostomidae 9: 87 Physeter catodon 3: 55, 86-89 pig 5: 8, 10, 12
bearded bushpig
tajacu
peccary 5:8, 12 collared
Phaner furcifer 4: 96 phascogale 10: (25)
P andersom 10: 14 P opossum 10:14 Phoca
8: 108; 10: (76), 84,
Chacoan
Pgymnotis 10: 74 Phalangeridae 10: 76
Philander
Pasteurella tularense 8: 8
68-69
North American 1: 32, 64-67
spot-necked
88,
84
parasites 9:
1:
river
58-59 98
1:
48
32 1:
:
aplicalis 10: 27 P bilarm 10: 27 parapox virus 7: 44
32 Indian smooth-coated marine 1: 32 hairy-nosed
1
106
Cape Congo clawless 1: 32 European 1: 58-63 European river 1: 60
Petauroides volans 10: 74 Petaurus P breviceps 10: 74, 86-87
10: 74, 4: 40,
:
06
1
54-57 hamadryas
P.
35, 54; 8: clawless 1: 32
36 36
Pcarmelitae 10: 74
P leo 2: 10, 14-19 P leo persica 2: (1 5) P onca 2: 0, 36-37 P. pardus 2: 0, 30-33 P tigris 2: 10, 20-25 P uncia 2: 0, 34-35 Pantholops hodgsoni 6: 62
Parantechinus
1: 19,
7:
petaurista 7:
P.
P.
black 2: 30, 31 see also leopard;
94-95 P jerdoni 1: 88 P zeylonensis 1 88
2: 50,
P elegans
Petrogale
98-101
2: 82,
Paracynictis selousi
88
:
O. crassicaudatus 4:
shrew
12,
Petauridae 10: (76) Petaurista
P gracilis 10: 74 Petinomys crinitus
88
larvata 1:
Paradoxurus P hermaphroditus
Otariidae 3: 8
otter
30
44-45
Pan P paniscus 4: P troglodytes
P.
24
giant
28, 30,
1,
pantotheres 7: 10, 1 Papio P cynocephalus 4: 40,
O. leucoryx 6: 62, 90-91 Oryzorictes tetradactylus
otter
3:
6:
O. gazella 6:
9:
1
mountain 8: 30 pacarana 7: 72, 8: 28, 31 pademelon
1
90-91 Oryx O.
paca
1
giant 9: 24,
77
8: 64,
90-91 scimitar-horned 6: 62
northern
agile gracile
Nectogale elegans
68-73 oryx Arabian
7: 72; 8:
P broad bent 10: 27 P raffrayana 10: 27 Peroryctidae 10: 24
Panthera
Orycteropus afer
O. garnettii 4:
okapi 6: 52, 52-53, 58-59 Okapia johnstoni 6: 52,
20
20, 28-29 Nasuella olivacea 1: 20 Natalidae 9: 87
nasua
6:
106-109
Osbornictis piscivora 3: 9,
22, 34, 52, 58, 85, 89, 91, 101
Nasua
orca 3: 55, (57), 62-65 Orcinus orca 3: 55, 62-65
1
Peroryctes
P
4: 8, 10, 12, 13,
Oryctolagus cuniculus
94
O. collaris 8: 94,
06 Peromyscus P leucopus 7: 83 P maniculatus 7: 82-83
7: (14)
30-31
78-79
O. alpina 8:
43 Perodicticus potto 4:
:
red
14-19 Bornean 4: 12, 14-15, 18, 78-79 Sumatran 4: 12, 14-15, 18
Ochotona
40
mouse
10: 14 woolly 10: 16
10: 1:
spirit gracile
7: (31) Perissodactyla 1: 70; 5: 10, 12,
62
oxpeckers 5: 38; 6: (73) Ozotocerus bezoarticus 6 10
giant
oribi 5:
o
33
panda
7
Oreotragus oreotragus 6: 62 7 7; 6: 67, 62 Ornithorhynchus anatinus
06
1
7
white-eared 10: 14
Oreamnos americanus 108-109
Nycticebus N. coucang 4: 0. 0. 108-109
8, 13, 14, 15,
13, 14, 16,
orangutan
6:
Paguma
18-23
16, 17,
Notoryctemorphia 10: 24 Notoryctes
musimon 7: (37); 9:
snowy
short-tailed 10: 14 :
oil 3:
N. concolor 4:
pygmy
shrew 10 16 silky shrew 10: 14
virginianus 6:
84-85
Patagonian 10: 14
Noctilionidae 9: 87
100-103
red-legged 10: 48, 57 red-necked 10: 48 Pagophilus groenlandica
14
pallid fat-tailed 10:
108
N. albiventris 9:
N.
mouse
10: 14
Noctilio
100-101
Nasalis
pale-bellied woolly
N. timealeyi 10:
ocelot
28 104-105
varius 9:
Myotis lucifugus Myoxidae 7: 12
7:
28
southern 10: 27 Ningaui
numbat
Mydaus
mouse
ningaui 10: (24) Pilbara 10: 25, 27
N. leporinus 9: 1: 32, 36,
O.
gray four-eyed 10: 14, 77 gray short-tailed 10: 14 Incan shrew 10: 14 lutrine 10: 14
7:
62
O. aries 6: 62
owl
shrew 10: 14
gray-bellied slender
Ovis O. canadensis 6:
10: 14, 75
membrane
nictitating nilgai 6:
M. porcellus 8: 38 Muscardlnus avellanarius 7: 102, 106-107 muSk 1: 85 6: 51 muskox 6: 62, 104-105 muskrat 7: 13, 65, 96-97 common 7: 96-97 mustang 5: 42, 58-61
7:
gray-bellied
10: (80)
M. musculus wagneri
mouse
10: 14 elegant fat-tailed 10: 14
Zealand, mammals introduced into 1: 43;
71
18-23
13, 14, 15, 16, 17,
54-55
P bougainville 10: 27 P nasuta 10: 27 Peramelidae 10: 24 perfume industry 1: (91);
104-105 8'
(Virginia) 10:
Dorothy's slender
New
M. musculus musculus 7:
64 64
Neurotrichus gibbsii
musculus domestlcus
7: 71
124
Chilean shrew 10: 14
common
68-71
7:
7: 71
N
62
6:
brevirostris
Ourebia ourebi 6: 62 Ovibos moschatus 6: 62,
10: 14, 77
Nesolagus
M. musculus M. musculus
M. M. M. M. M. M.
pygmaeus
N.
