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European badger

The European badger (Meles meles), also known as the Eurasian badger, is a badger species in the family Mustelidae native to Europe and West Asia and parts of Central Asia. It is classified as least concern on the IUCN Red List, as it has a wide range and a large, stable population size which is thought to be increasing in some regions. Several subspecies are recognized, with the nominate subspecies (M. m. meles) predominating in most of Europe.[1] In Europe, where no other badger species commonly occurs, it is generally just called the "badger".

European badger
Temporal range: 0.7–0 Ma
Middle Pleistocene – Recent
In Ähtäri Zoo, Finland
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Mustelidae
Genus: Meles
Species:
M. meles
Binomial name
Meles meles
European badger range (also includes Caucasian badger range)
Synonyms

Ursus meles Linnaeus, 1758

The European badger is a powerfully built, black, white, brown, and grey animal with a small head, a stocky body, small black eyes, and a short tail. Its weight varies, being 7–13 kg (15–29 lb) in spring, but building up to 15–17 kg (33–37 lb) in autumn before the winter sleep period. It is nocturnal and is a social, burrowing animal that sleeps during the day in one of several setts in its territorial range. These burrows have multiple chambers and entrances, and are extensive systems of underground passages of 35–81 m (115–266 ft) length. They house several badger families that use these setts for decades. Badgers are fussy over the cleanliness of their burrow, carrying in fresh bedding and removing soiled material, and they defecate in latrines strategically situated outside their setts or en route to other setts.[2]

Although classified as a carnivore, the European badger is an omnivore, feeding on a wide variety of plant and animal foods, including earthworms, large insects, small mammals, carrion, cereals, and tubers. Litters of up to five cubs are produced in spring. The young are weaned a few months later, but usually remain within the family group. The European badger has been known to share its burrow with other species, such as rabbits, red foxes, and raccoon dogs, but it can be ferocious when provoked, a trait which has been exploited in the now-illegal blood sport of badger-baiting. Badgers can be carriers of bovine tuberculosis, which also affects cattle. In England, badger populations are culled to try to reduce the incidence of bovine tuberculosis in cattle,[3] although the efficacy of this practice is strongly disputed,[4] and badger culls are widely considered cruel and inhumane.[5][6]

Nomenclature edit

The source of the word "badger" is uncertain. The Oxford English Dictionary states it probably derives from "badge" + -ard, a reference to the white mark on its forehead that resembles a badge, and may date to the early 16th century.[7] The French word bêcheur ('digger') has also been suggested as a source.[8] A male badger is a boar, a female is a sow, and a young badger is a cub. A badger's home is called a sett.[9] Badger colonies are often called clans.

The far older name "brock" (Old English: brocc), (Scots: brock) is a Celtic loanword (cf. Gaelic broc and Welsh broch, from Proto-Celtic *brokko) meaning 'grey'.[7] The Proto-Germanic term was *þahsu- (cf. German Dachs, Dutch das, Norwegian svin-toks; Early Modern English dasse), probably from the PIE root *tek'- 'to construct', which suggests that the badger was named after its digging of setts (tunnels); the Germanic term *þahsu- became taxus or taxō, -ōnis in Latin glosses, replacing mēlēs ('marten' or 'badger'),[10] and from these words the common Romance terms for the animal evolved (Italian tasso, French tesson/taisson/tasson—now blaireau is more common—, Catalan toixó, Spanish tejón, Portuguese texugo) except Asturian melandru.[11]

Until the mid-18th century, European badgers were variously known in English as brock, pate, grey, and bawson. The name "bawson" is derived from "bawsened", which refers to something striped with white. "Pate" is a local name that was once popular in northern England. The name "badget" was once common, but only used in Norfolk, while "earth dog" was used in southern Ireland.[12] The badger is commonly referred to in Welsh as a mochyn daear ('earth pig'). [13]

Taxonomy edit

Ursus meles was the scientific name used by Carl Linnaeus in 1758, who described the badger in his work Systema Naturae.[14]

Evolution edit

The species likely evolved from the Chinese Meles thorali of the early Pleistocene. The modern species originated during the early Middle Pleistocene, with fossil sites occurring in Episcopia, Grombasek, Süssenborn, Hundsheim, Erpfingen, Koněprusy, Mosbach 2, and Stránská Skála. A comparison between fossil and living specimens shows a marked progressive adaptation to omnivory, namely in the increase in the molars' surface areas and the modification of the carnassials. Occasionally, badger bones are discovered in earlier strata, due to the burrowing habits of the species.[15][16]

Subspecies edit

In the 19th and 20th centuries, several badger type specimens were described and proposed as subspecies. As of 2005, eight subspecies were recognized as valid taxa, but four (canescens, arcalus, rhodius, severzovi) are now considered to belong to a distinct species, the Caucasian badger (M. canescens).[17][18]

Subspecies Trinomial authority and synonyms Description Range
Common badger (M. m. meles)

 

Linnaeus, 1758

taxus (Boddaert, 1785)
alba (Gmelin, 1788)
maculata (Gmelin, 1788)
vulgaris (Tiedemann, 1808)
europaeus (Desmarest, 1816)
caninus (Billberg, 1827)
communis (Billberg, 1827)
typicus (Barrett-Hamilton, 1899)
britannicus (Satunin, 1905)
caucasicus (Ognev, 1926)
tauricus (Ognev, 1926)
danicus (Degerbøl, 1933)

A large subspecies with a strongly developed sagittal crest, it has a soft pelage and relatively dense underfur. The back has a relatively pure silvery-grey tone, while the main tone of the head is pure white. The dark stripes are wide and black, while the white fields fully extend along the upper and lateral parts of the neck. It can weigh up to 20–24 kg in autumn, with some specimens attaining even larger sizes.[19] Continental Europe, except for the Iberian Peninsula. Its eastern range encompasses the European area of the former Soviet Union eastward to the Volga, Crimea, Ciscaucasia, and the northern Caucasus
Iberian badger (M. m. marianensis) Graells, 1897[20]

mediterraneus (Barrett-Hamilton, 1899)

Spain and Portugal
Kizlyar badger (M. m. heptneri) Ognev, 1931 A large subspecies, it exhibits several traits of the Asian badger, namely its very pale, dull, dirty-greyish-ocherous colour and narrow head stripes.[21] Steppe region of northeastern Ciscaucasia, the Kalmytsk steppes and the Volga delta
Norwegian badger (M. m. milleri)

 

Baryshnikov, Puzachenko and Abramov, 2003[22] This subspecies has a smaller skull and smaller teeth than the nominate badger subspecies in Sweden and Finland.[22] Southwestern Norway, west of Telemark[22]

Description edit

 
A European badger skeleton at the Royal Veterinary College
 
Skull of a European badger
 
Dentition

European badgers are powerfully built animals with small heads, thick, short necks, stocky, wedge-shaped bodies and short tails. Their feet are plantigrade[23] or semidigitigrade[24] and short, with five toes on each foot.[25] The limbs are short and massive, with naked lower surfaces on the feet. The claws are strong, elongated and have an obtuse end, which assists in digging.[26] The claws are not retractable, and the hind claws wear with age. Old badgers sometimes have their hind claws almost completely worn away from constant use.[27] Their snouts, which are used for digging and probing, are muscular and flexible. The eyes are small and the ears short and tipped with white. Whiskers are present on the snout and above the eyes.

Boars typically have broader heads, thicker necks and narrower tails than sows, which are sleeker, have narrower, less domed heads and fluffier tails. The guts of badgers are longer than those of red foxes, reflecting their omnivorous diet. The small intestine has a mean length of 5.36 m (17.6 ft) and lacks a cecum. Both sexes have three pairs of nipples but these are more developed in females.[25] European badgers cannot flex their backs as martens, polecats and wolverines can, nor can they stand fully erect like honey badgers, though they can move quickly at full gallop.[26]

Adults measure 25–30 cm (9.8–11.8 in) in shoulder height,[28] 60–90 cm (24–35 in) in body length, 12–24 cm (4.7–9.4 in) in tail length, 7.5–13 cm (3.0–5.1 in) in hind foot length and 3.5–7 cm (1.4–2.8 in) in ear height. Males (or boars) slightly exceed females (or sows) in measurements, but can weigh considerably more. Their weights vary seasonally, growing from spring to autumn and reaching a peak just before the winter. During the summer, European badgers commonly weigh 7–13 kg (15–29 lb) and 15–17 kg (33–37 lb) in autumn.[29]

The average weight of adults in the Białowieża Forest was 10.2 kg (22 lb) in spring but up to 19 kg (42 lb) in autumn, 46% higher than the spring low mass.[30] In Woodchester Park, England, adults in spring weighed on average 7.9 kg (17 lb) and in fall average 9.5 kg (21 lb).[31] In Doñana National Park, average weight of adult badgers is reported as 6 to 7.95 kg (13.2 to 17.5 lb), perhaps in accordance with Bergmann's rule, that its size decreases in relatively warmer climates.[32][33] Sows can attain a top autumn weight of around 17.2 kg (38 lb), while exceptionally large boars have been reported in autumn. The heaviest verified was 27.2 kg (60 lb), though unverified specimens have been reported to 30.8 kg (68 lb) and even 34 kg (75 lb) (if so, the heaviest weight for any terrestrial mustelid). If average weights are used, the European badger ranks as the second largest terrestrial mustelid, behind only the wolverine.[29] Although their sense of smell is acute, their eyesight is monochromatic as has been shown by their lack of reaction to red lanterns. Only moving objects attract their attention. Their hearing is no better than that of humans.[34]

 
Badger skin – the contrasting markings of the fur serve to warn off attackers rather than camouflage, as they are conspicuous at night.[35]

European badger skulls are quite massive, heavy and elongated. Their braincases are oval in outline, while the facial part of their skulls is elongated and narrow.[36] Adults have prominent sagittal crests which can reach 15 mm tall in old males,[37] and are more strongly developed than those of honey badgers.[38] Aside from anchoring the jaw muscles, the thickness of the crests protect their skulls from hard blows.[39] Similar to martens,[40] the dentition of European badgers is well-suited for their omnivorous diets. Their incisors are small and chisel-shaped, their canine teeth are prominent and their carnassials are not overly specialized. Their molars are flattened and adapted for grinding.[37] Their jaws are powerful enough to crush most bones; a provoked badger was once reported as biting down on a man's wrist so severely that his hand had to be amputated.[41] The dental formula is 3.1.3.13.1.4.2.

