Mustelidae family: representatives and their description (photo)

The predatory family of mustelids includes a large number of phylogenetically related species, which differ quite significantly in body structure and lifestyle.

The predominant number of representatives are small and very small, there are, of course, medium ones, but there are not many of them. The body length of such animals ranges from fifteen to 120 (sometimes up to 150) cm. The weight of representatives varies from 100 grams to 40 kilograms. As a rule, their body is very elongated and quite flexible. A predator of the mustelid family with a short and massive body is a rather rare phenomenon.

Representatives of the family are distinguished by developed hair. In many species that live in the north in winter, it is very fluffy and thick. In the south, some representatives have a body covered with coarse, almost bristly hair. The colors can be different: spotted, plain, striped. It happens that there is an animal of the mustelid family whose fur is lighter underneath than on top. Depending on the season, representatives may change in thickness and fluffiness of fur. Some species change their color to snow-white in winter.

As a rule, all mustelids lead a terrestrial existence, climb trees well, some can dig quite deep burrows, and also get food from underground.

Mustelids are widespread. They are found on all continents except Australia.

The mustelidae family is one of the richest in the number of genera and species in the order of predators. It contains approximately 70 species, which are grouped into 25 genera and five subfamilies. The first of them is called martens. It includes approximately 33 species and ten genera.

Ermine

The ermine is similar in appearance to the weasel, with an average body length of 30 cm.

This animal is predatory and feeds on rodents. Sometimes it destroys nests. In times of hunger, it can eat frogs; if they are not available, then it eats garbage and juniper berries. It reproduces once a year, the duration of pregnancy is approximately 9.5 months. There is an average of five babies in a litter.

This representative is active at different times of the day.

How do animals reproduce?

In March, representatives of this species begin the mating season. Males scream loudly, making a variety of sounds, and fight over females. Since male weasels are polygamous, they can mate with several individuals of the opposite sex.

After the female becomes pregnant, she is left alone. The male leaves her and lives independently. The period of gestation of cubs lasts up to 35 days. At this time, the female prepares a cozy home for her future babies, which is lined with grass and moss. After 35 days, weasels give birth to tiny blind puppies, weighing about 2 grams .

There can be up to 8 puppies in a litter. While the cubs are blind, and this period lasts three weeks, they drink their mother's milk, but after this period the weasel brings them a small mouse, thereby accustoming them to other food. Then the kids begin to learn to play. They fight, fighting for their first “prey.” 4 months after birth, little weasels leave their mother. When they are about to leave the nest, they follow their mother everywhere. Together with her, they explore the area and go further and further. The reflex of following the mother becomes weaker, and then the matured children begin to live independently.

Relationship with a person

Previously, weasels were hunted for their skins.
Also, in some nations there was a superstition, because of which people were friendly towards affection, and because of their kindness, she seemed to bring happiness to the house. Others believed that it did not bring anything good and avoided the animal. Now the prejudices have evaporated, as has the hunting significance of weasels. She ceased to be an object of extraction of valuable fur. But in large quantities, the weasel exterminates mice, which benefits people . But once she gets into a human home, she will not leave without prey, and will definitely steal something or climb into the chicken coop. Although, due to the extermination of rodents, people are ready to forgive her a lot. Also, keeping this mammal at home has now become popular.

Weasel in your home

With its cute face, the animal wins the hearts of mustelid lovers. These people are eager to have such a pet. does not pose a danger to humans .
If you want to get yourself such a cute predator and become his friend, then you should know that the easiest way to tame a baby. However, they will require care. Difficulties arise with feeding a baby weasel, which is why an adult is usually caught and tamed gradually. Get ready for the fact that the weasel will not accept your idea with enthusiasm, and you will be bitten more than once. Care and attention will do their job: if you are ready to devote time to your future friend, then the weasel can become a faithful pet.

It is difficult to answer the question about purchasing an animal. these animals in a regular pet store , so it’s very difficult to find weasels for sale. Most likely, you will have to catch it yourself or find a special person for this.

What does a weasel look like?

Ferrets

Ferrets are very close to the norm. There are three known types of them: steppe, blackfoot and black. The first is the largest, body length up to 56 cm, weight up to two kg. Slightly smaller black ferrets. Their body length is 48 cm and their weight is no more than 1.5 kg.

