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European polecat

The European polecat (Mustela putorius), also known as the common polecat, black polecat and forest polecat, is a mustelid species native to western Eurasia and North Africa. It is of a generally dark brown colour, with a pale underbelly and a dark mask across the face. Occasionally, colour mutations including albinos, leucists, isabellinists, xanthochromists, amelanists and erythrists occur.[2] It has a shorter, more compact body than other Mustela species,[3] a more powerfully built skull and dentition,[4] is less agile,[5] and is well known for having the characteristic ability to secrete a particularly foul-smelling liquid to mark its territory.

European polecat
Temporal range: Middle Pleistocene – Recent
Welsh polecat (M. p. anglia) at the British Wildlife Centre, Newchapel, Surrey
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Mustelidae
Genus: Mustela
Species:
M. putorius
Binomial name
Mustela putorius
Geographic range

It is much less territorial than other mustelids, with animals of the same sex frequently sharing home ranges.[6] Like other mustelids, the European polecat is polygamous, with pregnancy occurring after mating, following induced ovulation.[7] It usually gives birth in early summer to litters consisting of five to 10 kits, which become independent at the age of two to three months. The European polecat feeds on small rodents, birds, amphibians and reptiles.[8] It occasionally cripples its prey by piercing its brain with its teeth and stores it, still living, in its burrow for future consumption.[9][10]

The European polecat originated in Western Europe during the Middle Pleistocene, with its closest living relatives being the steppe polecat, the black-footed ferret and the European mink. With the two former species, it can produce fertile offspring,[11] though hybrids between it and the latter species tend to be sterile, and are distinguished from their parent species by their larger size and more valuable pelts.[12]

The European polecat is thought to be the sole ancestor of the ferret, which was domesticated more than 2,000 years ago for the purpose of hunting vermin.[13] The species has otherwise been historically viewed negatively by humans. In Britain especially, the polecat was persecuted by gamekeepers, and became synonymous with promiscuity in early English literature. During modern times, the polecat is still scantly represented in popular culture when compared to other rare British mammals, and misunderstandings of its behaviour still persist in some rural areas.[14] Since 2008, it has been classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List due to its wide range and large numbers.[1]

Etymology and naming edit

The word "polecat" first appeared after the Norman Conquest of England, written (in Middle English) as polcat. While the second syllable is largely self-explanatory, the origin of the first is unclear. It is possibly derived from the French poule, meaning "chicken", likely in reference to the species' fondness for poultry, or it may be a variant of the Old English ful, meaning "foul". In Middle English, the species was referred to as foumart, meaning "foul marten", in reference to its strong odour.[citation needed] In Old French, the polecat was called fissau, which was derived from the Low German and Scandinavian verb for "to make a disagreeable smell". This was later corrupted in English as fitchew or fitchet, which itself became the word "fitch", which is used for the polecat's pelt.[15] The word fitchet is the root word for the North American fisher, which was named by Dutch colonists in America who noted similarities between the two species.[16] In some countries such as New Zealand, the term "fitch" has taken on a wider use to refer to related creatures such as ferrets, especially when farmed for their fur.[17][18]

A 2002 article in The Mammal Society's Mammal Review contested the European polecat's status as an animal indigenous to Britain on account of a scarce fossil record and linguistic evidence. Unlike most native British mammals, the polecat's Welsh name (ffwlbart, derived from the Middle English foulmart) is not of Celtic origin, much as the Welsh names of invasive species such as the European rabbit and fallow deer (cwningen, derived from the Middle English konyng and danas, derived from the Old French dain, respectively) are of Middle English or Old French origin. Polecats are not mentioned in Anglo-Saxon or Welsh literature prior to the Norman conquest of England in 1066, with the first recorded mention of the species in the Welsh language occurring in the 14th century's Llyfr Coch Hergest and in English in Chaucer's The Pardoner's Tale (1383). In contrast, attestations of the Welsh word for pine marten (bele), date back at least to the 10th century Welsh Laws and possibly much earlier in northern England.[19]

Local and indigenous names edit

Dialectal English names edit

Probably no other animal on the British list has had as many colloquial names as the polecat. In southern England it was generally referred to as 'fitchou' whereas in the north it was 'foumat or foumard... However there were a host of others including endless spelling variations: philbert, fulmer, fishock, filibart, poulcat, poll cat, etc. Charles Oldham identified at least 20 different versions of the name in the Hertfordshire/Bedfordshire area alone.