Scent glands are present below the base of the tail and on the anus. The subcaudal gland secretes a musky-smelling, cream-coloured fatty substance, while the anal glands secrete a stronger-smelling, yellowish-brown fluid.[37]

Fur edit

 
Mounted erythristic badger

In winter, the fur on the back and flanks is long and coarse, consisting of bristly guard hairs with a sparse, soft undercoat. The belly fur consists of short, sparse hairs, with skin being visible in the inguinal region. Guard hair length on the middle of the back is 75–80 mm (3.0–3.1 in) in winter. Prior to the winter, the throat, lower neck, chest and legs are black. The belly is of a lighter, brownish tint, while the inguinal region is brownish-grey. The general colour of the back and sides is light silvery-grey, with straw-coloured highlights on the sides. The tail has long and coarse hairs, and is generally the same colour as the back. Two black bands pass along the head, starting from the upper lip and passing upwards to the whole base of the ears. The bands sometimes extend along the neck and merge with the colour of the upper body. The front parts of the bands are 15 mm (0.59 in), and widen to 45–55 mm (1.8–2.2 in) in the ear region. A wide, white band extends from the nose tip through the forehead and crown. White markings occur on the lower part of the head, and extend backwards to a great part of the neck's length. The summer fur is much coarser, shorter and sparser, and is deeper in colour, with the black tones becoming brownish, sometimes with yellowish tinges.[26] Partial melanism in badgers is known, and albinos and leucists are not uncommon. Albino badgers can be pure white or yellowish with pink eyes, while leucistic ones are the same but with normal eyes instead. Erythristic badgers are more common than the former, being characterized by having a sandy-red colour on the usually black parts of the body. Yellow badgers are also known.[42]

Distribution and habitat edit

The European badger is native to most of Europe. Its range includes Albania, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Crete, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Kosovo, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and Ukraine.[1]

The distributional boundary between the ranges of European and Asian badgers is the Volga River, the European species being situated on the western bank.[43] The boundary between the ranges of the European and Caucasian badgers is in the North Caucasus, but a clear boundary has not been defined, and they are sympatric in some regions, potentially forming a hybrid zone.[44] They are common in European Russia, with 30,000 individuals having been recorded there in 1990. They are abundant and increasing throughout their range, partly due to a reduction in rabies in Central Europe. In the UK, badgers experienced a 77% increase in numbers during the 1980s and 1990s.[1] The badger population in Great Britain in 2012 is estimated to be 300,000.[43]

The European badger is found in deciduous and mixed woodlands, clearings, spinneys, pastureland and scrub, including Mediterranean maquis shrubland. It has adapted to life in suburban areas and urban parks, although not to the extent of red foxes. In mountainous areas it occurs up to an altitude of 2,000 m (6,600 ft).[1][45]

Behaviour and ecology edit

Social and territorial behaviour edit

 
A badger's claws
 
Scratching-tree of badgers
Two European badgers grooming each other

European badgers are the most social of badgers,[46] forming groups of six adults on average, though larger associations of up to 23 individuals have been recorded. Group size may be related to habitat composition. Under optimal conditions, badger territories can be as small as 30 ha (74 acres), but may be as large as 150 ha (370 acres) in marginal areas.[47] Badger territories can be identified by the presence of communal latrines and well-worn paths.[48] It is mainly males that are involved in territorial aggression. A hierarchical social system is thought to exist among badgers and large powerful boars seem to assert dominance over smaller males. Large boars sometimes intrude into neighbouring territories during the main mating season in early spring.

Sparring and more vicious fights generally result from territorial defense in the breeding season.[49] However, in general, animals within and outside a group show considerable tolerance of each other. Boars tend to mark their territories more actively than sows, with their territorial activity increasing during the mating season in early spring.[47] Badgers groom each other very thoroughly with their claws and teeth. Grooming may have a social function.[50] They are crepuscular and nocturnal in habits.[50] Aggression among badgers is largely associated with territorial defence and mating. When fighting, they bite each other on the neck and rump, while running and chasing each other and injuries incurred in such fights can be severe and sometimes fatal. When attacked by dogs or sexually excited, badgers may raise their tails and fluff up their fur.[51]

Grunting and snuffling sounds

European badgers have an extensive vocal repertoire. When threatened, they emit deep growls and, when fighting, make low kekkering noises. They bark when surprised, whicker when playing or in distress,[51] and emit a piercing scream when alarmed or frightened.[45]

Denning behaviour edit

 
Entrance to a badger sett
 
A sett shown in an engraving

Like other badger species, European badgers are burrowing animals. However, the dens they construct (called setts) are the most complex, and are passed on from generation to generation.[52] The number of exits in one sett can vary from a few to fifty. These setts can be vast, and can sometimes accommodate multiple families. When this happens, each family occupies its own passages and nesting chambers. Some setts may have exits which are only used in times of danger or play. A typical passage has a 22–63 cm (8.7–24.8 in) wide base and a 14–32 cm (5.5–12.6 in) height. Three sleeping chambers occur in a family unit, some of which are open at both ends. The nesting chamber is located 5–10 m (16–33 ft) from the opening, and is situated more than a 1 m (3 ft 3 in) underground, in some cases 2.3 m (7 ft 7 in). Generally, the passages are 35–81 m (115–266 ft) long. The nesting chamber is on average 74 cm × 76 cm (29 in × 30 in), and are 38 cm (15 in) high.[53]

Badgers dig and collect bedding throughout the year, particularly in autumn and spring. Sett maintenance is usually carried out by subordinate sows and dominant boars. The chambers are frequently lined with bedding, brought in on dry nights, which consists of grass, bracken, straw, leaves and moss. Up to 30 bundles can be carried to the sett on a single night. European badgers are fastidiously clean animals which regularly clear out and discard old bedding. During the winter, they may take their bedding outside on sunny mornings and retrieve it later in the day.[47] Spring cleaning is connected with the birth of cubs, and may occur several times during the summer to prevent parasite levels building up.[53]

If a badger dies within the sett, its conspecifics will seal off the chamber and dig a new one. Some badgers will drag their dead out of the sett and bury them outside.[54] A sett is almost invariably located near a tree, which is used by badgers for stretching or claw scraping.[55] Badgers defecate in latrines, which are located near the sett and at strategic locations on territorial boundaries or near places with abundant food supplies.[50]

In extreme cases, when there is a lack of suitable burrowing grounds, badgers may move into haystacks in winter.[53] They may share their setts with red foxes or European rabbits. The badgers may provide protection for the rabbits against other predators. The rabbits usually avoid predation by the badgers by inhabiting smaller, hard to reach chambers.[56]

Reproduction and development edit

Badger with cubs

Estrus in European badgers lasts four to six days and may occur throughout the year, though there is a peak in spring. Sexual maturity in boars is usually attained at the age of twelve to fifteen months but this can range from nine months to two years. Males are normally fecund during January–May, with spermatogenesis declining in summer. Sows usually begin ovulating in their second year, though some exceptionally begin at nine months. They can mate at any time of the year, though the main peak occurs in February–May, when mature sows are in postpartal estrus and young animals experience their first estrus. Matings occurring outside this period typically occur in sows which either failed to mate earlier in the year or matured slowly.[57] Badgers are usually monogamous; boars typically mate with one female for life, whereas sows have been known to mate with more than one male.[58] Mating lasts for fifteen to sixty minutes, though the pair may briefly copulate for a minute or two when the sow is not in estrus. A delay of two to nine months precedes the fertilized eggs implanting into the wall of the uterus, though matings in December can result in immediate implantation. Ordinarily, implantation happens in December, with a gestation period lasting seven weeks. Cubs are usually born in mid-January to mid-March within underground chambers containing bedding. In areas where the countryside is waterlogged, cubs may be born above ground in buildings. Typically, only dominant sows can breed, as they suppress the reproduction of subordinate females.[57]

The average litter consists of one to five cubs.[57] Although many cubs are sired by resident males, up to 54% can be fathered by boars from different colonies.[47] Dominant sows may kill the cubs of subordinates.[51] Cubs are born pink, with greyish, silvery fur and fused eyelids. Neonatal badgers are 12 cm (4.7 in) in body length on average and weigh 75 to 132 g (2.6 to 4.7 oz), with cubs from large litters being smaller.[57] By three to five days, their claws become pigmented, and individual dark hairs begin to appear.[58] Their eyes open at four to five weeks and their milk teeth erupt about the same time. They emerge from their setts at eight weeks of age, and begin to be weaned at twelve weeks, though they may still suckle until they are four to five months old. Subordinate females assist the mother in guarding, feeding and grooming the cubs.[57] Cubs fully develop their adult coats at six to nine weeks.[58] In areas with medium to high badger populations, dispersal from the natal group is uncommon, though badgers may temporarily visit other colonies.[50] Badgers can live for up to about fifteen years in the wild.[45]

Winter sleep edit

Badgers begin to prepare for winter sleep during late summer by accumulating fat reserves, which reach a peak in October. During this period, the sett is cleaned and the nesting chamber is filled with bedding. Upon retiring to sleep, badgers block their sett entrances with dry leaves and earth. They typically stop leaving their setts once snow has fallen. In Russia and the Nordic countries, European badgers retire for winter sleep from late October to mid-November and emerge from their setts in March and early April.[59] In areas such as England and Transcaucasia, where winters are less harsh, badgers either forgo winter sleep entirely or spend long periods underground, emerging in mild spells.[45]

Diet edit

European badgers are among the least carnivorous members of the Carnivora;[60] they are highly adaptable and opportunistic omnivores, whose diet encompasses a wide range of animals and plants. Earthworms are their most important food source, followed by large insects, carrion, cereals, fruit and small mammals, including rabbits, mice, rats, voles,[61] shrews, moles and hedgehogs. Insect prey includes chafers, dung and ground beetles, caterpillars, leatherjackets, and the nests of wasps and bumblebees. They are able to destroy wasp nests, consuming the occupants, combs, and envelope, such as that of Vespula rufa nests, since their thick skin and body hair protect the badgers from stings.[62] Cereal food includes wheat, oats, maize and occasionally barley. Fruits include windfall apples, pears, plums, blackberries, bilberries, raspberries, cherries,[61] strawberries, acorns, beechmast, pignuts and wild arum corms.