The main diet of all three species is rodents. The black ferret, as a rule, prefers mice and voles, while the steppe ferret prefers hamsters and gophers. Prairie dogs are what the Blackfeet prefer.

These representatives of the family (especially the steppe ones) live near lakes and rivers.

Martens

Now we will talk about stone and pine martens. These animals are much larger than ferrets. The body length of the stone marten is on average 45 cm, and its weight is no more than 2.5 kg. Lesnaya is a little smaller. Its body length is on average 44 cm, and its weight ranges from 750 to 1500 grams. The body of martens is strong, slender, the ears are large and erect. The differences between these species are in the structure of the teeth and skull. A more southern species is the stone marten.

As the name implies, the forest one lives in forests littered with dark coniferous and mixed ones. Sometimes the stone one lives in such areas, but more often it can be seen on treeless rocky slopes. As a rule, they are active at night, although they can also be found during the day.

The pine marten eats rodents and sometimes hares. The stone one eats the same way, but in its diet the lion's share is occupied by plant foods. The rut occurs between June and August. An average of five babies are born per litter

Mustelidae family

There are many species of animals in the mustelidae family. Sometimes they are so different from each other that it is difficult to believe in their relationship. Mustelids include the tiny graceful ermine and the clumsy large wolverine, the steppe-dwelling black-footed ferret and the seafaring sea otter, the steeplejack marten and the underground city builder badger. An elongated flexible body and short legs are the main similarities of all mustelids.

Pine marten

The central figure of the family is the European pine marten. This is the most dexterous poison dart frog in the family. The marten hunts birds and squirrels in the treetops, and “rides,” that is, moves by jumping from tree to tree. The American marten is just as agile. Living in the cold northern forests, martens are dressed in thick and valuable fur.

The most valuable fur-bearing animal is our taiga resident, the sable. The sable, although it climbs trees well, stays mainly on the ground and hunts mice and voles, supplementing its meat menu with pine nuts. To the south of these mustelids, the stone marten lives in Eurasia. She has adapted to close proximity to humans and, in times of famine, visits chicken coops to steal chickens. It also helps people by destroying rodent pests in the fields.

In North America, a large fishing marten (pecan) lives in forests, among rocks and along river banks. Despite its name, this marten does not fish very often, preferring to hunt a variety of rodents, including the large American tree porcupine. Martens are such skilled hunters that they can easily cope with prey larger than themselves. Thus, the Asian marten Kharza, found from the cold forests of our Primorye to the jungles of Southeast Asia, is capable of defeating a young wild boar, a fawn, and a musk deer - a small deer.

Mink

European and American minks, similar to martens, are ground hunters. A long flexible body spreads along the ground, hiding the predator in snowdrifts or grass. Prey for minks and smaller inhabitants of the Asian woodland forests - mice, voles, chipmunks, muskrats, squirrels, birds, frogs. Minks and Siberians are excellent fishermen: having spotted fish from the shore, they dive under the water for it. In winter, fish is their main food.

Weasel and ermine

The weasel family also includes the smallest predators, the weasel and the stoat. The lizards themselves are slightly larger, they can easily cope with mice and even rabbits. There is no escape for the victims from the nimble pursuers who seep even into their narrow holes. By destroying rodents, stoats and weasels protect the harvest. Occupying the same ecological niche of small terrestrial predators, weasels and stoats do not live side by side. Weasels live slightly south of ermines, although they are no worse adapted to snow and frost: both species have warm, valuable fur, reddish in summer, white in winter.

Tyra and grison

Large martens, the tayra and the grison, live in the tropics of North and South America. Tyra runs fast, deftly climbs trees and is an excellent swimmer. Its prey is much larger than the prey of arboreal raccoons living in the same places. Taira hunts large agouti rodents, squirrels and possums (arboreal marsupials), and can even defeat a small mazama deer. The grison is smaller than the tayra - it has a very long and flexible body on short legs. It hunts rodents on the ground and lives in burrows.

Ferret

Ferrets are close to martens and minks. A ferret and a mink can even start a family and give birth to healthy babies; a cross between a ferret and a mink is called honoriki. Forest ferrets are found in the European part of our country: on forest edges, near rivers and even in city parks. They hide in piles of dead wood, under roots, in other people's empty holes, they settle in barns, attics, woodpiles, and stacks.