— Roger Lovegrove (2007)[20]

Latin name edit

As well as the several indigenous names referring to smell (see above), the scientific name Mustela putorius is also derived from this species' foul smell. The Latin putorius translates to "stench" or "stink" and is the origin of the English word putrid.

Evolution edit

The earliest true polecat was Mustela stromeri, which appeared during the late Villafranchian. It was considerably smaller than the present form, thus indicating polecats evolved at a relatively late period. The oldest modern polecat fossils occur in Germany, Britain and France, and date back to the Middle Pleistocene. The European polecat's closest relatives are the steppe polecat and black-footed ferret, with which it is thought to have shared Mustela stromeri as a common ancestor. The European polecat is, however, not as maximally adapted in the direction of carnivory as the steppe polecat, being less specialised in skull structure and dentition.[6][30][31][32] The European polecat likely diverged from the steppe polecat 1.5 million years ago based on IRBP, though cytochrome b transversions indicate a younger date of 430,000 years.[33] It is also closely related to the European mink, with which it can hybridise.[34]

Domestication edit

 
Women hunting rabbits with a ferret in the Queen Mary Psalter

Morphological, cytological and molecular studies confirm the European polecat is the sole ancestor of the ferret, thus disproving any connection with the steppe polecat, which was once thought to have contributed to the ferret's creation.[13] Ferrets were first mentioned by Aristophanes in 450 BC and by Aristotle in 350 BC. Greek and Roman writers in the first century AD were the first to attest on the ferret's use in bolting rabbits from their burrows. The first accurate descriptions of ferrets come from Strabo during 200 AD, when ferrets were released onto the Balearic Islands to control rabbit populations. As the European rabbit is native to the Iberian Peninsula and northwest Africa, the European polecat likely was first domesticated in these regions.[35]

The ferret and European polecat are similar in both size and portions, to the point that dark-coloured ferrets are almost indistinguishable from their wild cousins, though the ferret's skull has a smaller cranial volume, and has a narrower postorbital constriction.[13] Compared to the European polecat, the ferret has a much smaller brain, though this comparison has not been made with Mediterranean polecats, from which ferrets likely derive.[36] The theory of a Mediterranean origin is further strengthened because the ferret is less tolerant of cold than northern polecat subspecies.[37] Unlike other subspecies, which are largely solitary, the ferret will readily live in social groups.[38] The ferret is also slower in all its movements than the polecat, and hardly ever makes any use of its anal scent glands.[39] Overall, the ferret represents a neotenous form of polecat.[40]

Subspecies edit

As of 2005, seven subspecies are recognised.[41]

Subspecies Trinomial authority Description Range Synonyms
Common polecat
M. p. putorius

(Nominate subspecies)  

Linnaeus, 1758 Larger than mosquensis, with darker, fluffier and more lustrous fur[42] Western European Russia, western Belarus, western Ukraine, Central and Western Europe and North Africa flavicans (de Sélys Longchamps, 1839)

foetens (Thunberge, 1789)
foetidus (Gray, 1843)
iltis (Boddaert, 1785)
infectus (Ogérien, 1863)
manium (Barrett-Hamilton, 1904)
putorius (Blyth, 1842)
verus (Brandt in Simashko, 1851)
vison (de Sélys Longchamps, 1839)
vulgaris (Griffith, 1827)

Welsh polecat
M. p. anglia

 

Pocock, 1936 England and Wales
Mediterranean polecat
M. p. aureola

 

Barrett-Hamilton, 1904 A small subspecies with yellowish underfur;[43] it may be the ancestral subspecies from which the domestic ferret is derived, based on the characteristics of the teeth.[44] The southern and western portions of the Iberian Peninsula
Scottish polecat
M. p. caledoniae

 

Tetley, 1939 Scotland
Domestic ferret
M. p. furo

 