Occasionally, they feed on medium to large birds, amphibians, fish, small reptiles including tortoises and lizards, snails, slugs, fungi, tubers and green food such as clover and grass, particularly in winter and during droughts.[63][61] Badgers characteristically capture large numbers of one food type in each hunt. Generally, they do not eat more than 0.5 kg (1.1 lb) of food per day, with young specimens yet to attain one year of age eating more than adults. An adult badger weighing 15 kg (33 lb) eats a quantity of food equal to 3.4% of its body weight.[60] Badgers typically eat prey on the spot, and rarely transport it to their setts. Surplus killing has been observed in chicken coops.[50]

 
A badger in England scavenging food

Badgers prey on rabbits throughout the year, especially during times when their young are available. They catch young rabbits by locating their position in their nest by scent, then dig vertically downwards to them. In mountainous or hilly districts, where vegetable food is scarce, badgers rely on rabbits as a principal food source. Adult rabbits are usually avoided, unless they are wounded or caught in traps.[64] They consume them by turning them inside out and eating the meat, leaving the inverted skin uneaten.[65] Hedgehogs are eaten in a similar manner.[64] In areas where badgers are common, hedgehogs are scarce.[46] Some rogue badgers may kill lambs,[64] though this is very rare; they may be erroneously implicated in lamb killings through the presence of discarded wool and bones near their setts, though foxes, which occasionally live alongside badgers, are often the culprits, as badgers do not transport food to their setts. They typically kill lambs by biting them behind the shoulder.[64] Poultry and game birds are also taken only rarely. Some badgers may build their setts in close proximity to poultry or game farms without ever causing damage. In the rare instances in which badgers do kill reared birds, the killings usually occur in February–March, when food is scarce due to harsh weather and increases in badger populations. Badgers can easily breach bee hives with their jaws, and are mostly indifferent to bee stings, even when set upon by swarms.[64]

Relationships with other non-human predators edit

 
A red fox challenging two badgers moving towards a bird feeder at night

European badgers have few natural enemies. While normally docile, badgers can become extremely aggressive and ferocious when cornered, making it dangerous for predators to target them. Grey wolves (Canis lupus), Eurasian lynxes (Lynx lynx) and brown bears (Ursus arctos), Europe's three largest remaining land predators, and large domestic dogs (C. familiaris) can pose a threat to adult badgers, though deaths caused by them are quantitatively rare as these predators are often limited in population due to human persecution and usually prefer easier, larger prey like ungulates, while badgers may fight viciously if aware of a predator and cornered without an escape route.[66][67][68][69] They may live alongside red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) in isolated sections of large burrows.[54] The two species possibly tolerate each other out of commensalism; foxes provide badgers with food scraps, while badgers maintain the shared burrow's cleanliness.[70] However, cases are known of badgers driving vixens from their dens and destroying their litters without eating them.[54] In turn, red foxes are known to have killed badger cubs in spring.[71] Golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) are known predators of European badgers and attacks by them on badger cubs are not infrequent, including cases where they have been pulled out directly from below the legs of their mothers, and even adult badgers may be attacked by this eagle species when emerging weak and hungry from hibernation.[72][73] Eurasian eagle owls (Bubo bubo) may also take an occasional cub and other large raptors such as white-tailed eagles (Haliaeetus albicilla) and greater spotted eagle (Clanga clanga) are considered potential badger cub predators.[66][69][74] Raccoon dogs may extensively use badger setts for shelter. There are many known cases of badgers and raccoon dogs wintering in the same hole, possibly because badgers enter hibernation two weeks earlier than the latter, and leave two weeks later. In exceptional cases, badger and raccoon dog cubs may coexist in the same burrow. Badgers may drive out or kill raccoon dogs if they overstay their welcome.[75]

Diseases and parasites edit

Bovine tuberculosis (bovine TB) caused by Mycobacterium bovis is a major mortality factor in badgers, though infected badgers can live and successfully breed for years before succumbing. The disease was first observed in badgers in 1951 in Switzerland where they were believed to have contracted it from chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra) or roe deer (Capreolus capreolus).[76] It was detected in the United Kingdom in 1971 where it was linked to an outbreak of bovine TB in cows. The evidence appears to indicate that the badger is the primary reservoir of infection for cattle in the southwest of England, Wales and Ireland. Since then there has been considerable controversy as to whether culling badgers will effectively reduce or eliminate bovine TB in cattle.[77]

Badgers are vulnerable to the mustelid herpesvirus-1, as well as rabies and canine distemper, though the latter two are absent in Great Britain. Other diseases found in European badgers include arteriosclerosis, pneumonia, pleurisy, nephritis, enteritis, polyarthritis and lymphosarcoma.[78]

Internal parasites of badgers include trematodes, nematodes and several species of tapeworm.[78] Ectoparasites carried by them include the fleas Paraceras melis (the badger flea), Chaetopsylla trichosa and Pulex irritans (the human flea), the lice Trichodectes melis and the ticks Ixodes ricinus, I. canisuga, I. hexagonus, I. reduvius and I. melicula. They also suffer from mange.[78] They spend much time grooming, individuals concentrating on their own ventral areas, alternating one side with the other, while social grooming occurs with one individual grooming another on its dorsal surface. Fleas tried to avoid the scratching, retreating rapidly downwards and backwards through the fur. This was in contrast to fleas away from their host, which ran upwards and jumped when disturbed. The grooming seems to disadvantage fleas rather than merely having a social function.[79]

Conservation edit

The International Union for Conservation of Nature rates the European badger as being of least concern. This is because it is a relatively common species with a wide range and populations are generally stable. In Central Europe it has become more abundant in recent decades due to a reduction in the incidence of rabies. In other areas it has also fared well, with increases in numbers in Western Europe and the United Kingdom. However, in some areas of intensive agriculture it has reduced in numbers due to loss of habitat and in others it is hunted as a pest.[1]

Cultural significance edit

 
Mr. Badger, as portrayed in an illustrated edition of Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows
 
Tommy Brock, as illustrated by Beatrix Potter in The Tale of Mr. Tod

Badgers play a part in European folklore and are featured in modern literature. In Irish mythology, badgers are portrayed as shape-shifters and kinsmen to Tadg, the king of Tara and foster father of Cormac mac Airt. In one story, Tadg berates his adopted son for having killed and prepared some badgers for dinner.[80] In German folklore, the badger is portrayed as a cautious, peace-loving Philistine, who loves more than anything his home, family and comfort, though he can become aggressive if surprised. He is a cousin of Reynard the Fox, whom he uselessly tries to convince to return to the path of righteousness.[12]

In Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows, Mr. Badger is depicted as a gruff, solitary figure who "simply hates society", yet is a good friend to Mole and Ratty. As a friend of Toad's now-deceased father, he is often firm and serious with Toad, but at the same time generally patient and well-meaning towards him. He can be seen as a wise hermit, a good leader and gentleman, embodying common sense. He is also brave and a skilled fighter, and helps rid Toad Hall of invaders from the wild wood.[81]

The "Frances" series of children's books by Russell and Lillian Hoban depicts an anthropomorphic badger family.

In T. H. White's Arthurian series The Once and Future King, the young King Arthur is transformed into a badger by Merlin as part of his education. He meets with an older badger who tells him "I can only teach you two things – to dig, and love your home."[82]

A villainous badger named Tommy Brock appears in Beatrix Potter's 1912 book The Tale of Mr. Tod. He is shown kidnapping the children of Benjamin Bunny and his wife Flopsy, and hiding them in an oven at the home of Mr. Tod the fox, whom he fights at the end of the book. The portrayal of the badger as a filthy animal which appropriates fox dens was criticized from a naturalistic viewpoint, though the inconsistencies are few and employed to create individual characters rather than evoke an archetypical fox and badger.[83] A wise old badger named Trufflehunter appears in C. S. Lewis' Prince Caspian, where he aids Caspian X in his struggle against King Miraz.[84]

A badger takes a prominent role in Colin Dann's The Animals of Farthing Wood series as second in command to Fox.[85] The badger is also the house symbol for Hufflepuff in the Harry Potter book series.[86] The Redwall series also has the Badger Lords, who rule the extinct volcano fortress of Salamandastron and are renowned as fierce warriors.[87] The children's television series Bodger & Badger was popular on CBBC during the 1990s and was set around the mishaps of a mashed potato-loving badger and his human companion.[88]

An unnamed badger is part of Bosnian Serb writer Petar Kočić's satirical play Badger on Tribunal in which local farmer David Štrbac attempts to sue a badger for eating his crops. It is actually highly critical towards Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina at the beginning of the 20th century. In honor of Kočić and his Badger, satirical theater in Banja Luka is named Jazavac (Badger).

Heraldry edit

 
European badger in the coat of arms of Luhanka

European badger appears on the coat of arms of the municipality of Luhanka in Central Finland, referring to the former importance of the fur trade in the locality.[89] The badger is also the title animal of the Nurmijärvi municipality in Uusimaa, Finland, where it is a very common mammal.[90]

Hunting edit

 
Illustration of a badger brought to bay by a Dachshund (Dachshund is German for "badger-dog")

European badgers are of little significance to hunting economies, though they may be actively hunted locally. Methods used for hunting badgers include catching them in jaw traps, ambushing them at their setts with guns, smoking them out of their earths and through the use of specially bred dogs such as Fox Terriers and Dachshunds to dig them out.[91] Badgers are, however, notoriously durable animals; their skins are thick, loose and covered in long hair which acts as protection, and their heavily ossified skulls allow them to shrug off most blunt traumas, as well as shotgun pellets.[92]

Badger-baiting edit

Badger-baiting was once a popular blood sport,[93] in which badgers were captured alive, placed in boxes, and attacked with dogs.[94] In the UK, this was outlawed by the Cruelty to Animals Act of 1835[94] and again by the Protection of Animals Act of 1911.[95] Moreover, the cruelty towards and killing of the badger constitute offences under the Protection of Badgers Act 1992,[96] and further offences under this act are inevitably committed to facilitate badger-baiting (such as interfering with a sett, or the taking or the very possession of a badger for purposes other than nursing an injured animal to health). If convicted, badger-baiters may face a sentence of up to six months in jail, a fine of up to £5,000, and other punitive measures, such as community service or a ban from owning dogs.[97]