Mus
Mâ&#x20AC;&#x2DC;.
Central American woolly
62
N. batesi 6:
75 75
5: 74, 5: 74,
lard pig 5: (78)
pig family pig fish 3:
pig
mouse
pika
5:
74-75
78 38 62
8:
8: 60,
Alpine 8: 94
American
8: 67, 94, 96,
98-101 Asian 8:
97
collared 8: 94, 97,
common
98
(American)
96, 98-101
8: 94,
SET INDEX
North American
Eurasian 8: 98, 100
Himalayan 8: 94, 96 pika family 8: 94-97 Rocky Mountain (American)
Old World 12-15
8: 94, 96, 98-101 Russian steppe 8: 94, 97
tree
8-13
mammals
possum 10: 8, 8:
30
10: (10), 75-77 Arnh5mland 10: 80
brush-tipped ringtail 10: 74 common brushtail 10: 70, 74, 76, 78-81
common copper
27
P maculata 10: 27 P novaeguineae 10: 27 Platanista
green
P gangetica 3: 55, (61) P minor 3: 55, (61) platypus 1:14
honey
106-109 1
1
10-1
1
Pliohippus 5: 42
74
ringtail 10:
39,
5:
10: 74, 76,
ringtail 10: (77)
74 74 76
scaly-tailed 10:
P aureospinula 9: P truei 9: 12, 13 :
striped 10: 74,
1
Weyland
32 1
:
32
ringtail 10:
:
Potamochoerus P larvatus 5: 74 P porcus 5: 74 Potamogale velox
9:
pollution
61, 62, 64, 69,
Potamogalidae
1
71, 75; 2: (88); 3: 12, 41,
59, 61, 65, 67, 74, 79,
83
95
Pongo P abelii 4: 12, 14-19 P pygmaeus 4: 12, 14-19 Pontoporia blainvillei 3:55, (61)
pony Falabella 5: (43) feral
see mustang
42-43 wild see mustang porcupine 1: 50-51; 8: 10, 12-15 Welsh
5:
African 14,
8: 10, 12,
12-13,
16-19
American American
8:
10
tree 8: 9
bicolored tree 8: 27
13 brown hairy dwarf 8: 12 brush-tailed 8: 14, 16 Cape 8: 12, 75 Brazilian tree 8: 12,
crested (African) 8: 10, 12,
12-13, 14, 16-19 Europe 8: (19) hairy dwarf 8: 12 in
long-tailed 8: 12, 14, 16
Malayan 8: 12, 72, 14 Mexican tree (tree) 8: 12,
26-27
New World
7: 72;
12-15
North African (African) 8: 10, 12, 12-13, 14,
6-19
72-73
10: 48, 50, 51,
Potorous
P longipes 10: 48 P tridactyl us 10: 48, 72-73 Potos flavus 20 potto 4: 106, 106-107 golden 4: 106 Martin's false 4: 106 pouches 10 (10) prairie dog 1: 46-47; 7: 13, 15, 18, 36 black-tailed 7: 34, 56-59
56-59 Utah
7:
58
white-tailed 7: 58 Presbytis 4: 41
higher 4:
1
lower
1
4:
1
,
1
06-1 07 9: 65
Prionodon P linsang 1: 88 P pardicolor 1 88 :
Proboscidea 1: 10, 5: 14 Procapra picticaudata 6: 62 Procavia capensis 8: 103,
106-107 Procaviidae 8: 102
Procolobus 4: 41-42 P badius 4: 40 Procyon
P cancrivorus P gloverellani
1: 1:
20 26
rock see pika
pseudantechinus Woolley's 10: 27
Pseudantechinus P macdonnellensis 10: 27 P woolleyae 10: 27 Pseudocheiridae 10: (76) Pseudocheirus peregrinus
74
P archeri 10: 74 P cupreus 1 0: 74, 90-91 Pseudochirulus caroli 10:
74
P cinereus 10: 74 Pseudois nayaur 6: 62 Pseudopotto martini 4: 1 06 pseudoruminants 5: 70 Pseudoryx nghetinhensis 6: 62 Pteronura brasiliensis 1: 32,
vlei 7:
Pudu P mephistophiles
6:
1
1
42-43
2: 10, 13,
punare 8: 30 Pusa sibirica 3: 9 Pygathrix roxellana 4:
Q
quagga
5:
45,
40
48
see porcupine, North
American quills 8: 12, (14),
16-17, (21)
see also spines 10: 48, 52,
68-69
(25), 27 Guinea 10: 25, 27 northern 10: 27, 32-33
quoll 10:
New
raccoon Barbados
1:
26
common
1:
20, 21,
22-27 26
Island 1:
20 1:
Rangifer tarandus 6:
desert 10:
musky
1
R.
1:
Amami
43; 8: 61, 62 8: 62,
64
American swamp 8: 66 annamite 8: 64 brush 8: 64 bunyoro 8: 63, 64 bush see hare, snowshoe chocolate Dutch 8: 72-73 cottontail 1: 87 desert 8: 66
76-77
rattus 7:
giant R. affinisi 7:
0,
Raphicerus campestris 6: 62 rat 1: 15; 7: 12 African marsh 7:
65
Amazon bamboo
8:
36 36
.
7:
30
33
red ape see orangutan
Red
30 Asian climbing 7: 64 Atlantic bamboo 8: 30 Australasian water 7: 65
Lists of Threatened Species (IUCN) 1: 16
Redunca R. arundinum R.
Australian water 7: 9, 17,
65 8: 31
black (ship) 7: 11, 13,
14-15, 72, 75, 76-77
30 broad-headed spiny
bicolor 7:
R indica 7: 34, 62-63 recolonization 3: 14, 35,
8:
62
6:
fulvorufula 6: 62
R. redunca 6: 62 reedbuck bohor 6: 62 mountain 6: 62 southern 6: 62
reestablishment 3: 31, 93
30 14-15, 72-75 8:
.
77; 8: 10; 10:
72
rufous 10: 48, 57 see also potoroo Rattus R. norvegicus 7: 72-75
R.