Linnaeus, 1758 A domesticated form, its skull is generally typical in conformation to the nominate subspecies, though with features in common with the steppe polecat.[31] Typically, the dark facial fur does not extend to the nose, while the pale cheek patches are very extensive and contrast poorly with the dark mask. One or more paws may be white, with white guard hairs often being well distributed over the body, particularly on the hind quarters.[45] Worldwide in association with humans albus (Bechstein, 1801)

furoputorius (Link, 1795)
subrufo (Gray, 1865)

Middle Russian polecat
M. p. mosquensis
Heptner, 1966 A small subspecies, with relatively light, slightly fluffy fur with little lustre[42] European Russia orientalis (Brauner, 1929)

orientalis (Polushina, 1955)
ognevi (Kratochvil)

Carpathian polecat
M. p. rothschildi
Pocock, 1932 A very lightly coloured subspecies, its fur closely approaches that of the steppe polecat.[46] Dobruja, Romania

Description edit

Build edit

 
Skull
 
Skeleton

The appearance of the European polecat is typical of members of the genus Mustela, though it is generally more compact in conformation and, although short-legged, has a less elongated body than the European mink or steppe polecat.[3][47] The tail is short, about ⅓ its body length.[3] The eyes are small, with dark brown irises. The hind toes are long and partially webbed, with weakly curved 4 mm-long, nonretractable claws. The front claws are strongly curved, partially retractable, and measure 6 mm in length.[48] The feet are moderately long and more robust than in other members of the genus.[47] The polecat's skull is relatively coarse and massive, more so than the mink's, with a strong, but short and broad facial region and strongly developed projections. In comparison to other similarly sized mustelids, the polecat's teeth are very strong, large and massive in relation to skull size. Sexual dimorphism in the skull is apparent in the lighter, narrower skull of the female, which also has weaker projections.[4] The polecat's running gait is not as complex and twisting as that of the mink or stoat, and it is not as fast as the mountain weasel (solongoi), stoat or least weasel, as it can be outrun by a conditioned man. Its sensory organs are well developed, though it is unable to distinguish between colours.[5]

The dimensions of the European polecat vary greatly. The species does not conform to Bergmann's rule, with the pattern of size variation seeming to follow a trend of size increase along an east–west axis.[49] Males measure 350–460 mm in body length and females are 290–394 mm. The tail measures 115–167 mm in males and 84–150 mm in females. Adult males in middle Europe weigh 1,000-1,500 grams and females 650-815 grams. Gigantism is known among polecats, but specimens exhibiting this are likely the products of polecat-mink hybridisation.[50]

Fur edit

 
A young erythristic Welsh polecat at the British Wildlife Centre, Surrey, England

The winter fur of the European polecat is brownish black or blackish brown, the intensity of which is determined by the colour of the long guard hairs. On the back and flanks, the dark tone is brightened by bright whitish-yellowish, sometimes yellowish-greyish underfur which shows through. The lightly coloured underfur is not equally visible on different parts of the body. On the back and hindquarters, the underfur is almost completely covered by the dark guard hairs. On the flanks, though, the lightening is well defined, and contrasts sharply with the general tone of the back. The throat, lower neck, chest and abdomen are black or blackish brown. The limbs are pure black or black with brown tints, while the tail is black or blackish brown, completely lacking light underfur. The area around and between the eyes is black-brown, with a longitudinal stripe of similar colour along the top of the nose. The ears are dark brown and edged with white. The summer fur is short, sparse and coarse. It is greyer, duller and lacking in the lustre of the winter fur. The underfur is more weakly developed in the summer fur, and has a brownish-grey or rusty-grey colour.[2] The polecat is a good swimmer,[51] but its fur is not as well insulated against cold water as the American mink's; while a mink will take 118 minutes to cool in a water temperature of 8 °C (46 °F), the polecat cools down much faster at 26–28 minutes.[52]

Polecats were found in two major phenotypes a typic one and a dark fur one with no black mask.[53] Colour mutations include albinos, leucists, isabellinists, xanthochromists, amelanists, and erythrists. In typical erythristic individuals, the underfur is usually bright reddish. The guard hairs on the trunk are bright reddish or reddish brown. Black guard hairs are absent on the lower body and head. In some rare cases, the guard hairs are so light, they are almost indistinguishable from the pale-yellow underfur. These individuals are called "amelanistic". In these cases, the whole animal is a very light golden-yellow colour.[2] These individuals are called "isabelline" or "xanthochromistic".