Culling edit

Many badgers in Europe were gassed during the 1960s and 1970s to control rabies.[98] Until the 1980s, badger culling in the United Kingdom was undertaken in the form of gassing, to control the spread of bovine tuberculosis (bTB). Limited culling resumed in 1998 as part of a 10-year randomized trial cull which was considered by John Krebs and others to show that culling was ineffective. Some groups called for a selective cull,[99] while others favoured a programme of vaccination, and vets support the cull on compassionate grounds as they say that the illness causes much suffering in badgers.[99] In 2012, the government authorized a limited cull[100] led by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), however, this was later deferred with a wide range of reasons given.[101] In August 2013, a full culling programme began where about 5,000 badgers were killed over six weeks in West Somerset and Gloucestershire by marksmen with high-velocity rifles using a mixture of controlled shooting and free shooting (some badgers were trapped in cages first). The cull caused many protests with emotional, economic and scientific reasons being cited. The badger is considered an iconic species of the British countryside, though is not endangered. It was claimed by shadow ministers that "The government's own figures show it will cost more than it saves...", and Lord Krebs, who led the Randomised Badger Culling Trial in the 1990s, said the two pilots "will not yield any useful information".[102] A scientific study of culling from 2013 to 2017 has shown a reduction of 36–55% incidence of bovine tuberculosis in cattle.[3]

Tameability edit

 
A tame orphan badger with keeper
 
A hand reared European badger showed at the celebration of the National Day of Sweden

There are several accounts of European badgers being tamed. Tame badgers can be affectionate pets, and can be trained to come to their owners when their names are called. They are easily fed, as they are not fussy eaters, and will instinctively unearth rats, moles and young rabbits without training, though they do have a weakness for pork. Although there is one record of a tame badger befriending a fox, they generally do not tolerate the presence of cats and dogs, and will chase them.[103][dubious ]

Uses edit

 
A shaving brush using badger hair

Badger meat is eaten in some districts of the former Soviet Union, though in most cases it is discarded.[91] Smoked hams made from badgers were once highly esteemed in England, Wales and Ireland.[104]

Some badger products have been used for medical purposes; badger expert Ernest Neal, quoting from an 1810 edition of The Sporting Magazine, wrote;

The flesh, blood and grease of the badger are very useful for oils, ointments, salves and powders, for shortness of breath, the cough of the lungs, for the stone, sprained sinews, collachs etc. The skin being well dressed is very warm and comfortable for ancient people who are troubled with paralytic disorders.[104]

The hair of the European badger has been used for centuries for making sporrans[104] and shaving brushes.[93][105] Sporrans are traditionally worn as part of male Scottish highland dress. They form a bag or pocket made from a pelt and a badger or other animal's mask may be used as a flap.[106] The pelt was also formerly used for pistol furniture.[93]

References edit

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Works cited edit

  • Baynes, T. S., ed. (1878), "Badger" , Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 3 (9th ed.), New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, p. 227
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911), "Badger" , Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 3 (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press, p. 188
  • Harris, S.; Yalden, D. (2008). Mammals of the British Isles (Fourth Revised ed.). Mammal Society. ISBN 978-0-906282-65-6.
  • Kurtén, B. (1968). "The Badger Meles meles Linné". Pleistocene mammals of Europe (Reprint 2017 ed.). London and New York: Routledge. pp. 104–105. ISBN 9781351499484.
  • Heptner, V. G.; Sludskii, A. A. (2001). "Badger Meles meles Linnaeus, 1758". Mammals of the Soviet Union. Vol. II, Part 1b, Carnivores (Mustelidae and Procyonidae). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Libraries and National Science Foundation. pp. 1232–1282. ISBN 90-04-08876-8.
  • König, C. (1973). Mammals. London: William Collins. ISBN 0-00-212080-1.
  • Macdonald, D. (2001). The New Encyclopedia of Mammals. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-850823-9.
  • Neal, E. (1976). The Badger. New Naturalist (Fifth ed.). London: Collins. ISBN 9780002193993.
  • Pease, A. E. (1898). The badger; a monograph. London: Lawrence and Bullen.
  • Spagnesi, M.; De Marina Marinis, M. (2002). "Mammiferi d'Italia" (PDF). Quaderni di Conservazione della Natura (in Italian). ISSN 1592-2901.[permanent dead link]

External links edit

  • Photographs and video
  • The Badger Trust – representing over 80 British badger groups
  • Scottish Badgers
  • Badgerland – The Definitive On-Line Guide to Badgers (Meles meles) in the UK
  • Badgerwatcher.com – A guide to watching badgers in the UK
  • Wildlife Online – Natural History of the European Badger
  • .
  • Dublin and Wicklow Badger Group 2021-06-18 at the Wayback Machine
  • Science & Nature: Animals, BBC.
  • Badgers in the Netherlands, Badgergroup Brabant Foundation.
  • , The Census Foundation.
  • Originally a Dutch site, but you can change language at the top of the page. Sightings, pictures and distribution maps of European badgers in the Netherlands.
  • Badgers in France, L'assiociation Meles.
  • A video of an adult european badger. This is a close up video showing their behavior
  • Video of a European Badger feeding on peanuts by its sett
  • Video of an evening's badger-watching in mid-Wales, U.K.

Badgers and TB in the UK edit

  • National Farmers Union proposals to control badgers (would involve repeal of the 1992 act) July 2005[permanent dead link]

Claims of continued badger-hunting in the UK edit

  • Allegations of lamping (among other practices) were made in the appendix to the