7:
48
10: 48,
Ratufa
20-25
brown
74
see badger, honey rat-kangaroo 10: 51, 52 ratel
20-21
20, 20, 21, 21
armored 8: 30 armored spiny
rat;
ratufa see squirrel, Indian
refection 9: 29, 29 reforestation 4: 91
89 20-25 22-23
regeneration, of land 10:
1
brush-furred 7: 65 cane 7: 72; 8: 31
reindeer
Central American climbing
reintroduction 1: 46; 2: 41,
7:
reindeer
64
7:
64
72-75. 77; 8: 10; 10: 11 dassie 7: 72; 8: 31. 54-55 desert wood 7: 84-85 golden-backed tree 7: 67 greater cane 8: 30 greedy olalla 8: 30 (ship) 7:
7
7,
13,
14-15, 72, 75, 76-77 Indonesian key-footed 7: 64
Kenyan crested 7: 66 lesser cane 8: 30 Natal
multimammate
New World
7:
7:
65
64
Norway (brown) 7: 14-15, 72-75 77; 8: 10; 10: Old World 7: 14, 65 1
Owl's spiny 8: 30
6:
R.
hirsutus 7: 81
R megalotis 7: 80-81 R. paradoxus 7: 81 R. rodriguez 7: 81 R. spectabilis 7:
religious
81
ceremonies
5:
relocation 5:
34
repopulation reproduction
1:
61, 75
1:
12-14
25
see also embryonic diapause; implantation/fertilization;
breeding rhebok, gray 6: 62 Rheithrosciurus macrotis 7: 36 rhinoceros 5: 8, 8, 9, 11, 12 black 5: 28, 33, (34), 36-39 giraffe 5: 8
greater Indian (Indian) 5: 28,
painted tree 8: 30 Panama spiny 8: 30, 31
plague (ship) 7: 7 7, 13, 14-15, 72, 75, 76-77 plain brush-tailed 8:
plains viscacha 8: 7:
7: 29, 107 Reithrodon tomys
30-35
84-85
pouched
90-91,
45, (66), 91,
grass (white) 5: 28, 29,
pack (desert wood) 7:
moss
5: 34; 6:
Chilean rock 8: 30 chinchilla 7: 12 common (brown) 7: 14-15,
house
6: 10, 12,
(56), 69; 4: 87, 88,
.
R rabbit
103
rat-bite fever 7:
Central American vesper
P pudu 6: puku 6: 62
puma
79; 7: 14, 74; 9: 84, 97,
raccoon family
rat;
mole
rat;
viscacha
bristle-spined 8:
Pteropodidae 9: 86 Pteropus 9: 86 P giganteus 9: 88-91 Ptilocercus lowu 9: 59 pudu 6: 10, 12 northern 6: 10 southern 6: 10, 12
water
vole,
kangaroo
8:
1:
30
65
see also chinchilla
rabbit
bamboo
wood)
84-85
viscacha rat 8: 29, 30
62
ringtail 1:
64
water spe
crab-eating
13, 14-15, 72,
7,
tuft-tailed spiny tree 8:
volcano 8: 63, 64 see also cottontail
Cozumel
27
7
76-77
smooth-tailed giant 7: 65 South American climbing
7:
64-66 8:
7:
75,
hare,
rabies 1: 26, 87, 2: (67), 77,
110-111
ship
trade (desert
snowshoe see snowshoe
10: 28, 32, 37, 43, 71, (95) Proteles cristata 2: 102,
quokka
Priodontes maximus
64
14-15,
spiny 7: 72; 8: 31 spiny tree 8: 30
hemorrhagic disease 72 rabbit warrens 8: 70-71
quillpig
P comata 4: 40 P femoralis 4: 40 primates 1: 10, 4: 8-1
riverine 8: 62,
13,
7 7,
72, 75, 76-77 rufous tree 8: 30
7:
64-67
8:
64-67
29
rock 8:
8: 64, (93)
rabbit family
100; 3: 12, 19, 59, 74, 107, 5: 41, 60; 9: 85,
68-69
long-footed 10: 48 long-nosed (potoroo)
60-61 62, 64,
8:
66 marsh 8: 65 Mexican volcano 8: 64 Old World (European) 8: 60-61, 62, 64, 68-73
swamp
35, 39, 44, 49, 55, (97),
73
plains (black-tailed) 7: 34,
Asian brush-tailed 8: 12 bahia hairy dwarf 8: 12
13, 14,
9:
48, 50, 51,
:
7: 8;
African brush-tailed 8: 12
8:
potoroo 10: 72-73
24
roof (ship) 7:
8:
62, 69, 74; 2: 21, 28, 33,
P
Virginia
Gilbert's 10:
noise pollution 3: 88,
74
European 68-73
Sumatran 8: 63, 64 Sumatran short-eared
Pseudochirops
see also opossum,
Poelagus marjorita 8: 64 Poiana richardsom 1 88 polecat 1: 44-45 European 1: 32, 34, 35, 35 marbled 1 32, 34, 34 :
8
P diadema 4: 96 P tattersalli 4: 96 P verreauxi 4: 96
10:
western pygmy 10: 74
Poecilogale albinucha
1:
fat-tailed 10: 25,
mountain brushtail 10: 74 mountain pygmy 10: 74,
rat family 7:
pygmy
Prototheria 10: 104
rock ringtail 10:
(102)
Podogymnura
:
Propaleotherium Propithecus
75-76,
10: 8, 74,
76, 77, (77)
poaching 4: 24, 27,
63
6:
P crassicaudatus 8: 64 P randensis 8: 64 P rupestris 8: 64
ringtail 10: 74,
marsupial gliding 7: (37)
Plecotus auritus 9:
1
110-111 American 2: 26, pranking 6: 97
74, 76
ringtail 10:
102-103 Lead beater's 77, 88-89
duck-billed 10: 105,
6: 60, 62, (63),
protection, legal 1: 35, 47, 51,
Daintree River ringtail 10: 74 eastern pygmy 10: 74 feathertail 10: 74
Planigale
Poecilictis libyca 1
pronghorn
90-91
27
platyrrhines 4:
78-79
55,
porpoising 3: 69
13 Plagiodontia aedium plague 7: 14, 76-77 planigale 10: (24) common 10: 25,
(harbor) 3: 55,
domestic (European) 8: 60-61, 62, 64, 68-73
forest 8:
Prolagus 8: (96)
Pronolagus
78-79 harbor 3:
1,
10:
78
3:
30
8:
26-27
8-1
common
Papuan
19
8:
8: 12, 13, 14,
porpoise
P albicans 4: 72 P irrorata 4: 72 P monachus 4: 72 P pithecia 4: 72
P lotor 1: 20, 22-27 P pygmaeus 1: 26 Procyonidae 1: 20-21
ÂŤ
Proechimys semispinosus
Porcus piscus
87
Pithecia
9-1
8 );
7: 72, 8:
South African
8:
pinto 5: 59
placental
(
20-25
upper Amazon 8: 12 porcupinelike rodents
Sardinian 8: (96) pingers 3: 79 Pinnipedia 1: 70; 3: pipistrelle 9:
7:
8: 10, 12, 13, 14,
18
30
30
40-41 Indian 5: 28, 40-41 Javan 5: 28 northern white 5: 34 rhinoceros family 5:
28-29
southern white
5: 34,
35
125
SET INDEX
square-lipped (white) 5: 28,
30-35 Sumatran 5: 28, 29 white 5: 28, 29, 30-35 woolly 5: 28 29,
Rhinoceros R. sondaicus R.