Behaviour edit

 
A group of common polecats in Sweden

Social and territorial behaviour edit

The European polecat has definite home ranges that vary according to season, habitat, sex and social status.[54] Breeding females settle in discrete areas, whereas breeding males and dispersing juveniles have more fluid home ranges, and are more mobile.[55] Both males and females share home ranges with other members of the same sex; males have larger home ranges than females, but evidence of territorial marking is sparse.[6]

European polecats use several den sites distributed throughout their home ranges and are often most active around rabbit warrens. Some European polecats use farm buildings or haystacks as daytime resting sites in winter.[6] Occasionally, European polecats use abandoned European badger or red fox burrows.[56] Like other mustelids, the polecat is usually a silent animal, though it will growl fiercely when angered, and squeak when distressed. It also emits a low, mewling cry to its mate or offspring.[10]

Reproduction and development edit

The European polecat is a seasonal breeder, with no courtship rituals. During the mating season, the male grabs the female by the neck and drags her about to stimulate ovulation, then copulates for up to an hour. The species is polygamous, with each male polecat mating with several females. The gestation period lasts 40–43 days, with litters usually being born in May-early June. Each litter typically consists of five to 10 kits. At birth, the kits weigh 9-10 g and measure 55–70 mm in body length; they are blind and deaf. At the age of one week, the kits are covered in silky, white fur, which is replaced with a cinnamon brown-greyish woolly coat at the age of 3–4 wk. Weaning begins at three weeks of age, while the permanent dentition erupts after 7–8 wk. The kits become independent after two to three months.[9] Females are very protective of their young, and have even been known to confront humans approaching too closely to their litters.[57]

Ecology edit

 
Scottish polecat guarding a rabbit carcass from a least weasel, as painted by Archibald Thorburn

Diet edit

 
Common polecat attacking a grey partridge, as exhibited at the Bulgarian National Museum of Natural History

The European polecat's diet consists of mouse-like rodents, followed by amphibians and birds. Its most frequent prey item in the former Soviet Union is the common vole and rarely the red-backed vole. In large river floodlands, water vole are common prey. In spring and winter, amphibians (especially grass frogs and green toads) become important food items. Selective predation on male frogs by the polecat decreases the occurrence of polyandry in frog populations.[58] However, because amphibians have little calorific value, the polecat never grows fat on them, no matter how many it consumes. In Central Europe, the diet in winter months is dominated by birds including quail, grey partridges, grouse, chickens, pigeons and passerines. Seasonal changes in the activity rhythm is synchronised with the activity of the main prey.[59] Some species only rarely preyed upon by the polecat include European hedgehogs, asp vipers, grass snakes, lizards and insects.[8] In Britain, it commonly kills brown rats and European rabbits, and is capable of killing larger prey, such as geese and hares.[9] One polecat was reported to frequently wait at a riverbank and catch eels, which it took back to its burrow.[60] The European polecat hunts its prey by stalking it and seizing it with its canine teeth, killing the animal with a bite to the neck. This killing method is instinctive, but perfected with practice. The polecat sometimes caches its food, particularly during seasonal gluts of frogs and toads.[61] Sometimes, the polecat does not kill these, but bites them at the base of the skull, thus paralyzing them and keeping them fresh for later consumption.[9] Although they are normally shy around humans, naturalist Alfred Brehm in his Brehms Tierleben mentions an exceptional case in which three polecats attacked a baby in Hesse.[57] During winter, some European polecats raid beehives and feed on honey.[62]

Enemies and competitors edit

Although the European polecat can coexist with the European mink, it suffers in areas where the invasive American mink also occurs, as the latter species feeds on the same mammals as the polecat much more frequently than the European mink, and has been known to drive the polecat out of wetland habitats.[63] In areas where the European polecat is sympatric with the steppe polecat, the two species overlap greatly in choice of food, though the former tends to consume more household foods and birds, while the latter preys on mammals more frequently.[64] There is at least one record of a beech marten killing a polecat.[65] The European polecat may prey on the much smaller least weasel.[66]