european, badger, meles, meles, also, known, eurasian, badger, badger, species, family, mustelidae, native, europe, west, asia, parts, central, asia, classified, least, concern, iucn, list, wide, range, large, stable, population, size, which, thought, increasi. The European badger Meles meles also known as the Eurasian badger is a badger species in the family Mustelidae native to Europe and West Asia and parts of Central Asia It is classified as least concern on the IUCN Red List as it has a wide range and a large stable population size which is thought to be increasing in some regions Several subspecies are recognized with the nominate subspecies M m meles predominating in most of Europe 1 In Europe where no other badger species commonly occurs it is generally just called the badger European badgerTemporal range 0 7 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Middle Pleistocene RecentIn Ahtari Zoo FinlandConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraFamily MustelidaeGenus MelesSpecies M melesBinomial nameMeles meles Linnaeus 1758 European badger range also includes Caucasian badger range SynonymsUrsus meles Linnaeus 1758The European badger is a powerfully built black white brown and grey animal with a small head a stocky body small black eyes and a short tail Its weight varies being 7 13 kg 15 29 lb in spring but building up to 15 17 kg 33 37 lb in autumn before the winter sleep period It is nocturnal and is a social burrowing animal that sleeps during the day in one of several setts in its territorial range These burrows have multiple chambers and entrances and are extensive systems of underground passages of 35 81 m 115 266 ft length They house several badger families that use these setts for decades Badgers are fussy over the cleanliness of their burrow carrying in fresh bedding and removing soiled material and they defecate in latrines strategically situated outside their setts or en route to other setts 2 Although classified as a carnivore the European badger is an omnivore feeding on a wide variety of plant and animal foods including earthworms large insects small mammals carrion cereals and tubers Litters of up to five cubs are produced in spring The young are weaned a few months later but usually remain within the family group The European badger has been known to share its burrow with other species such as rabbits red foxes and raccoon dogs but it can be ferocious when provoked a trait which has been exploited in the now illegal blood sport of badger baiting Badgers can be carriers of bovine tuberculosis which also affects cattle In England badger populations are culled to try to reduce the incidence of bovine tuberculosis in cattle 3 although the efficacy of this practice is strongly disputed 4 and badger culls are widely considered cruel and inhumane 5 6 Contents 1 Nomenclature 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Evolution 2 2 Subspecies 3 Description 3 1 Fur 4 Distribution and habitat 5 Behaviour and ecology 5 1 Social and territorial behaviour 5 2 Denning behaviour 5 3 Reproduction and development 5 4 Winter sleep 5 5 Diet 5 6 Relationships with other non human predators 5 7 Diseases and parasites 6 Conservation 7 Cultural significance 7 1 Heraldry 7 2 Hunting 7 3 Badger baiting 7 4 Culling 7 5 Tameability 7 6 Uses 8 References 8 1 Works cited 9 External links 9 1 Badgers and TB in the UK 9 2 Claims of continued badger hunting in the UKNomenclature editThe source of the word badger is uncertain The Oxford English Dictionary states it probably derives from badge ard a reference to the white mark on its forehead that resembles a badge and may date to the early 16th century 7 The French word becheur digger has also been suggested as a source 8 A male badger is a boar a female is a sow and a young badger is a cub A badger s home is called a sett 9 Badger colonies are often called clans The far older name brock Old English brocc Scots brock is a Celtic loanword cf Gaelic broc and Welsh broch from Proto Celtic brokko meaning grey 7 The Proto Germanic term was thahsu cf German Dachs Dutch das Norwegian svin toks Early Modern English dasse probably from the PIE root tek to construct which suggests that the badger was named after its digging of setts tunnels the Germanic term thahsu became taxus or taxō ōnis in Latin glosses replacing meles marten or badger 10 and from these words the common Romance terms for the animal evolved Italian tasso French tesson taisson tasson now blaireau is more common Catalan toixo Spanish tejon Portuguese texugo except Asturian melandru 11 Until the mid 18th century European badgers were variously known in English as brock pate grey and bawson The name bawson is derived from bawsened which refers to something striped with white Pate is a local name that was once popular in northern England The name badget was once common but only used in Norfolk while earth dog was used in southern Ireland 12 The badger is commonly referred to in Welsh as a mochyn daear earth pig 13 Taxonomy editUrsus meles was the scientific name used by Carl Linnaeus in 1758 who described the badger in his work Systema Naturae 14 Evolution edit The species likely evolved from the Chinese Meles thorali of the early Pleistocene The modern species originated during the early Middle Pleistocene with fossil sites occurring in Episcopia Grombasek Sussenborn Hundsheim Erpfingen Koneprusy Mosbach 2 and Stranska Skala A comparison between fossil and living specimens shows a marked progressive adaptation to omnivory namely in the increase in the molars surface areas and the modification of the carnassials Occasionally badger bones are discovered in earlier strata due to the burrowing habits of the species 15 16 Subspecies edit In the 19th and 20th centuries several badger type specimens were described and proposed as subspecies As of 2005 update eight subspecies were recognized as valid taxa but four canescens arcalus rhodius severzovi are now considered to belong to a distinct species the Caucasian badger M canescens 17 18 Subspecies Trinomial authority and synonyms Description RangeCommon badger M m meles nbsp Linnaeus 1758taxus Boddaert 1785 alba Gmelin 1788 maculata Gmelin 1788 vulgaris Tiedemann 1808 europaeus Desmarest 1816 caninus Billberg 1827 communis Billberg 1827 typicus Barrett Hamilton 1899 britannicus Satunin 1905 caucasicus Ognev 1926 tauricus Ognev 1926 danicus Degerbol 1933 A large subspecies with a strongly developed sagittal crest it has a soft pelage and relatively dense underfur The back has a relatively pure silvery grey tone while the main tone of the head is pure white The dark stripes are wide and black while the white fields fully extend along the upper and lateral parts of the neck It can weigh up to 20 24 kg in autumn with some specimens attaining even larger sizes 19 Continental Europe except for the Iberian Peninsula Its eastern range encompasses the European area of the former Soviet Union eastward to the Volga Crimea Ciscaucasia and the northern CaucasusIberian badger M m marianensis Graells 1897 20 mediterraneus Barrett Hamilton 1899 Spain and PortugalKizlyar badger M m heptneri Ognev 1931 A large subspecies it exhibits several traits of the Asian badger namely its very pale dull dirty greyish ocherous colour and narrow head stripes 21 Steppe region of northeastern Ciscaucasia the Kalmytsk steppes and the Volga deltaNorwegian badger M m milleri nbsp Baryshnikov Puzachenko and Abramov 2003 22 This subspecies has a smaller skull and smaller teeth than the nominate badger subspecies in Sweden and Finland 22 Southwestern Norway west of Telemark 22 Description edit nbsp A European badger skeleton at the Royal Veterinary College nbsp Skull of a European badger nbsp DentitionEuropean badgers are powerfully built animals with small heads thick short necks stocky wedge shaped bodies and short tails Their feet are plantigrade 23 or semidigitigrade 24 and short with five toes on each foot 25 The limbs are short and massive with naked lower surfaces on the feet The claws are strong elongated and have an obtuse end which assists in digging 26 The claws are not retractable and the hind claws wear with age Old badgers sometimes have their hind claws almost completely worn away from constant use 27 Their snouts which are used for digging and probing are muscular and flexible The eyes are small and the ears short and tipped with white Whiskers are present on the snout and above the eyes Boars typically have broader heads thicker necks and narrower tails than sows which are sleeker have narrower less domed heads and fluffier tails The guts of badgers are longer than those of red foxes reflecting their omnivorous diet The small intestine has a mean length of 5 36 m 17 6 ft and lacks a cecum Both sexes have three pairs of nipples but these are more developed in females 25 European badgers cannot flex their backs as martens polecats and wolverines can nor can they stand fully erect like honey badgers though they can move quickly at full gallop 26 Adults measure 25 30 cm 9 8 11 8 in in shoulder height 28 60 90 cm 24 35 in in body length 12 24 cm 4 7 9 4 in in tail length 7 5 13 cm 3 0 5 1 in in hind foot length and 3 5 7 cm 1 4 2 8 in in ear height Males or boars slightly exceed females or sows in measurements but can weigh considerably more Their weights vary seasonally growing from spring to autumn and reaching a peak just before the winter During the summer European badgers commonly weigh 7 13 kg 15 29 lb and 15 17 kg 33 37 lb in autumn 29 The average weight of adults in the Bialowieza Forest was 10 2 kg 22 lb in spring but up to 19 kg 42 lb in autumn 46 higher than the spring low mass 30 In Woodchester Park England adults in spring weighed on average 7 9 kg 17 lb and in fall average 9 5 kg 21 lb 31 In Donana National Park average weight of adult badgers is reported as 6 to 7 95 kg 13 2 to 17 5 lb perhaps in accordance with Bergmann s rule that its size decreases in relatively warmer climates 32 33 Sows can attain a top autumn weight of around 17 2 kg 38 lb while exceptionally large boars have been reported in autumn The heaviest verified was 27 2 kg 60 lb though unverified specimens have been reported to 30 8 kg 68 lb and even 34 kg 75 lb if so the heaviest weight for any terrestrial mustelid If average weights are used the European badger ranks as the second largest terrestrial mustelid behind only the wolverine 29 Although their sense of smell is acute their eyesight is monochromatic as has been shown by their lack of reaction to red lanterns Only moving objects attract their attention Their hearing is no better than that of humans 34 nbsp Badger skin the contrasting markings of the fur serve to warn off attackers rather than camouflage as they are conspicuous at night 35 European badger skulls are quite massive heavy and elongated Their braincases are oval in outline while the facial part of their skulls is elongated and narrow 36 Adults have prominent sagittal crests which can reach 15 mm tall in old males 37 and are more strongly developed than those of honey badgers 38 Aside from anchoring the jaw muscles the thickness of the crests protect their skulls from hard blows 39 Similar to martens 40 the dentition of European badgers is well suited for their omnivorous diets Their incisors are small and chisel shaped their canine teeth are prominent and their carnassials are not overly specialized Their molars are flattened and adapted for grinding 37 Their jaws are powerful enough to crush most bones a provoked badger was once reported as biting down on a man s wrist so severely that his hand had to be amputated 41 The dental formula is 3 1 3 1 3 1 4 2 Scent glands are present below the base of the tail and on the anus The subcaudal gland secretes a musky smelling cream coloured fatty substance while the anal glands secrete a stronger smelling yellowish brown fluid 37 Fur edit nbsp Mounted erythristic badgerIn winter the fur on the back and flanks is long and coarse consisting of bristly guard hairs with a sparse soft undercoat The belly fur consists of short sparse hairs with skin being visible in the inguinal region Guard hair length on the middle of the back is 75 80 mm 3 0 3 1 in in winter Prior to the winter the throat lower neck chest and legs are black The belly is of a lighter brownish tint while the inguinal region is brownish grey The general colour of the back and sides is light silvery grey with straw coloured highlights on the sides The tail has long and coarse hairs and is generally the same colour as the back Two black bands pass along the head starting from the upper lip and passing upwards to the whole base of the ears The bands sometimes extend along the neck and merge with the colour of the upper body The front parts of the bands are 15 mm 0 59 in and widen to 45 55 mm 1 8 2 2 in in the ear region A wide white band extends from the nose tip through the forehead and crown White markings occur on the lower part of the head and extend backwards to a great part of the neck s length The summer fur is much coarser shorter and sparser and is deeper in colour with the black tones becoming brownish sometimes with yellowish tinges 26 Partial melanism in badgers is known and albinos and leucists are not uncommon Albino badgers can be pure white or yellowish with pink eyes