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The stoat (Mustela erminea) is a small mammal of the family Mustelidae. It is also known as the short-tailed weasel, the wild otter, and the ermine.
Natural historyThe stoat can be found almost throughout the northern temperate, subarctic and arctic regions, that is in Europe, Asia, Canada and the United States (though it is absent from the south eastern US). It was introduced into New Zealand in an unsuccessful attempt to control the rabbit population and is considered a pest because it eats the eggs and young of native birds. Stoats are largely nocturnal or crepuscular but will sometimes come out during the day. Physical Description
Image:Elizabeth1England.jpg Her Royal Highness Queen Elizabeth I, ‘the Virgin Queen’ painted with an ermine. In this painting the stoat has, unnaturally, black spots over its entire body. DietThe stoat is an opportunistic carnivore. It eats rabbits; rodents such as the mouse, vole and rat; other small mammals; birds and their eggs and young; and sometimes fish, reptiles, amphibians, and invertebrates. It is a very skillful tree climber and can descend a trunk headfirst, like a squirrel. The stoat is capable of killing animals much larger than itself. When it is able to obtain more meat than it can eat it will engage in "surplus killing" and often stores the extra food for later. Like other mustelids it typically dispatches its prey by biting into the base of the skull to get at the centers of the brain responsible for such important biological functions as breathing. Sometimes it will also make preliminary bites to other areas of the body. In most areas in which stoats and least weasels cooxist, the Least weasel generally takes smaller prey and the stoat slightly larger prey. The larger male stoats generally take larger prey than females. ReproductionImage:Mustela.erminea.young.jpg Young Mustela erminea The stoat is territorial and relatively intolerant of others in its range, especially others of the same sex. Within its range, it typically uses several dens, often taken from prey species. It usually travels alone, except when it is mating or is a mother with older offspring. It breeds once a year, producing several young per litter, and its mating system is promiscuous. Copulation occurs during the mating season with multiple partners and is often forced by the male, who does not help raise the offspring. Sometimes it occurs when the female is so young she has not even left the den. In spite of being such a small animal, the stoat's gestation is among the longest reported for mammals (11 months) because of the adaptation of delayed implantation, or embryonic diapause, in which a fertilized egg is not implanted in the uterus until months later. The animal's "real" gestation is much shorter. This is presumably an adaptation to the highly seasonal environment in which the stoat lives. Senses and BehaviourCommunication (and also location of prey) occurs largely by scent, since the stoat as typical of mammals has a sensitive olfactory system. As a result much of this communication is missed by human observers. However, stoats are believed to identify females in estrus by scent, and also the sex, health and age of prey. Some kinds of rodents such as voles have counter-adapted by being able to shut down reproduction (which makes females slower and easier to catch) if they smell the odor of mustelids. The stoat's visual resolution is lower than that of humans and color vision is poor, although night vision is superior. Like most other non-primate mammals they have dichromatic colour vision (they can distinguish long from short wavelengths of light, but cannot make distinctions of hue within those bands). Tactile information is conferred by the vibrissae, or whiskers. When alarmed, a stoat can release a powerful musky smell from glands near its anus. Subspecies
Stoats and humans
GalleryReferences
External LinksWikispecies has information related to:
da:Lækat de:Hermelin eo:Ermeno es:Mustela erminea fi:Kärppä fr:Hermine fy:Harmeling gd:Neas mhòr io:Ermino it:Mustela erminea ja:オコジョ lt:Šermuonėlis nl:Hermelijn (dier) nn:Røyskatt no:Røyskatt pl:Gronostaj pt:Arminho ru:Горностай simple:Stoat sv:Hermelin tr:Kakım
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