Hybridisation edit

 
Heads of a 1) polecat, 2) ferret and 3) polecat-ferret hybrid

In some parts of Britain, the abandonment of domestic ferrets has led to ferret-polecat crossbreeds living in the wild. Ferrets were likely first brought to Britain after the Norman Conquest of England, or as late as the fourteenth century.[11] Crossbreeds between the two animals typically have a distinct white throat patch, white feet and white hairs interspersed among the fur.[13] Typically, first generation crossbreeds between polecats and ferrets develop their wild parents' fear of humans if left with their mothers during the critical socialisation period between 7½ and 8½ weeks of age.[67]

The European polecat can hybridise with the European mink, producing offspring termed khor'-tumak by Russian furriers[34] and khonorik by fanciers.[12] Such hybridisation is very rare in the wild, and typically only occurs where the European mink population is in decline.[68] A polecat-mink hybrid has a poorly defined facial mask, yellow fur on the ears, grey-yellow underfur and long, dark brown guard hairs. It is fairly large, with a male attaining the peak sizes known for European polecats weighing 1,120–1,746 g (2 lb 7+12 oz – 3 lb 13+916 oz) and measuring 41–47 cm (16–18+12 in) in length; a female is much larger than a female European minks weighing 742 g (26+316 oz) and measuring 37 cm (14+12 in) in length.[63] The majority of polecat-mink hybrids have skulls bearing greater similarities to those of polecats than to minks; they can swim well and burrow for food like polecats, but are difficult to tame and breed, as males are sterile.[69] The first captive polecat-mink hybrid was created in 1978 for fur, but breeding of these hybrids declined as European mink populations decreased.[12] Studies on the behavioural ecology of free-ranging polecat-mink hybrids in the upper reaches of the Lovat River indicate that hybrids stray from aquatic habitats more readily than minks, and tolerate both parent species entering their territories, though the hybrid's larger size, especially the male's deters intrusion. During summer, the diets of wild polecat-mink hybrids are more similar to those of minks than to the polecats, as they feed predominantly on frogs. During winter, their diets overlap more with those of polecats, and will eat a larger proportion of rodents than in the summer, though they still rely heavily on frogs and rarely scavenge ungulate carcasses as polecats do.[63]

The European polecat can also hybridise with the Asian steppe polecat or the domestic ferret to produce fertile offspring.[11] European-steppe polecat hybrids are very rare, despite their sympatry in several areas. Nevertheless, hybrids have been recorded in southern Ukraine, the Kursk and Voronezh Oblasts, the Trans-Carpathians and several other localities.[70]

Range, history and conservation edit

The European polecat is widespread in the western Palaearctic to the Urals in the Russian Federation, though it is absent from Ireland, northern Scandinavia, and much of the Balkans and eastern Adriatic coast. It occurs only marginally in northern Greece. It is found in Morocco in the Rif Mountains, from sea level to 2400 m. Its domesticated form, the ferret, was introduced in Britain, and some Mediterranean islands and New Zealand.[1]

Britain edit

There are ... some extreme examples, but the fact remains that throughout England and Wales polecats were consistently persecuted at a greater intensity than any other species of mustelid. Did this level of persecution have an effect on overall numbers or did it purely satisfy local vengeance? ... The polecat may be the best example of a species for which the level of killing really did make a difference to the population. The developing sporting estates then administered the coup de grâce.

— Roger Lovegrove (2007)[71]

In Britain, the European polecat was regarded as a serious poultry predator prior to the introduction of wire netting, therefore eliminating it was considered the only option to protect stock. This extreme enmity does not appear to have been universal however. Speaking of Merioneth (Gwynedd) Peter Hope Jones reported that "for a county supposedly well-placed within the known past distribution of this species, Merioneth has relatively very few records of Polecats amongst its parish bounty payments. Perhaps this animal was not generally considered to be an important pest, but whatever the real reason, in only two parishes are direct references made to this species by the name by which we know it today. In the years from 1729 to 1732 about twenty were killed in Towyn parish, where 2/6 was paid for a full-grown polecat and half this sum for a young 'kittin'. Records for Llanfor.... show that only 42 were killed in the 39-year period from 1720 to 1758, the payment being exactly half the going rate for a fox, i.e. 2/6 for a full-grown polecat, and 1/3 for a young animal".[72]