while leucistic ones are the same but with normal eyes instead Erythristic badgers are more common than the former being characterized by having a sandy red colour on the usually black parts of the body Yellow badgers are also known 42 Distribution and habitat editThe European badger is native to most of Europe Its range includes Albania Austria Belarus Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Crete Croatia Czech Republic Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Great Britain Greece Hungary Ireland Italy Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Macedonia Moldova Montenegro Netherlands Norway Poland Portugal Romania Russia Kosovo Serbia Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland and Ukraine 1 The distributional boundary between the ranges of European and Asian badgers is the Volga River the European species being situated on the western bank 43 The boundary between the ranges of the European and Caucasian badgers is in the North Caucasus but a clear boundary has not been defined and they are sympatric in some regions potentially forming a hybrid zone 44 They are common in European Russia with 30 000 individuals having been recorded there in 1990 They are abundant and increasing throughout their range partly due to a reduction in rabies in Central Europe In the UK badgers experienced a 77 increase in numbers during the 1980s and 1990s 1 The badger population in Great Britain in 2012 is estimated to be 300 000 43 The European badger is found in deciduous and mixed woodlands clearings spinneys pastureland and scrub including Mediterranean maquis shrubland It has adapted to life in suburban areas and urban parks although not to the extent of red foxes In mountainous areas it occurs up to an altitude of 2 000 m 6 600 ft 1 45 Behaviour and ecology editSocial and territorial behaviour edit nbsp A badger s claws nbsp Scratching tree of badgers source source source source source source Two European badgers grooming each otherEuropean badgers are the most social of badgers 46 forming groups of six adults on average though larger associations of up to 23 individuals have been recorded Group size may be related to habitat composition Under optimal conditions badger territories can be as small as 30 ha 74 acres but may be as large as 150 ha 370 acres in marginal areas 47 Badger territories can be identified by the presence of communal latrines and well worn paths 48 It is mainly males that are involved in territorial aggression A hierarchical social system is thought to exist among badgers and large powerful boars seem to assert dominance over smaller males Large boars sometimes intrude into neighbouring territories during the main mating season in early spring Sparring and more vicious fights generally result from territorial defense in the breeding season 49 However in general animals within and outside a group show considerable tolerance of each other Boars tend to mark their territories more actively than sows with their territorial activity increasing during the mating season in early spring 47 Badgers groom each other very thoroughly with their claws and teeth Grooming may have a social function 50 They are crepuscular and nocturnal in habits 50 Aggression among badgers is largely associated with territorial defence and mating When fighting they bite each other on the neck and rump while running and chasing each other and injuries incurred in such fights can be severe and sometimes fatal When attacked by dogs or sexually excited badgers may raise their tails and fluff up their fur 51 source source track Grunting and snuffling soundsEuropean badgers have an extensive vocal repertoire When threatened they emit deep growls and when fighting make low kekkering noises They bark when surprised whicker when playing or in distress 51 and emit a piercing scream when alarmed or frightened 45 Denning behaviour edit Main article Sett nbsp Entrance to a badger sett nbsp A sett shown in an engravingLike other badger species European badgers are burrowing animals However the dens they construct called setts are the most complex and are passed on from generation to generation 52 The number of exits in one sett can vary from a few to fifty These setts can be vast and can sometimes accommodate multiple families When this happens each family occupies its own passages and nesting chambers Some setts may have exits which are only used in times of danger or play A typical passage has a 22 63 cm 8 7 24 8 in wide base and a 14 32 cm 5 5 12 6 in height Three sleeping chambers occur in a family unit some of which are open at both ends The nesting chamber is located 5 10 m 16 33 ft from the opening and is situated more than a 1 m 3 ft 3 in underground in some cases 2 3 m 7 ft 7 in Generally the passages are 35 81 m 115 266 ft long The nesting chamber is on average 74 cm 76 cm 29 in 30 in and are 38 cm 15 in high 53 Badgers dig and collect bedding throughout the year particularly in autumn and spring Sett maintenance is usually carried out by subordinate sows and dominant boars The chambers are frequently lined with bedding brought in on dry nights which consists of grass bracken straw leaves and moss Up to 30 bundles can be carried to the sett on a single night European badgers are fastidiously clean animals which regularly clear out and discard old bedding During the winter they may take their bedding outside on sunny mornings and retrieve it later in the day 47 Spring cleaning is connected with the birth of cubs and may occur several times during the summer to prevent parasite levels building up 53 If a badger dies within the sett its conspecifics will seal off the chamber and dig a new one Some badgers will drag their dead out of the sett and bury them outside 54 A sett is almost invariably located near a tree which is used by badgers for stretching or claw scraping 55 Badgers defecate in latrines which are located near the sett and at strategic locations on territorial boundaries or near places with abundant food supplies 50 In extreme cases when there is a lack of suitable burrowing grounds badgers may move into haystacks in winter 53 They may share their setts with red foxes or European rabbits The badgers may provide protection for the rabbits against other predators The rabbits usually avoid predation by the badgers by inhabiting smaller hard to reach chambers 56 Reproduction and development edit source source source source source source Badger with cubsEstrus in European badgers lasts four to six days and may occur throughout the year though there is a peak in spring Sexual maturity in boars is usually attained at the age of twelve to fifteen months but this can range from nine months to two years Males are normally fecund during January May with spermatogenesis declining in summer Sows usually begin ovulating in their second year though some exceptionally begin at nine months They can mate at any time of the year though the main peak occurs in February May when mature sows are in postpartal estrus and young animals experience their first estrus Matings occurring outside this period typically occur in sows which either failed to mate earlier in the year or matured slowly 57 Badgers are usually monogamous boars typically mate with one female for life whereas sows have been known to mate with more than one male 58 Mating lasts for fifteen to sixty minutes though the pair may briefly copulate for a minute or two when the sow is not in estrus A delay of two to nine months precedes the fertilized eggs implanting into the wall of the uterus though matings in December can result in immediate implantation Ordinarily implantation happens in December with a gestation period lasting seven weeks Cubs are usually born in mid January to mid March within underground chambers containing bedding In areas where the countryside is waterlogged cubs may be born above ground in buildings Typically only dominant sows can breed as they suppress the reproduction of subordinate females 57 The average litter consists of one to five cubs 57 Although many cubs are sired by resident males up to 54 can be fathered by boars from different colonies 47 Dominant sows may kill the cubs of subordinates 51 Cubs are born pink with greyish silvery fur and fused eyelids Neonatal badgers are 12 cm 4 7 in in body length on average and weigh 75 to 132 g 2 6 to 4 7 oz with cubs from large litters being smaller 57 By three to five days their claws become pigmented and individual dark hairs begin to appear 58 Their eyes open at four to five weeks and their milk teeth erupt about the same time They emerge from their setts at eight weeks of age and begin to be weaned at twelve weeks though they may still suckle until they are four to five months old Subordinate females assist the mother in guarding feeding and grooming the cubs 57 Cubs fully develop their adult coats at six to nine weeks 58 In areas with medium to high badger populations dispersal from the natal group is uncommon though badgers may temporarily visit other colonies 50 Badgers can live for up to about fifteen years in the wild 45 Winter sleep edit Badgers begin to prepare for winter sleep during late summer by accumulating fat reserves which reach a peak in October During this period the sett is cleaned and the nesting chamber is filled with bedding Upon retiring to sleep badgers block their sett entrances with dry leaves and earth They typically stop leaving their setts once snow has fallen In Russia and the Nordic countries European badgers retire for winter sleep from late October to mid November and emerge from their setts in March and early April 59 In areas such as England and Transcaucasia where winters are less harsh badgers either forgo winter sleep entirely or spend long periods underground emerging in mild spells 45 Diet edit European badgers are among the least carnivorous members of the Carnivora 60 they are highly adaptable and opportunistic omnivores whose diet encompasses a wide range of animals and plants Earthworms are their most important food source followed by large insects carrion cereals fruit and small mammals including rabbits mice rats voles 61 shrews moles and hedgehogs Insect prey includes chafers dung and ground beetles caterpillars leatherjackets and the nests of wasps and bumblebees They are able to destroy wasp nests consuming the occupants combs and envelope such as that of Vespula rufa nests since their thick skin and body hair protect the badgers from stings 62 Cereal food includes wheat oats maize and occasionally barley Fruits include windfall apples pears plums blackberries bilberries raspberries cherries 61 strawberries acorns beechmast pignuts and wild arum corms Occasionally they feed on medium to large birds amphibians fish small reptiles including tortoises and lizards snails slugs fungi tubers and green food such as clover and grass particularly in winter and during droughts 63 61 Badgers characteristically capture large numbers of one food type in each hunt Generally they do not eat more than 0 5 kg 1 1 lb of food per day with young specimens yet to attain one year of age eating more than adults An adult badger weighing 15 kg 33 lb eats a quantity of food equal to 3 4 of its body weight 60 Badgers typically eat prey on the spot and rarely transport it to their setts Surplus killing has been observed in chicken coops 50 nbsp A badger in England scavenging foodBadgers prey on rabbits throughout the year especially during times when their young are available They catch young rabbits by locating their position in their nest by scent then dig vertically downwards to them In mountainous or hilly districts where vegetable food is scarce badgers rely on rabbits as a principal food source Adult rabbits are usually avoided unless they are wounded or caught in traps 64 They consume them by turning them inside out and eating the meat leaving the inverted skin uneaten 65 Hedgehogs are eaten in a similar manner 64 In areas where badgers are common hedgehogs are scarce 46 Some rogue badgers may kill lambs 64 though this is very rare they may be erroneously implicated in lamb killings through the presence of discarded wool and bones near their setts though foxes which occasionally live alongside badgers are often the culprits as badgers do not transport food to their setts They typically kill lambs by biting them behind the shoulder 64 Poultry and game birds are also taken only rarely Some badgers may build their setts in close proximity to poultry or game farms without ever causing damage In the rare instances in which badgers do kill reared birds the killings usually occur in February March when food is scarce due to harsh weather and increases in badger populations Badgers can easily breach bee hives with their jaws and are mostly indifferent to bee stings even when set upon by swarms 64 Relationships with other non human predators edit nbsp A red fox challenging two badgers moving towards a bird feeder at nightEuropean badgers have few natural enemies While normally docile badgers can become extremely aggressive and ferocious when cornered making it dangerous for predators to target them Grey wolves Canis lupus Eurasian lynxes Lynx lynx and brown bears Ursus arctos Europe s three largest remaining land predators and large domestic dogs C familiaris can pose a