28
5:
40-41
unicornis 5: 28,
106-107
Rhinopithecus roxellana see Pygathrix roxellana
Rhinopomatidae Rhynchocyon
9: 59,
59 R. petersi 9: 59 Rhynchogale melleri 1 98 Rhyncholestes raphanurus :
vulgaris 7: 34,
7:
46-47 42-45
1-12 mouselike 7: 16-19 porcupinelike 8: 8-1 squirrel-like 7: 16-19 Romerolagus diazi 8: 64 rorquals 3: 55, 106, 107 1
2, 6:
1
pseudoruminants Rupicapra R. pyrenaica
6:
70
5:
R. rupicapra 6: 62, Rupicaprini 6: 108
9-10,
10;
86
3 8-13 64 :
94
oedipus 4: 86 saiga 6: 62 Saiga tartarica 6: 62
.
4:
6:
1
08 6: 6:
sewellel 7: (29)
4: 72,
sheep
73
:
21 (32), rat,
naked saola 6: 62 28-31
1
:
70;
Scapanus orarius
9 58 :
9:
40
4:
96
Sirenia 1: 10; 3: 47, 5: (12)
patches 4: 39, 52, 58
Island
Soay
6:
shrew
1:
American water
9:
36-37
62,
87, (88), 91
pygmy
7:
black-striped 7: colonial
7:
S.
hippurus 7: 36
5.
lowii 7:
5.
tenuis 7:
ground
Supercohort 41
brown-throated three-toed (three-toed) 9: 65, giant ground 9: 64
72-73
banded
65
34
36
38
testing surgical techniques 4: 13
38-41
antelope
36
62-63 Mindanao
flying 7:
8: 64, (93)
5.
bachmam
8:
S.
dicei 8: (93)
8: (93)
64
S.
floridanus 8: 64,
S.
insonus 8: (93)
S.
palustris
hefnen
5. transitionalis 8:
90-93 8:
64
(93)
symbiosis 6: (73) 6: 62, 70-73 syndactyly 10: 75, (94)
Syncerus caffer
Tachyglossus aculeatus 10:
9:
110-111
100-103
Himalayan 6: 62 takh see horse, Mongolian
red 7: 41
takin 6: 62,
wild
flying 7: 34,
36
36
S.
virginiae 10:
9
audubonn
tahr,
South African ground
9:
aquaticus
S.
7: 34,
36 36 Prevost's 7: 36 pygmy 7: 36
murina 10:
Solenodontidae sonar 3: 83
S.
plantain 7:
gilberti 10:
Solenodon S. Cuban us 9: 9 S. paradoxus 9: 9
6: 62,
80-81
pale giant 7:
scaly-tailed 7: 12, 17, (19)
36 7: 10,
36-37 southern flying 60-61
54-55 three-striped ground 7: 36 tree 7: 17, 34, 35, 36 tufted ground 7: 36 squirrel-like rodents 7: 16-19 stances 5: 9-10
108
43
talapoin 4: 40, 47, Talpa T.
europaea
T.
street 9:
9: 40,
44-47
40
Talpidae 9: 9
tamandua 7: 34,
spotted giant flying 7: 36 squirrel family 7: 34-3 7 thirteen-lined ground 7: 34,
74
3:
grimmia
Tadarida brasiliensis
S.
9
Sylvicapra
34
northern flying 7: 61 northern striped palm
S.
9:
.
Indian giant 7: 34, 62-63 Javanese flying 7: 36 Low's 7: 36 Malabar (Indian giant) 7: 34,
slender 7:
Cuban
ground
8-9
7:
dolichura 10:
1
74
squirrel, thirteen-lined
(37); 10: (76)
crassicaudata 10: 27
8: (78)
5:
scrota 5: 74, 76-79 suslik, thirteen-lined see
Sylvilagus
S.
9: 8, 9, (10),
barbatus
S.
flying 7: 8, 13, 17, 34, 37,
red giant flying 7:
(102), 109; 9: 16
meerkat
swimming therapy
7: 34, 36,
98,
:
S.
36
7:
S.
1:
1
100-105 suricate see
36 36-37
aitkeni 10:
27
Suricata suricatta
Sus
S.