In Kent, for example, at least 42 parishes paid bounties for polecats, of which three extended into the 19th century, though by this time only single individuals were recorded, and usually after gaps of many years.[20] In the Kingdom of Scotland, during the reign of David II, an export duty of 4d. was imposed on each polecat fur trimmer, which was raised to 8d. in 1424. The species held an important place in Scotland's fur markets; the annual Dumfries Fur Fair (1816–1874) sold 400 polecat pelts in 1829 and 600 in 1831. The following year, a contemporary account described polecat skins as "a drug on the market". In 1856, the number of sold pelts decreased to 240, 168 in 1860, 12 in 1866 and none in 1869.[73] The decline was halted with the decrease in the intensity of gamekeeping during the 20 year interval between the First and Second World Wars.[74]

The European polecat is afforded both national and European protection; it is listed on Schedule 6 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 and Regulation 41 of the Conservation (Natural Habitats, &c.) Regulations 1994 and is listed on Annex V of the Habitats Directive.[75] A survey carried out by the Vincent Wildlife Trust in 2015 found that the polecat had spread into areas (such as East Anglia and South Yorkshire) where they had not been seen for 100 years. Naturalist Chris Packham termed the spread "...one of the great natural recoveries."[76]

The New Forest in Hampshire also now has a small polecat population, a fact discovered after scientists set up cameras to film pine martens.[77]

France edit

The European polecat is present in all of France's territories, excepting Corsica, and has been in a state of decline for several decades.[78] Nevertheless, it is listed as Least Concern on France's Red Data Book. The European polecat is rare in numerous regions or départements. In the Rhone-Alps region, its population has undergone a sizeable decline since the 1990s, largely as a consequence of poisoning campaigns against muskrats. A 1999 study on the decline of polecats in this region indicated the species has little chance of surviving there. Elsewhere, it is considered either rare or sporadic in 22 districts and absent or extirpated in 22 others. In Drôme, for example, polecat populations have been decreasing since 1975, and have disappeared in 27 communes in Isère. Its numbers are declining in Morvan and Ariège, and is thinly distributed in Brittany. Although present in Aquitaine, its numbers have been dropping since the 1950s, and is very rare in the mountain regions. In Normandy, the speed of the polecat's decline has somewhat decreased. In the alpine départements, its range is limited by altitude, as the species relies on more Mediterranean climates to thrive. It is, however, especially abundant in the irrigated Crau, but is absent on the eastern part of the area, apparently being restricted by the valleys of the Durance and Rhone Rivers. The largest populations occur in Northern France: Pas de Calais, Central France; Alsace, Lorraine and the areas of the Loire with the Vendée, which holds the largest record of polecat observations. It is common in all the départements of Champagne-Ardenne.[79]

Former Soviet Union edit

The western border of the European polecat's range in the former Soviet Union begins from the mouth of the Danube in the south approximately to northwest of Suoyarvi, on the Finnish border in the north. In Karelia, its northern border extends from the former point towards the southeast to the Spassk Bay of Lake Onega, thereby passing around the West Karelian uplands from the south and then, passing around these uplands from the east, it suddenly ascends directly to the north passing in particular, near the western shore of Segozer and reaches Rugozer. From there, the border line turns northeast, crossing the Lakhta and reaching Kem on the White Sea. From Archangelsk, the border reaches Mezen, thus attaining the species' most northerly range. From the Mezen River's mouth, the border abruptly returns south, approaching closer to the upper Mezen near 64° lat. From there, the polecat's northern border goes on to the upper Vychegda River, and descends further on southwards and in the Urals. Its eastern range apparently extends along the Urals, embracing Sverdlovsk from the west. It is probably absent in the southern Urals, where the steppe polecat occurs. The southern border of the polecat's range starts in the west of the Danube's mouth and extends eastward along the coast of the Black Sea reaching the mouth of the Dnepr, from which it moves back from the shore of the Azov Sea and, along it, goes to the mouth of the Don. From the mouth and lower course of the Don, its range passes into the steppe region of western and middle Ciscaucasia. The European polecat is absent from the Saratov steppes of Transvolga, instead being encountered only in the extreme lower Bolshoy and Maly Irgiz Rivers. Further on, the border goes to the north along the Volga River. It steeply returns east somewhat south at the Samara bend, passing around Obshchy Syrt, reaching the Urals at the latitude of Magnitogorsk. The range of the polecat within the former Soviet Union has expanded northwards. From 1930 to 1952 for example, the polecat colonised northwestern Karelia and southern Finland.[80]