Previously, when cats were a curiosity in Rus', peasants kept ferrets at home so that they would destroy mice and rats. In the southern steppes, the forest polecat is adjacent to a larger brother - the steppe polecat. This is a valuable fur-bearing animal, but people, given its contribution to the destruction of rodents, have limited their hunting. Black-footed ferrets used to live in the American steppes and prairies. They hunted prairie dogs, rodents similar to gophers. But farmers, exterminating prairie dogs, also exterminated ferrets. Now they are bred in captivity.

Man is unfair to the ferret: this animal does more good than harm, because its main prey is voles and mice. Harmful rodents not only eat grain in the fields, but also make supplies for the winter, stuffing up to half a kilogram of seeds into underground storerooms. One ferret hunting in a field destroys 10-12 rodents per day, thus saving about a ton of grain over the summer.

Skunk

Skunks live in American forests, steppes and deserts. They look like ferrets, but are related to badgers. During the day, skunks sleep in holes and caves, and at night they catch insects, mice, frogs, and other small animals, look for fruits and seeds, and feast on garbage in villages. When in danger, the skunk bristles its fur, turns its back to the offender and raises its tail. If the threat has no effect, the skunk stands on its front legs, raising its butt, and throws a stream of stinking liquid at the enemy. Bright black and white fur warns predators from afar: “Don’t touch me, I’m stinky!” Striped and spotted skunks live in North America, and Patagonian skunks live in South America. Skunks living in cold regions go into hibernation for the winter, gathering several animals in one hole.

The bandage, African weasel and zorilla are taxonomically closer to ferrets, but similar to skunks. The contrasting coloring alerts predators to their ability to defend themselves by shooting out a foul-smelling liquid. These hunters of jerboas, ground squirrels, hamsters and other small animals live in the steppes and deserts: the bandage - in the south of Eurasia, the African weasel and zorilla - in Africa.

Ferrets and skunks are small animals. In order not to become prey to larger predators, they chose an original method of defense: to discourage their enemies' appetite with stench. Ferrets simply secrete a disgusting-smelling liquid from glands under their tail, and skunks can shoot a stream of this stinking and caustic liquid into the predator’s face at a distance of up to 3 m. A smeared and blinded enemy will forever remember the meeting with the stinky and will henceforth avoid it. Once the stink glands are removed, the skunk can be kept as a pet.

Badger

A massive body, a short thick neck, powerful paws with huge claws, coarse fur and a short tail - this is an ordinary badger, not much like graceful martens. An omnivorous animal living on earth does not need to be agile; it likes any food: fruits and roots, insects and bird eggs, worms, larvae, a gaping mouse, a frog, a lizard, carrion (dead animals). The badger is strong and does not have many enemies. Only terrible hunger pushes a bear or a wolf to fight a badger - after all, a blow from a badger’s clawed paw will leave deep wounds. But the badger needs its claws, first of all, for digging holes. Badger holes are underground labyrinths with many cozy “rooms”: bedrooms, children’s rooms, storage rooms, there are even toilets in the far reaches. The badger spends most of its life in the hole and hibernates there.

Common badgers live in Europe, from the taiga to the southern mountains and steppes, as well as in Siberian and Far Eastern forests, Japan, China, and Korea. They live in families: parents and several generations of their descendants. Their closest relative is the American badger, which inhabits the prairies of North America. It hunts for rabbits and prairie dogs by digging them out of holes. In the art of digging, American badgers are not inferior to their European “brothers”. But “Americans” are bad family men: they live alone, and the female raises her offspring alone.

The jungles of Southeast Asia are home to the teledu badger and the Palawan badger. With their long snouts, they rummage through the forest floor, digging out small living creatures, looking for roots and fallen fruits. The teledu is a large animal and can fend for itself, while the small Palawan badger defends itself like a skunk, throwing out a stinking stream in the face of the enemy. The neighbor of these badgers, the smallest of all, is the Burmese badger. Graceful and long-tailed, it resembles a ferret, for which it is also called the ferret badger. For his ability to deftly climb trees, hiding in their crowns, he was given a third name - tree badger.