38 38 38-39
human
eastern fox 7: 34, 46-47 Eurasian red 7: 42-45 European red 7: 34
red-cheeked
Sminthopsis
40 40
4:
surgery animal parts for surgery 5: 79
35 9:
10
1:
grizzled 4:
60-61
flying) 7: 34,
36 36
sureli 4:
eastern flying (southern
horse-tailed 7: 1:
Hispaniola 9: 9
30-33
8: 12 8-9, 61
Cape ground
38-39
9: 28,
Sundasciuris
black flying 7: 34, black giant 7: 36
Harris'
)
solenodon
10; 9: 8, 9, (10), 11
6:
5: (12)
bottom" see whale,
blue
43-44, 47 gray-cheeked flying 7: 36 ground 7: 18, 19, 34, 36
32 striped 1: 32, 84-87 western hog-nosed 1: 32 western spotted 1: 32 sloth 9: 64-65, 65-66, 66, 66
snowshoes
African forest 9: 28 American short-tailed 9:
skunk 1: 34 Andes 1: 32 hooded 1: 32 pygmy spotted
snares 4: 24, 53
63
pelengensis 10: 74
Suncus etruscus
springhare 7: 12, 18, 20-21 spy-hopping 3: 71, 96, 107
gray
see also fur trade
snakes
barbary 6: 62 blue 6: 62 desert bighorn 6: 100 domestic 6: 62, 63 wild 6: 63
10: 27,
laniarius ( harrisii) 10: 27, 28-31
Scandentia
39
Orkney
Sarcophilus S. harrisii
11;
6: 60-63 American bighorn 6: 100-103
monk 4: 72 white-nosed 4: 72 Salanoia concolor 1 98 poisonous 9: 8, 11, sand puppy see mole
1: 15; 5: 11,
celebensis 10: 74
S.
.
three-toed 9: 65, 72-73 Smilodon fatalis 2: 1
68-69
72
32 16-17
American gray (gray) 7: 34, 36, 38-41 43-44, 47 American red 7: 42 Arctic ground 2: 65
three-toed 9: 65 southern two-toed 9: 65
24
1:
mammals
African
maned
46
S.
"sulfur
squirrel 7: 11, 12, 13, 15 African ground 1: 101
Simias concolor see Nasalis concolor
(
pygmaea
3:
27
styloglossus 5: (12)
32
spines 9: 13, 15, see also quills
squid
Hoffmann's two-toed
62 62
Setonix brachyurus 10: 48,
buffy 4: 72
saliva 9: 17,
40 64-67
hypoleucos 4: 40 S. obscurus see Trachypithecus obscurus sengi 9: 58
Setifer setosus 9:
Guianan
18-19
S.
servalines 2:
bald-faced 4: 72
40
Sigmoceros lichtensteinii see Alcelaphus lichtensteinii Sign Language, American ~ 4: 13, (16), 27 simakobu 4: 40
12
9,
serval 2: 10, 46-47
78-79
saki
4:
inquisitive 9:
shrew mouse 8: 102 branch 8: 102 variable 8: 102 siamang 4: 8, 36, 37 Siebenschlafer 7: 104
3: (59),
Strigocuscus
subungulates
springbok 96-97
32
on shore 66, 67, 96
strandings,
lower
springhaas see springhare
54-55
111. 3: 12, 15; 5:91; 6: 66; 10: 56, 91
geei see Trachypithecus geei
Japanese mainland
72
42
Gibb's (American) 9:
2: 33, 36, 37, 39, 47, 100,
entellus 4: 40,
serow
Saimiri
54-55
9:
the stomach 3: (27), 91
stridulation 9:
1
kraemeri 10: 74 maculatus 10: 82-83 papuensis 10: 74
spiny
1: (74);
31-32, (31)
stotting 6: 35, 97; 8:
1
Spilogale
5.
skin trade 1: (23), 69, 72, 74;
3: 9, 13, 18,
Serengeti Plains 6: 84, (85)
S.
28-29
9:
Tibetan water 9: 28 see also elephant shrew; otter shrew; tree shrew shrew mole 9: 40, 41
sitting
S.
94
9: 8,
California
102 Semnopithecus
5 imperator subgrisescens
bearded
32
7:
imperator 4: 86, 94-95 imperator imperator
boliviensis 4:
3:
fur) 3: 8,
vestitus 8:
S. gracilis 1:
diademed 4: 96 golden-crowned Verreaux's 4: 96
3: 9, 12,
5.
5.
pygmy white-toothed
Australian 3: 9, 11
S.
sc iu re us 4: 72,
piebald 9: 28
3: (27), 91
strepsirhines see primates,
insidiosus 8:
S.
hammers
in
3: 86, 87, 89, 91
S.
5.
sifaka
Selvinia betpakdalaensis
Saguinus
S,
9,
sea leopard see seal, leopard 1:
30-33
tailed 9: 28,
40-43 stomach stones
4:
Spilocuscus
northern (American) short-
20-23
American 1: 48, 50 sacred animals 4: 59, (66); 9: 91
S.
13
16-17
Steller's 3: 9, 12,
4:
.
1
Galapagos 3: 9 New Zealand 3:
sable,
28
shrew family
9
86-87
108
s
5. fusciollis 4:
least 9:
Asiatic 9:
3:
28
Indian house 9:
76-77 stoat 1:19, 32, 34, 36,
54-55
7: 34,
62
6: 67,
Stenella longirostris 3: 55,
as
Sphiggurus
8-9
gray 3: 42-43 harbor 3: 8, 9, 40-41 harp 3: 9, 12, 44-45 Hawaiian monk 3: 9, 30-31 leopard 3: 9, 11, 37, 38-39
sea lion
62
9:
American
44-45 southern elephant
8-9
28
greater white-toothed
36-37
3: 9, 11,
ringed 2:
spermaceti
steenbok
stones
Spermophilus tridecemlineatus
forest 9: ~
36-37
palustris 9:
Soricidae 9: 9, 58 Spalacopus cyanus 8: 30 Speothos venaticus 2: 50
9: 28,
29
fur 1: (11)
9, ,
34-35
pygmy
songs gibbons 4: 36, 39 whale songs 3: 99-100, 105 Sorex S. araneus 9: 34-35 S. minutus 9: 28 5.
28
southern fur (Cape 1 1
common
29
46, 47, 47, 53
saddleback (harp)
92-93
38-39
Eurasian water 9: 28,
(harbor) 3: 8, 9,
3:
29
10
9:
Eurasian 9:
3: 8, 9, 9, 10, 11,
phocid
Rousettus aegyptiacus
4:
1: (11), 9:
Eurasian
northern elephant 3: 12, 32-35 northern fur 3: 9, 12, 14-15
1
5:
38-41
scorpion 1: (102) Scutisorex somerem 9: 28 sea canary see beluga sea cow
monk
evolution 7: 12
126
niger 7: 34,
S.
eared
Rocky Mountain tick fever 7: 14 rodents 1: 10; 7: 8-1 cavylike 8: 8-1
S,
S.