threat to adult badgers though deaths caused by them are quantitatively rare as these predators are often limited in population due to human persecution and usually prefer easier larger prey like ungulates while badgers may fight viciously if aware of a predator and cornered without an escape route 66 67 68 69 They may live alongside red foxes Vulpes vulpes in isolated sections of large burrows 54 The two species possibly tolerate each other out of commensalism foxes provide badgers with food scraps while badgers maintain the shared burrow s cleanliness 70 However cases are known of badgers driving vixens from their dens and destroying their litters without eating them 54 In turn red foxes are known to have killed badger cubs in spring 71 Golden eagles Aquila chrysaetos are known predators of European badgers and attacks by them on badger cubs are not infrequent including cases where they have been pulled out directly from below the legs of their mothers and even adult badgers may be attacked by this eagle species when emerging weak and hungry from hibernation 72 73 Eurasian eagle owls Bubo bubo may also take an occasional cub and other large raptors such as white tailed eagles Haliaeetus albicilla and greater spotted eagle Clanga clanga are considered potential badger cub predators 66 69 74 Raccoon dogs may extensively use badger setts for shelter There are many known cases of badgers and raccoon dogs wintering in the same hole possibly because badgers enter hibernation two weeks earlier than the latter and leave two weeks later In exceptional cases badger and raccoon dog cubs may coexist in the same burrow Badgers may drive out or kill raccoon dogs if they overstay their welcome 75 Diseases and parasites edit Bovine tuberculosis bovine TB caused by Mycobacterium bovis is a major mortality factor in badgers though infected badgers can live and successfully breed for years before succumbing The disease was first observed in badgers in 1951 in Switzerland where they were believed to have contracted it from chamois Rupicapra rupicapra or roe deer Capreolus capreolus 76 It was detected in the United Kingdom in 1971 where it was linked to an outbreak of bovine TB in cows The evidence appears to indicate that the badger is the primary reservoir of infection for cattle in the southwest of England Wales and Ireland Since then there has been considerable controversy as to whether culling badgers will effectively reduce or eliminate bovine TB in cattle 77 Badgers are vulnerable to the mustelid herpesvirus 1 as well as rabies and canine distemper though the latter two are absent in Great Britain Other diseases found in European badgers include arteriosclerosis pneumonia pleurisy nephritis enteritis polyarthritis and lymphosarcoma 78 Internal parasites of badgers include trematodes nematodes and several species of tapeworm 78 Ectoparasites carried by them include the fleas Paraceras melis the badger flea Chaetopsylla trichosa and Pulex irritans the human flea the lice Trichodectes melis and the ticks Ixodes ricinus I canisuga I hexagonus I reduvius and I melicula They also suffer from mange 78 They spend much time grooming individuals concentrating on their own ventral areas alternating one side with the other while social grooming occurs with one individual grooming another on its dorsal surface Fleas tried to avoid the scratching retreating rapidly downwards and backwards through the fur This was in contrast to fleas away from their host which ran upwards and jumped when disturbed The grooming seems to disadvantage fleas rather than merely having a social function 79 Conservation editThe International Union for Conservation of Nature rates the European badger as being of least concern This is because it is a relatively common species with a wide range and populations are generally stable In Central Europe it has become more abundant in recent decades due to a reduction in the incidence of rabies In other areas it has also fared well with increases in numbers in Western Europe and the United Kingdom However in some areas of intensive agriculture it has reduced in numbers due to loss of habitat and in others it is hunted as a pest 1 Cultural significance edit nbsp Mr Badger as portrayed in an illustrated edition of Kenneth Grahame s The Wind in the Willows nbsp Tommy Brock as illustrated by Beatrix Potter in The Tale of Mr TodMain article List of fictional badgers Badgers play a part in European folklore and are featured in modern literature In Irish mythology badgers are portrayed as shape shifters and kinsmen to Tadg the king of Tara and foster father of Cormac mac Airt In one story Tadg berates his adopted son for having killed and prepared some badgers for dinner 80 In German folklore the badger is portrayed as a cautious peace loving Philistine who loves more than anything his home family and comfort though he can become aggressive if surprised He is a cousin of Reynard the Fox whom he uselessly tries to convince to return to the path of righteousness 12 In Kenneth Grahame s The Wind in the Willows Mr Badger is depicted as a gruff solitary figure who simply hates society yet is a good friend to Mole and Ratty As a friend of Toad s now deceased father he is often firm and serious with Toad but at the same time generally patient and well meaning towards him He can be seen as a wise hermit a good leader and gentleman embodying common sense He is also brave and a skilled fighter and helps rid Toad Hall of invaders from the wild wood 81 The Frances series of children s books by Russell and Lillian Hoban depicts an anthropomorphic badger family In T H White s Arthurian series The Once and Future King the young King Arthur is transformed into a badger by Merlin as part of his education He meets with an older badger who tells him I can only teach you two things to dig and love your home 82 A villainous badger named Tommy Brock appears in Beatrix Potter s 1912 book The Tale of Mr Tod He is shown kidnapping the children of Benjamin Bunny and his wife Flopsy and hiding them in an oven at the home of Mr Tod the fox whom he fights at the end of the book The portrayal of the badger as a filthy animal which appropriates fox dens was criticized from a naturalistic viewpoint though the inconsistencies are few and employed to create individual characters rather than evoke an archetypical fox and badger 83 A wise old badger named Trufflehunter appears in C S Lewis Prince Caspian where he aids Caspian X in his struggle against King Miraz 84 A badger takes a prominent role in Colin Dann s The Animals of Farthing Wood series as second in command to Fox 85 The badger is also the house symbol for Hufflepuff in the Harry Potter book series 86 The Redwall series also has the Badger Lords who rule the extinct volcano fortress of Salamandastron and are renowned as fierce warriors 87 The children s television series Bodger amp Badger was popular on CBBC during the 1990s and was set around the mishaps of a mashed potato loving badger and his human companion 88 An unnamed badger is part of Bosnian Serb writer Petar Kocic s satirical play Badger on Tribunal in which local farmer David Strbac attempts to sue a badger for eating his crops It is actually highly critical towards Austro Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina at the beginning of the 20th century In honor of Kocic and his Badger satirical theater in Banja Luka is named Jazavac Badger Heraldry edit nbsp European badger in the coat of arms of LuhankaEuropean badger appears on the coat of arms of the municipality of Luhanka in Central Finland referring to the former importance of the fur trade in the locality 89 The badger is also the title animal of the Nurmijarvi municipality in Uusimaa Finland where it is a very common mammal 90 Hunting edit nbsp Illustration of a badger brought to bay by a Dachshund Dachshund is German for badger dog European badgers are of little significance to hunting economies though they may be actively hunted locally Methods used for hunting badgers include catching them in jaw traps ambushing them at their setts with guns smoking them out of their earths and through the use of specially bred dogs such as Fox Terriers and Dachshunds to dig them out 91 Badgers are however notoriously durable animals their skins are thick loose and covered in long hair which acts as protection and their heavily ossified skulls allow them to shrug off most blunt traumas as well as shotgun pellets 92 Badger baiting edit Main article Badger baiting Badger baiting was once a popular blood sport 93 in which badgers were captured alive placed in boxes and attacked with dogs 94 In the UK this was outlawed by the Cruelty to Animals Act of 1835 94 and again by the Protection of Animals Act of 1911 95 Moreover the cruelty towards and killing of the badger constitute offences under the Protection of Badgers Act 1992 96 and further offences under this act are inevitably committed to facilitate badger baiting such as interfering with a sett or the taking or the very possession of a badger for purposes other than nursing an injured animal to health If convicted badger baiters may face a sentence of up to six months in jail a fine of up to 5 000 and other punitive measures such as community service or a ban from owning dogs 97 Culling edit See also Badger culling in the United Kingdom Many badgers in Europe were gassed during the 1960s and 1970s to control rabies 98 Until the 1980s badger culling in the United Kingdom was undertaken in the form of gassing to control the spread of bovine tuberculosis bTB Limited culling resumed in 1998 as part of a 10 year randomized trial cull which was considered by John Krebs and others to show that culling was ineffective Some groups called for a selective cull 99 while others favoured a programme of vaccination and vets support the cull on compassionate grounds as they say that the illness causes much suffering in badgers 99 In 2012 the government authorized a limited cull 100 led by the Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs Defra however this was later deferred with a wide range of reasons given 101 In August 2013 a full culling programme began where about 5 000 badgers were killed over six weeks in West Somerset and Gloucestershire by marksmen with high velocity rifles using a mixture of controlled shooting and free shooting some badgers were trapped in cages first The cull caused many protests with emotional economic and scientific reasons being cited The badger is considered an iconic species of the British countryside though is not endangered It was claimed by shadow ministers that The government s own figures show it will cost more than it saves and Lord Krebs who led the Randomised Badger Culling Trial in the 1990s said the two pilots will not yield any useful information 102 A scientific study of culling from 2013 to 2017 has shown a reduction of 36 55 incidence of bovine tuberculosis in cattle 3 Tameability edit nbsp A tame orphan badger with keeper nbsp A hand reared European badger showed at the celebration of the National Day of SwedenThere are several accounts of European badgers being tamed Tame badgers can be affectionate pets and can be trained to come to their owners when their names are called They are easily fed as they are not fussy eaters and will instinctively unearth rats moles and young rabbits without training though they do have a weakness for pork Although there is one record of a tame badger befriending a fox they generally do not tolerate the presence of cats and dogs and will chase them 103 dubious discuss Uses edit nbsp A shaving brush using badger hairBadger meat is eaten in some districts of the former Soviet Union though in most cases it is discarded 91 Smoked hams made from badgers were once highly esteemed in England Wales and Ireland 104 Some badger products have been used for medical purposes badger expert Ernest Neal quoting from an 1810 edition of The Sporting Magazine wrote The flesh blood and grease of the badger are very useful for oils ointments salves and powders for shortness of breath the cough of the lungs for the stone sprained sinews collachs etc The skin being well dressed is very warm and comfortable for ancient people who are troubled with paralytic disorders 104 The hair of the European badger has been used for centuries for making sporrans 104 and shaving brushes 93 105 Sporrans are traditionally worn as part of male Scottish highland dress They form a bag or pocket made from a pelt and a badger or other animal s mask may be used as a flap 106 The pelt was also formerly used for pistol furniture 93 References edit a b c d e f Kranz A Abramov A V Herrero J amp Maran T 2016 Meles meles IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T29673A45203002 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 1 RLTS T29673A45203002 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Kilshaw K Newman C Buesching CD Bunyan J Macdonald DW 2009 Coordinated latrine use by European badgers Meles meles Potential consequences for territory defense Journal of Mammalogy 90 5 1188 1198 doi 10 1644 08 MAMM A 200 1 JSTOR 27755113 S2CID 86435009 a b Downs SH Prosser A Ashton A Ashfield S Brunton LA Brouwer A Upton P Robertson A Donnelly CA Parry JE October 2019 Assessing effects from four years of industry