Prior to the First World War, the Russian Empire produced more than 50% of global polecat skins. The harvesting of polecats in Russia increased substantially after the October Revolution, which coincided with Western Europe's decline in polecat numbers. The Russian population of polecats decreased somewhat after the Second World War, and their hunting was subsequently discouraged, as polecats were acknowledged to limit harmful rodent populations.[81]

Diseases and parasites edit

The European polecat may suffer from distemper, influenza, the common cold and pneumonia. Occasionally, it is affected by malignant tumours and hydrocephaly. It commonly has broken teeth and, on rarer occasions, fatal abscesses on the jaw, head and neck. In mainland Europe, it is a carrier of trichinosis, leptospirosis, toxoplasmosis and adiaspiromycosis. Incidences of polecats carrying rabies are high in some localized areas.[82]

Ectoparasites known to infest polecats include flea species such as Ctenocephalides felis, Archaeospylla erinacei, Nosopsyllus fasciatus and Paraceras melis. The tick Ixodes hexagonus is the polecat's most common ectoparasite, which is sometimes found in large numbers on the neck and behind the ears. Another, less common species to infest polecats is I. canisuga. The biting louse Trichodectes jacobi is also known to infest polecats.[82]

Endoparasites carried by polecats include the cestodes Taenia tenuicollis and T. martis and the nematodes Molineus patens, Strongyloides papillosus, Capilliaria putorii, Filaroides martis and Skjrabingylus nasicola.[82]

Relationships with humans edit

Hunting and fur use edit

 
Polecat skins (fitch) in Copenhagen

The polecat has earned for itself a most unenviable fame, having been long celebrated as one of the most noxious pests to which the farmyard is liable. Slightly smaller than the marten, and not quite so powerful, it is found to be a more deadly enemy to rabbits, game and poultry, than any other animal its size.

European polecat hunting was once a favourite sport of the Westmorland dalesmen and the Scots, who hunted them at night in midwinter. However, the majority of polecat deaths caused by humans have been accidental, having mostly been caused by steel traps set for rabbits.[84] Hunting polecats by moonlight was also a popular diversion among midland schoolboys.[62] Until the mid-19th century, polecats in Britain were hunted from early February to late April with mixed packs of hunting dogs on the Welsh hills and Lakeland fells, though otterhounds were used on the fells, the Border country and the Scottish Lowlands.[85] John Tucker Edwardes, the creator of the Sealyham terrier, used captured wild male polecats to test the gameness of yearling terriers.[86] In the former Soviet Union, polecats are hunted chiefly in late autumn and early winter with guns and hunting dogs, as well as foothold traps and wooden snares. However, even in season, hunters rarely catch more than 10-15 polecats. The species does not constitute an important element in former Soviet commercial hunting, and is usually only caught incidentally.[81]

The European polecat is a valuable fur bearer, whose pelt (fitch) is more valuable than the steppe polecat's.[81] Its skin is used primarily in the production of jackets, capes and coats. It is particularly well suited for trimmings for women's clothing. The tail is sometimes used for the making of paintbrushes.[87] One disadvantage of polecat skin, however, is its unpleasant odour, which is difficult to remove.[57] The European polecat was first commercially farmed for its fur in Great Britain during the 1920s, but was only elevated to economic importance in Finland in 1979. It never became popular in the United States and Canada, due to import laws regarding non-native species. It did gain economic importance in the USSR, though.[88]

 
Welsh polecat being fed at the British Wildlife Centre, Newchapel, Surrey

Tameability edit

Unlike the stoat and least weasel, the European polecat is easy to breed in captivity.[86] According to Aubyn Trevor-Battye, the European polecat is difficult to tame, but is superior to its domesticated form, the ferret, in bolting rats from their holes due to its greater agility. It is prone to attempting escape once finished bolting rats, but can be easily outrun.[89] Polecat kits can be successfully raised and suckled by mother cats.[57] According to Owen's Welsh Dictionary, the Gwythelians (early Irish settlers in northern Wales) kept polecats as pets.[90] Attempts to tame the European polecat are generally hampered by the adult's nervous and unsociable disposition. First generation hybrids between polecats and ferrets, conceived to improve the latter's bloodlines, produce animals with personalities similar to their wild parent's.[40]