40-41 crabeater 38
raccoon rockhare see hare, greater red rockhare
S.
carolinensis 7: 34,
common
10: 14
rumen 6: 8 ruminants
elephant Etruscan
circus tricks 3: (23)
Rhynchomeles prattorum 10: 27 rinderpest 6: 73, 77, 85 ringing of trees 7: 37 ringtail see under possum;
S.
5.
:
R. cirnei 9:
9:
29
28 Etruscan white-toothed
see also dugong sea grass 3: 46, 52 seal 1: 10; 3 8-13. 64; 7: 12 Antarctic fur 3: 9, 12 Baikal 3: 9, 10-11 Cape fur 3: 8, 9, 16-17 Caribbean monk 3: 9
62-63
extinct 7:
9: 28,
desert 9:
9: 2ÂŁ,
Steller's 3:
86
9:
R.'chrysopygus
expansion
armored
Sciurus
Rhinocerotidae 5: 28 Rhinolophidae 9: 87 Rhinolophus hipposideros 9:
Scelidotherium 9: 64 Sciuridae 7: 12 Sciurognathi (sciurognaths) 7: (8), 12, 16-19; 8: 8 Sciuromorpha 7: 8
9:
southern
9:
68 65
Tamandua tetradactyla tamaraw 6: 62
9:
65
tamarin
4: 8 bearded emperor
4:
94
black-chinned emperor 4:
94
black-faced
88 88
lion 4:
black lion 4: 86,
cotton-top 4: 86,
87
94-95 golden-headed lion 4: 88
emperor
4: 86,
SET INDEX
golden
thylacine
lion 4: 86, 87,
saddleback 4: 86, 95 tamarin family 4: 86-87 Tamias sibiricus 7:
T.
striatus 7: 34,
48-49
tapetum lucidum 2 10-12; 4: 85, 106, 107 :
tapir
12
5: 8, 11,
62 63
Baird's 5: 62,
Brazilian
T.
64-65 63
Malayan 5: 62, 63, mountain 5: 62, 63 South American (Brazilian) 5: 62, 63, 64-65 tapir family 5: 62-63
Tapirus
bairdu 5: 62
T.
indicus 5: 62
T.
pinchaque
T.
terrestris 5: 62,
107 106, 107
tarsier 4: 11, 106,
4:
western
107
4: 106, 107,
102-103 Tarsius T.
bancanus
4:
T pumilus 4: 1 T. spectrum 4:
06 06 06 1
1
Tasmanian devil
10: (24), 27,
T.
T.
(16),
derbianus gigas oryx 6: 62, 76
Taxidea taxus
1:
32,
76
6:
76-77
pecan
5:
88
I tajacu
5:
88, 90-91
T.
Tayassuidae
5:
tayra 1: 32; 4: teeth aardvark 9: 65, (66), bats 9: (85), (95)
selenodont 1: 32
6:
78-79
tenrec
8: 12; 9: 8, 9, 11
aquatic 9: 24, 25, 25 common 9: 24, 26-27 four-toed rice 9: 24 greater (common) 9: 24, 9: 24,
large-eared 9: 24,
25
hedgehog
rice 9:
9:
9: 10,
25
25
24-25 tailless (common) 9: 24, 26-27 tenrec family 9: 24-25 streaked 9: 24,
T.
T.
T.
ecaudatus
26-27 24
Tenrecidae 9: 9, 1 1, termite mounds, as vantage points 6: 88, 88-89 termites 2: 50, 76, 1 10-1 11, 10:
34
62 Theropithecus gelada
4: 40,
Thomomys 7:
talpoides
26-27
Thrichomys apereoides
Thryonomyidae Thryonomys
8:
7: ?2; 8:
T gregorianus 8: 30 I swinderianus 8: 30
30 31
variegata 4: 96,
8:
79 Trypanosoma cruzi tsessebe 6: 88
8:
plains 8:
1:
70; 5: (12);
88 V' tangalunga 1: 88 \/ zibetha 1: 88 Viverricula indica 1 88 Viverridae 1:18, 88, 98 vole 7: 1 3, 7, 65 bank 7: 74-75 field 7: 92-93 1:
9-10,
tularemia 8: 81, 93 3: 69, 77 tunnels, foraging 7:
tuna
100-101 see also burrows
1
5,
1
1,
34
36-39
north European water (water) 7: 9, 98-99
92-93 southern red-backed 7: 94-95 waterd: 54; 7: 9, 98-99 Vombatiformes 10: 75 Vombatus ursinus 10: 74, 98-101 vomeronasal organ 5: 62, 65 Vormela peregusna
1:
32
X 1:
10; 9:
64-66
Y
36 1:
32,
yak
6:
74-75
wild 6: 75 1:
34
32,
weasel family
webbed
1:
yapok see opossum, water
wetlands
whale
Yellowstone National Park
32-35
fingers 4: 71
Weil's disease 7: 14,
74
10,
54-59:
(1 1),
14;
5: (10),
1: (11); 3:
bowhead
20-23 zebra 2: 8-9, 6: (85), 95
66,
54, 55,
110-111 dwarf sperm 3: 55 gray 3: 55, 57, (57), 59, 92-97 3: 55, (57),
killer 3: 37, 39, 55,
62-65
.
83, 94,
96
12-13;
46-51
common
3: 55, 108,
102-105
5: 12,
3: 9,
Burchell's (plains) 5: 42,
98-101
humpback
76
Zalophus californianus
7: 12
(57), 58,
67
z
24
1:
1:
6: 66,
Yersinia pestis 7:
baleen 3: 54-55, 56, 58
blue
104, 105,
9: (46)
Xenarthra
32, 34, 35,
short-tailed see stoat
3:
5:
Wyulda squamicaudata 10: 74
34
short-tailed (field) 7:
7: 12, 8:
worms
(least)
North African banded Patagonian
V megaspila
87, 7: 34,
Conservation of Nature
long-tailed 1: 32,
30
1:
World Conservation Union see International Union for the
36-39 30
woodchuck
(106), 108, 111
96
5:
common
1: 19,
northern hairy-nosed 10: 74, (101) southern hairy-nosed 10: 74, 101, (101)
50-51 wool production
in
62,
32, 34, 35,
1: 19,
least
1
65
desert 5: 74 washing bears 1: (24) Washington Convention see Convention on
5: 75; 6:
18, 32, 35,
98-101
80-83
74
5:
European
:
27
75,
5:
African striped 1: 32,
28
2: 50, 53,
.