led badger culling in England on the incidence of bovine tuberculosis in cattle 2013 2017 Scientific Reports 9 14666 14666 Bibcode 2019NatSR 914666D doi 10 1038 s41598 019 49957 6 PMC 6789095 PMID 31604960 Pallab Ghosh 11 October 2019 Badger culls have varying impacts on cattle TB BBC News Retrieved 21 November 2020 James Tapsfield 28 February 2014 Badger culls were cruel and ineffective says independent panel The Independent Retrieved 21 November 2020 Badger cull poll Nine out of ten want culling to end Farming UK 21 October 2014 Retrieved 21 November 2020 a b Weiner E S C Simpson J R 1989 The Oxford English Dictionary Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 861186 2 Retrieved 30 August 2008 Neal Ernest G and Cheeseman C L 1996 Badgers p 2 T amp A D Poyser ISBN 0 85661 082 8 Scotland s Wildlife Badgers and Development PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2015 06 19 Ernout Alfred Meillet Antoine 1979 1932 Dictionnaire etimologique de la langue latine in French 4th ed Paris Klincksieck Devoto Giacomo 1989 1979 Avviamento all etimologia italiana in Italian 6th ed Milano Mondadori a b Neal 1976 pp 150 152 Badger Geiriadur Welsh English English Welsh On line Dictionary University of Wales Trinity Saint David Retrieved 2013 10 05 Linnaeus C 1758 Ursus meles Caroli Linnaei Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis Vol Tomus I decima reformata ed Holmiae Laurentius Salvius p 48 in Latin Kurten 1968 pp 103 105 Spagnesi amp De Marina Marinis 2002 pp 226 227 Wozencraft W C 2005 Species Meles meles In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press pp 611 612 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Explore the Database www mammaldiversity org Retrieved 2021 06 25 Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 pp 1253 1254 Graells M de la P 1897 Meles Taxus Schreb Fauna Mastodologica Iberica Memorias de la Real Academia de Ciencias Exactas Fisicas y Naturales de Madrid Vol 17 Madrid pp 170 173 Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 pp 1254 1255 a b c Baryshnikov G F Puzachenko A Y Abramov A V 2003 New analysis of variability of check teeth in Eurasian badgers Carnivora Mustelidae Meles PDF Russian Journal of Theriology 1 2 133 149 doi 10 15298 rusjtheriol 01 2 07 Raichev E 2010 Adaptability to locomotion in snow conditions of fox gackal wild cat badger in the region of Sredna Gora Bulgaria Trakia Journal of Sciences 8 2 499 505 Polly P D amp MacLeod N 2008 Locomotion in fossil Carnivora an application of eigensurface analysis for morphometric comparison of 3D surfaces Palaeontologia Electronica 11 2 10 13 a b Harris amp Yalden 2008 p 427 a b c Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 pp 1234 1237 Neal 1976 p 23 Pease 1898 p 24 a b Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 pp 1241 1242 Kowalczyk R Jȩdrzejewska B Zalewski A 2003 Annual and circadian activity patterns of badgers Meles meles in Bialowieza Primeval Forest eastern Poland compared with other Palaearctic populations PDF Journal of Biogeography 30 3 463 472 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2699 2003 00804 x S2CID 56433126 dead link Delahay R J Carter S P Forrester G J Mitchell A Cheeseman C L 2006 Habitat correlates of group size bodyweight and reproductive performance in a high density Eurasian badger Meles meles population Journal of Zoology 270 3 437 447 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 2006 00165 x Rodriguez A Martin R Delibes M 1996 Space use and activity in a Mediterranean population of badgers Meles meles Acta Theriologica 41 1 59 72 doi 10 4098 AT arch 96 5 hdl 10261 50772 Revilla E Palomares F Delibes M 2001 Edge core effects and the effectiveness of traditional reserves in conservation Eurasian badgers in Donana National Park Conservation Biology 15 1 148 158 doi 10 1111 j 1523 1739 2001 99431 x S2CID 86810777 Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 p 1272 Neal 1976 p 25 Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 p 1238 a b c Harris amp Yalden 2008 p 428 Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 p 1214 Neal 1976 p 29 Pease 1898 p 29 Pease 1898 p 35 Neal 1976 p 27 a b Badger Meles meles British Wildlife Centre 2012 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2013 07 07 Abramov A V Puzachenko A Yu 2013 The taxonomic status of badgers Mammalia Mustelidae from Southwest Asia based on cranial morphometrics with the redescription of Meles canescens Zootaxa 3681 1 44 58 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 3681 1 2 PMID 25232583 a b c d Konig 1973 pp 162 163 a b Macdonald 2001 p 117 a b c d Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 430 431 Schmid T K Roper T J Christian S E Ostler J Conradt L amp Butler J 1993 Territorial marking with faeces in badgers Meles meles a comparison of boundary and hinterland latrine use Behaviour 127 3 4 289 307 doi 10 1163 156853993X00074 S2CID 22043004 Gallagher J amp Clifton Hadley R S 2005 Tuberculosis in badgers a review of the disease and its significance for other animals Research in Veterinary Science 69 3 203 217 doi 10 1053 rvsc 2000 0422 PMID 11124091 S2CID 12245569 a b c d e Harris amp Yalden 2008 p 432 a b c Harris amp Yalden 2008 p 431 Macdonald 2001 p 116 a b c Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 pp 1269 1272 a b c Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 pp 1279 1281 Neal 1976 p 83 Pease 1898 p 45 a b c d e Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 433 434 a b c Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 pp 1278 1279 Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 pp 1272 1233 a b Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 pp 1265 1268 a b c Wang Annie Meles meles Eurasian Badger ADW University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Edwards Robin 1980 Social Wasps Their Biology and Control W Sussex Great Britain Rentokil Limited Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 432 433 a b c d e Neal 1976 pp 70 80 Pease 1898 p 62 a b Sidorovich V E Rotenko I I amp Krasko D A 2011 March BadgerMeles melesspatial structure and diet in an area of low earthworm biomass and high predation risk In Annales Zoologici Fennici Vol 48 No 1 pp 1 16 Finnish Zoological and Botanical Publishing Olsson O Wirtberg J Andersson M amp Wirtberg I 1997 WolfCanis lupuspredation on mooseAlces alcesand roe deerCapreolus capreolusin south central Scandinavia Wildlife biology 3 1 13 25 Naves J Fernandez Gil A Rodriguez C Delibes M 2006 Brown Bear Food Habits at the Border of Its Range A Long Term Study Journal of Mammalogy 87 5 899 doi 10 1644 05 MAMM A 318R2 1 hdl 10261 50290 a b Butler J M amp Roper T J 1995 Escape tactics and alarm responses in badgers Meles meles a field experiment Ethology 99 4 313 322 Dale Thomas Francis The fox Longmans Green and Co 1906 Palomares F amp Caro T M 1999 Interspecific killing among mammalian carnivores The American Naturalist 153 5 492 508 Watson J 2010 The golden eagle Poyser Monographs A amp C Black Sorensen O J Totsas M Solstad T amp Rigg R 2008 Predation by a golden eagle on a brown bear cub Ursus 19 2 190 193 Korpimaki E amp Norrdahl K 1989 Avian predation on mustelids in Europe 1 occurrence and effects on body size variation and life traits Oikos 205 215 Heptner V G Naumov N P Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol II Part 1a SIRENIA AND CARNIVORA Sea cows Wolves and Bears p 107 Science Publishers Inc USA 1998 ISBN 1 886106 81 9 Bouvier G Burgisser H Sweitzer R 1951 Tuberculose chez un chamois Schweizer Arch Tierheil 93 689 695 Gallagher J Clifton Hadley R S 2000 Tuberculosis in badgers a review of the disease and its significance for other animals PDF Research in Veterinary Science 69 3 203 217 doi 10 1053 rvsc 2000 0422 PMID 11124091 a b c Harris amp Yalden 2008 p 435 Stewart Paul D Macdonald David W 2003 Badgers and Badger Fleas Strategies and Counter Strategies Ethology 109 9 751 763 doi 10 1046 j 1439 0310 2003 00910 x Monaghan Patricia The encyclopedia of Celtic mythology and folklore p 436 Infobase Publishing 2004 ISBN 0 8160 4524 0 Grahame Kenneth 1908 The Wind in the Willows Wordsworth Editions Ltd ISBN 978 1853260179 White T H 1939 The Once And Future King 200 Madison Ave New York NY 10016 MacDonald Ruth K Beatrix Potter p 47 Twayne Publishers 1986 ISBN 0 8057 6917 X C S Lewis 1951 Prince Caspian Harper Collins ISBN 978 0006716792 Dann Colin 1979 The Animals of Farthing Wood Egmont Publishing ISBN 1 4052 2552 1 Rowling J K 1997 Harry Potter and the Philosopher s Stone Bloomsbury ISBN 0 7475 3269 9 Jacques Brian 2001 Tribes of Redwall Badgers Red Fox ISBN 0 09 941714 6 Comedy Bodger and Badger BBC Retrieved 2013 06 20 Suomen kunnallisvaakunat in Finnish Suomen Kunnallisliitto 1982 ISBN 951 773 085 3 Vaakunat ja tunnukset Nurmijarvi in Finnish a b Heptner amp Sludskii 2001 pp 1281 1282 Pease 1898 p 36 a b c EB 1878 a b EB 1911 Protection of Animals Act 1911 revised OPSI website Archived from the original on 2009 05 01 Retrieved 2009 06 16 UK Government Protection of Badgers Act 1992 Retrieved October 7 2015 Protection of Badgers Act 1992 OPSI website Archived from the original on 2009 08 14 Retrieved 2009 06 16 The European badger Meles meles Archived 2012 09 01 at the Wayback Machine badger org uk a b Moody Oliver 2013 04 27 Badger cull is necessary to stop them suffering say vets The Times Wildlife Retrieved 2013 08 30 Carrington D 2011 12 11 Badger culling will go ahead in 2012 The Guardian Retrieved 2013 08 30 Carrington D 2012 Badger cull postponed until 2013 The Guardian Retrieved August 30 2013 Badger cull begins in Somerset in attempt to tackle TB BBC 2013 Retrieved August 30 2013 Pease 1898 pp 58 61 a b c Neal 1976 pp 152 154 Griffiths H I Thomas D H 1997 The Conservation and Management of the European Badger Meles Meles Strasbourg Council of Europe p 53 ISBN 978 9 28 713447 9 Sporran wearers may need licence BBC News 2007 06 24 Retrieved 2013 07 11 Works cited edit Baynes T S ed 1878 Badger Encyclopaedia Britannica vol 3 9th ed New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 227 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Badger Encyclopaedia Britannica vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 188 Harris S Yalden D 2008 Mammals of the British Isles Fourth Revised ed Mammal Society ISBN 978 0 906282 65 6 Kurten B 1968 The Badger Meles meles Linne Pleistocene mammals of Europe Reprint 2017 ed London and New York Routledge pp 104 105 ISBN 9781351499484 Heptner V G Sludskii A A 2001 Badger Meles meles Linnaeus 1758 Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol II Part 1b Carnivores Mustelidae and Procyonidae Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Libraries and National Science Foundation pp 1232 1282 ISBN 90 04 08876 8 Konig C 1973 Mammals London William Collins ISBN 0 00 212080 1 Macdonald D 2001 The New Encyclopedia of Mammals Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 850823 9 Neal E 1976 The Badger New Naturalist Fifth ed London Collins ISBN 9780002193993 Pease A E 1898 The badger a monograph London Lawrence and Bullen Spagnesi M De Marina Marinis M 2002 Mammiferi d Italia PDF Quaderni di Conservazione della Natura in Italian ISSN 1592 2901 permanent dead link External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Meles meles nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Meles meles ARKive Photographs and video The Badger Trust representing over 80 British badger groups Scottish Badgers Steve Jackson s Badger Pages Facts about and photos of the badgers of the world Badgerland The Definitive On Line Guide to Badgers Meles meles in the UK Badgerwatcher com A guide to watching badgers in the UK Wildlife Online Natural History of the European Badger Lancashire Badger Group Dublin and Wicklow Badger Group Archived 2021 06 18 at the Wayback Machine Science amp Nature Animals BBC Badgers in the Netherlands Badgergroup Brabant Foundation Badger Survey in the Netherlands 2000 2001 The Census Foundation Waarneming nl Originally a Dutch site but you can change language at the top of the page Sightings pictures and distribution maps of European badgers in the Netherlands Badgers in France L assiociation Meles A video of an adult european badger This is a close up video showing their behavior Video of a European Badger feeding on peanuts by its sett Video of an evening s badger watching in mid Wales U K Badgers and TB in the UK edit DEFRA UK government department position on badgers and TB Executive summary of the Krebs Report Bovine Tuberculosis in Cattle and Badgers 1997 The Randomised Badger Culling Trial Godfray Report Independent Scientific Review of the Randomised Badger Culling Trial and Associated Epidemiological Research March 2004 PDF format National Farmers Union proposals to control badgers would involve repeal of the 1992 act July 2005 permanent dead link NFBG now Badger Trust response to the National Farmers Union proposals August 2005Claims of continued badger hunting in the UK edit Allegations of lamping among other practices were made in the appendix to the NFBG now Badger Trust response to the Krebs Report Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title European badger amp oldid 1207459913, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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