Badger honey badger

In the savannas of Africa, in the steppes of Central and South Asia, lives the honey badger, a lover of honey from wild bees. The honey guide bird finds bees' nests for him. She flies to the honey badger and leads him to the hive. A badger uses its claws to destroy the bees’ home, eats honey and larvae, and the honey guide feasts on beeswax in a torn up hive. This is how the beast and the bird have been cooperating for centuries. The honey badger also feeds on lizards, turtles, beetles, and digs out small rodents from burrows. But he himself doesn’t know how to build good real “badger” holes.

Wolverine

Wolverine is a unique animal; there is no one in the mustelidae family who looks like it. Therefore, the wolverine was separated into a separate genus with a single species. Large and powerful, strong and resilient, the wolverine is also agile. These qualities help the animal survive in the harsh taiga and hunt even in freezing cold.

A vagabond and a loner, the wolverine roams its vast swathe of taiga in search of food. Its main food is carrion; it also eats the remains of the meals of wolves, bears and other large predators. Not finding easy money, the wolverine goes hunting. She does not waste energy catching mice and hares; her prey is large ungulates. It is difficult for her to cope with an adult healthy elk or red deer; she attacks young or weak animals. Wolverine jumps onto prey from a tree, grabs it and, gnawing its neck, kills a victim tens of times larger than itself.

Otter

In Eurasia and northern Africa, common otters live along the banks of forest rivers with clean water. These are large, strong, graceful animals, adapted for underwater hunting. The streamlined shape of the long flexible body resembles a torpedo, the muscular tail serves as an underwater rudder, the membranes between the toes turn short paws into flippers, the eyes see under water, and the warm fur does not get wet. Under water, the otter hunts fish, frogs, crayfish, and near the water it catches water voles, muskrats, and water birds. In a steep river bank, the otter makes a hole with an entrance under water, from which a vertical corridor leads upward to a dry nesting chamber, where the otter rests and raises its offspring. The underwater passage serves for safety - the land predator will not interfere, and the otters will not crawl out of the nest until they learn to swim.

Otters live solitary lives, protecting their large stretch of river. In winter, if the native river is frozen, the otter leaves to look for new feeding places. On land, it moves by comically rearranging its short legs, but thanks to its endurance, it can cover up to 20 km in the snow in a day. Spring is wedding season for otters. The offspring appear only after a year, and the female raises the babies alone. Otter cubs, from 2 to 4 babies, stay close to their mother for a long time, gradually mastering the techniques of underwater hunting.

The common otter and the similar Canadian otter have webbed toes that end in long, sharp claws that the otters use to grab slippery fish, their main prey. Clawless otters live in Asia and Africa. They feed on crabs and shellfish. You can’t grab a clam shell or a crab shell with your claws, and to feel this living creature in the river mud, you need sensitive fingers, without long claws that interfere with this delicate work.

The largest - the giant otter - lives in the tropical forests of South America, on the banks of the Amazon. These otters live in large families: a female, a male and children of different ages. They hunt during the day and, talking to each other, fill the area with loud cries.

Sea otter

Sea otters - sea otters - live on the sea coasts of Kamchatka and the Kuril Islands, as well as along the coast of North America in the North Pacific Ocean. With their short, whiskered muzzles, these mustelids resemble beaver rodents, which is why they are called sea beavers. Sea otters rarely go onto land and sleep on the water, lying on their backs. To prevent them from being carried away by the current, they wrap themselves in long seaweed, wrapping themselves comfortably in it, like in a blanket, and the seaweed serves them as an anchor. The habits of sea otters are reminiscent of humans: in their sleep, they fold their paws under their cheeks, like sleeping children, and languidly cover their eyes with their paws. In the water, sea otters are agile, but on the shore, where they are driven by a strong storm, they become funny and clumsy. Sea otters give birth to only one baby each, and this also happens in the sea. The baby spends his childhood swimming on his mother's chest. If the mother accidentally dies, the little sea otter will not be lost - some caring sea otter will take care of the orphan.

Sea otters are one of the few animals that actively use tools. Having obtained their usual food from the bottom - spiny sea urchins or mollusks, sea otters lie down on the water with their belly up and use stones to break the spiny shell of a urchin or a shell of a mollusk. They place the prey on a flat stone-anvil on the chest, and use another stone, like a hammer, to crush the shell of the prey. Sea otters store convenient pebbles under their arms so that the tool is always “at hand.”

See further: Cats

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