weasel
1
timber (gray)
wombat 10: (10), 77, 93 common 10: 74, 75,
defassa 6: 93 water reabsorption
5: 92,
Mexican 2: 54 red 2: 59 Tasmanian see thylacine
wapiti see elk warfarin 7: 75
waterbuck 92-93
04
53
54-57 59 wolverine 1: 56-57
Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
plains 8: 28, 30 viscacha rat 8: 29,
truffles 5:
50
variegata rubra 4: 104 variegata variegata 1
2: 50,
54-57.
marsupial see thylacine
International Trade
northern 8: 30
1
28-29, 31 forest 8: 30 strong 8: 30
62-63
86
2: 50, 53,
maned 60
10: 48, 50,
common
95
(53)
104-105
mountain
triok, Tate's 10: 74, (77)
tuco-tuco
9:
6:
walrus 3: 8, 9, 10, 11, 24-29 want see mole, European
warthog
Viverra
Trichys fasciculata 8:
9:
:
viscacha 7: 12, 8: 28
3:
Tubulidentata
6:
2 82
vicuna 5: 92, 93, 110-111
10: (80)
Tetracerus quadricornis
94-97 maritimus 2: 82, 84-89 melanoleuca 2: 98
U. arctos 2: 82, 92,
whiteness in mammals 8: (84) wildcat 2: 10, 13, 48-49 African 2: 72 European 2: 72
gray 59
yellow-footed rock 10: 48, 70-71 wallaroo 10: 60-61 10: 48,
3: 58, 89, 91,
93, 101, 105, 107, 108 whistlepig see woodchuck
Falkland Island 2: 50, 53,
wallowing 5: 38, 69, 71, 77, 76-77, 83
2: 82,
58 59
tuberculosis, bovine 1: 81;
6: 87, 9: 64, 66, 69;
40
90-93
1
I caninus 10: 74 I vulpecula 10: 74, 78-81
9: 24,
americanus
U.
56 Vicugna vicugna 10-1
Trichosurus
Tenrec 9: 9
59
vibrissae 8:
48-51 senegalensis 3: 47
manatus
9:
60-61 58, 58, 59
tribal
25
spiny 9:
50
49
whiptail 10: 48, 57
hill
4:
Tremarctos ornatus 2: 82 warfare 4: 30 Trichechus T. inunguis 3: 47
25 24
50
Vespertiliomdae 9: 87
9: 59,
9: 58,
2:
common
V.
58-59
pen-tailed 9:
pygmy
cinereoargenteus
Ursus
1/
10, 5: (10);
1:
Philippine 9:
9: 24,
25
24,
shrew
tree
rock 10: 51
10: 48,
whale meat 3: 59, 67 whale songs 3: 99-100, 105 whale watching 3: (57), 71, 95, 104
wildebeest 5: 12, 47; black 6: 62 blue 6: 62, 82-85 wolf 2: 9 Ethiopean 2: 50, 52
70-71
Urotrichus 9: 54
y
48 48-49
6: 10,
10: 48,
ringtailed rock (yellow-
swamp
Varecia
tree dwelling 2: 31
long-tailed 9: 24,
pygmy shrew
napu
common
26-27 greater hedgehog lesser
T.
red-necked
50 64-65
toolache 10: 53
2: (67)
Tragulus 6: 48 T. javanicus 6: 10,
Telicomys 7: 11-12
48
forest 10:
prettyfacc 10: 48, 57 Proserpine rock 10: 48,
European Urocyon
vaccination, against rabies
78-79
Papuan
66
55, 57, 58,
whaling industry
northern nail-tailed 10: 48
rufous hare 10: 48, 57 spectacled hare 10: 48
U.
50
48
footed rock) 10: 48,
Vampyrum spectrum
T strepsiceros 6: Tragulidae 6: 10
9
teledu
lesser forest 10:
3:
3: 55,
white see beluga
bridled nail-tailed 10: 48,
V
62
sperm 3: 86-89
48
0:
wallaby 10: 48-53 banded hare 10: 48, 57
8-13
U- thibetanus
scriptus 6:
1
urchin see hedgehog,
U.
T obscurus 4: 40 Tragelaphus T. buxtom 6: 62 T.
Wallabia bicolor
43
U.
Trachypithecus T geei 4: 40
88 89
southern right 108-109
w
even-toed 1: 10; 5: 10, 88 odd-toed 1: 70; 5: 10, 7 7,
Uropsilus investigator 9:
3: (57),
2: 50,
right 3: 55 short-finned pilot
64-67 74-75
Bennett's (red-necked) 10: 48, 64-65
Urogale everetti
1,
31-32, (31)
whale watching 71, 95, 104
Tayassu
zerda
U. littoralis 2:
topi 6: 62, (85), 88-89 torpor 7: 80; 9: 20-21, 29, 38, 82, 102; 10: 40, 85, 103 tourism 3: 51, 71, (94), 95, 5: 39, 9: 53, 101
76
1/
5:
pygmy right 3: 54, 55upygmy sperm 3: 55
50
87
titi
tool users 1: (74), 4: 10-1
Taurotragus T. derbianus 6: 62, 76-77 T. derbianus derbianus
70-73
2: 50,
vulpes 2: 50,
black-headed 4: 80 red 4: 72, 80-81 white (red) 4: 72, 80-81 Umfolozi park 5: 34 Uncia uncia 2: 34-35 ungulates (hoofed mammals)
Thomson's
ruppelli 2:
2:
V.
17,
bald (red) 4: 72, 80-81 black 4: 9, 72
dusky 4: 72 masked 4: 72 yellow-handed 4: 72 toddy 1: 95 toddy cat see civet, common palm tommie see gazelle,
lagopus
3: 55, 106-107 northern bottlenose 3: 55, 90-91 northern right 3: 109
minke
2:
V.
5: 14,
uakari
2: 23, (23)
V.
1/
chama
26, 66, 72, 74, 80-81, 86,
u
23
V-
cana
V.
3: 55,
66-67
velox 2: 50, 68-69 velox herbes 2: 69
Tympanoctomys barrerae 8: 30 typhus 7: 14, 74
14
long-finned pilot 50
2:
50 50 corsac 2: 50
V.
V.
see also ivory
tiger 2: 10, 20-25 Bali 2: 21 Bengal 2: 21, 27, 22, Caspian 2: 21 Chinese 2: 20, 21
28-31
6:
87
9:
106, 107
6:
tusks 3: 26, 84-85,
tiger-horses 5: 52
Tarsipes rostratus 10: 74,
9:
72-7 5
88
ticks 6: 18; 7:
white
107
spectral 4: 106,
minor
Tursiops truncatus 3: 55,
Siberian 2: 20, 21,
64-65
T.
east Caucasian 6: 106, 107
22-23 Sumatran 2: 21 Tasmanian see thylacine
62
5:
59,
west Caucasian
Indochinese 2: 21 Javan 2: 21
T.
pygmy
tiang 6:
glis 9:
48
Thyropteridae
,
62, 63,
5:
thetis 10:
60-61 59
T.
tur
10: 27, 36-37 Thylamis T. elegans 10: 14 T. pailidior 10: 14 Thylogale T. stigmatica 10: 48
48
T.
Vulpes V. bengalensis
Jupaia
2: 80; 10: 24, 26,
28, 36-37 Thylacinidae 10: 24, 26 Thylacinus cynocephalus
88-91 lion 4: 86
58,
(plains) 5: 42,
46-51 Grevy's 5: 42, (44), 52-53 mountain 5: 42 plains 5: 42, 46-51 zebra family 5: 42-45 zokor
7:
zorilla 1:
1
32, 34,
34
127
SMALL CARNIVORES
Picture Credits Abbreviations Frank Lane Picture Agency
FLPA
OSF
Oxford
Scientific Films
Ulrich/OSF;
= top; b = bottom;
c
=
center;
I
=
left;
r
=
T.
Leeson/Sunset/FLPA; 44-45 Mike
Birkhead/OSF; 46-47 Alan
Tom t
42-43
& Sandy
Carey/OSF; 48-49
50-51 Alan & Sandy Carey/OSF;
Ulrich/OSF;
52-53 Marianne Wilding/Survival Anglia/OSF; 54 Dean
right
Conger/Corbis; 55 Richard Packwood/OSF; 56-57, 57 Daniel
Jacket tl
caracal, Pete Oxford/naturepl.com; tr
gorilla,
bl
Cox/OSF; 58-59
Gordon/OSF; 61
group of
dolphins, Robert Harding Picture Library;
J.
lowland
Niall
Benvie/OSF; 60-61 Nick
Benvie/OSF; 62-63 Bridget
Niall
Wheeler/Survival Anglia/OSF;
64-65 Joe
McDonald/Animals Animals/OSF; 66 Alan & Sandy
Martin Rugner/Naturphotographie; br
Carey/OSF; 66-67 Daniel
Rothchild's giraffe, Gerard Lacz/FLPA
J.
Cox/OSF; 68-69 Nick
Gordon/OSF; 70-71 Michael Leach/OSF; 72-73 Stan 9 Stephen
J.
Krasemann/Bruce Coleman Collection;
Osolinski/OSF; 73
10-11 Peter Davey/FLPA; 12-13 K.G.
Preston-Mafham/Premaphotos
Howard
Hall/OSF;
74
Jeff
Foott/Okapia/OSF; 75 Claude Steelman/Survival
15
Wildlife;
Anglia/OSF; 76-77 Bob Bennett/OSF; 78-79 Neil
Rafi
Ben-Shahar/OSF; 18-19 Steve Turner/OSF; 21 Tom
Latham/OSF; 79 David Fox/OSF; 80 Richard
Vezo/naturepl.com; 22-23 Daniel
Packwood/OSF; 80-81 Robin Redfern/OSF; 82-83
Bettmann/Corbis; 24, 24-25
Tom
J.
Cox/OSF; 23
Ulrich/OSF; 26t Ralph
Anthony Bannister/ABPL/OSF; 84-85 Richard Day/OSF;
Reinhold/Animals Animals/OSF; 26b Richard Day/OSF;
86 TC Nature/OSF; 86-87
Zig Leszczynski/Animals
27 Wendy Shattil/Bob Rozinski/OSF; 28-29 Konrad
Animals/OSF; 87 Daniel
Cox/OSF; 89
Wothe/OSF; 30-31 Stan Osolinski/OSF; 33 Mark
Shah/naturepl.com; 92-93 Gerard Lacz/FLPA; 94-95
Hamblin/OSF; 35 Mark Deeble & Victoria Stone/OSF;
Werner Pfunder/OSF; 96-97, 97 Doug Allan/OSF;
36-37 Jorge
100-101, 102, 102-103, 103, 104-105 David
Sierra/OSF;
38 Press-Tige Pictures/OSF;
Anup
Macdonald/OSF; 106-107 Adrian Bailey/OSF; 108-109
38-39 David Thompson/OSF; 40-41 Mark Hamblin/OSF; 41 Robin Redfern/OSF; 42
J.
Tom
Belinda Wright/OSF;
110-111 Steve Turner/OSF
Artists Denys Ovenden,
While every effort has been
made
Priscilla
Barrett with Michael Long,
to trace the copyright holders rectify
128
of
illustrations
any omissions or
Graham
Allen,
reproduced
inaccuracies.
in this
Malcolm McGregor
book, the publishers
will
be pleased
to
3
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5
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SMALL CARNIVORES Raccoons, Weasels, Otters, Skunks
LARGE CARNIVORES Big Cats, Dogs, Bears,
SEA Seals,
Hyenas
...
MAMMALS
Sea Lions, Whales, Dolphins, Manatees
PRIMATES Apes, Monkeys, Marmosets, Lemurs
LARGE HERBIVORES Elephants, Rhinos, Horses, Pies
RUMINANT (HORNED) HERBIVORES Deer, Cattle, Antelope, Goats,
RODENTS Squirrels, Rats,
RODENTS
2
Sheep
1
Mice
AND LAGOMORPHS
Porcupines, Cavies, Rabbits
...
INSECTIVORES AND BATS Hedgehogs, Moles, Anteaters, Bats
...
MARSUPIALS Kangaroos, Possums, Koala
I
90 Sherman Rjrnpike Danbury, CT 06816
SET ISBN 0 7172 5742 8
VOLUME
ISBN
0 7172 574.3 6