In culture edit

In Britain, the polecat historically has had a negative reputation. References to the polecat in early English literature are often vilifying, usually being synonymous with prostitutes and generally immoral people, as is the case in Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor: "Out of my door, you witch, you hag, you baggage, you polecat, you runyon!" In some rural areas, the belief persists that the polecat chews off the ears of sleeping sheep and can paralyse or kill men by jumping on them from behind and biting their necks.[14] However, in some regions, it was widely believed among farmers that allowing a polecat to nest in a chicken coop would ensure the animal would not kill the poultry out of gratitude, and instead kill vermin. Cases in which polecats did kill poultry were attributed to animals which were guests at other farms.[83] In Wales, polecats were widely believed to migrate in large numbers every spring to the great peat bog of Tregaron to feed on the breeding frogs there. This was later proven to be incorrect, as the climate in Tregaron is too wet for the European polecat, and it does not hold large frog populations.[85] Compared to other British carnivores, such as otters and badgers, the polecat has received little exposure in popular media. A study conducted on rural school children showed only 3.8% of the surveyed children could identify polecats in photographs, whereas 83.7% correctly identified otters.[14]

Gallery edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Skumatov, D.; Abramov, A.V.; Herrero, J.; Kitchener, A.; Maran, T.; Kranz, A.; Sándor, A.; Saveljev, A.; Savouré-Soubelet, A.; Guinot-Ghestem, M.; Zuberogoitia, I.; Birks, J.D.S.; Weber, A.; Melisch, R.; Ruette, S. (2016). "Mustela putorius". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T41658A45214384. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-1.RLTS.T41658A45214384.en. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 1109–1111
  3. ^ a b c Heptner & Sludskii 2002, p. 1108
  4. ^ a b Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 1112–1113
  5. ^ a b Heptner & Sludskii 2002, p. 1130
  6. ^ a b c d Harris & Yalden 2008, pp. 480–481
  7. ^ Williams, Elizabeth S.; Thorne, E. Tom; Kwiatkowski, Donald R.; Lutz, Kim; Anderson, Sandy L. (1992). "Comparative vaginal cytology of the estrous cycle of black-footed ferrets (Mustela nigripes), Siberian polecats (M. eversmanni), and domestic ferrets (M. putorius furo)". Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation. 4 (1): 38–44. doi:10.1177/104063879200400109. PMID 1554767. S2CID 11010465.
  8. ^ a b Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 1127–1129
  9. ^ a b c d Harris & Yalden 2008, pp. 482–483
  10. ^ a b Johnston 1903, p. 155
  11. ^ a b c Davison, A.; Birks, J.D.; Griffiths, S.H.I.; Kitchener, A.C.; Biggins, D. & Butlin, R.K. (1999). "Hybridization and the phylogenetic relationship between polecats and domestic ferrets in Britain". Biological Conservation. 87 (2): 155–161. doi:10.1016/S0006-3207(98)00067-6.
  12. ^ a b c . Russian Ferret Society. Archived from the original on 31 July 2020. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
  13. ^ a b c d Harris & Yalden 2008, pp. 485–487
  14. ^ a b c Bidder, Owen (2009), The European Polecat: Unsung Species 2011-11-19 at the Wayback Machine, Natur Cymru, Summer/Haf 09
  15. ^ Johnston 1903, p. 154
  16. ^ Powell, R.A. (1981). "Mammalian Species: Martes pennanti" (PDF). The American Society of Mammalogists: 156:1–6. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  17. ^ "DOC's work with ferrets 2014-04-21 at the Wayback Machine", New Zealand Department of Conservation. Retrieved 20 April 2014.
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  19. ^ Brown, Duncan (2002) The foulmart: what’s in a name? 2011-09-03 at the Wayback Machine Mammal Rev., Volume 32, No. 2, 145–149
  20. ^ a b Lovegrove 2007, p. 198
  21. ^ Moore, A.W. (1924). "Foul-cat". A vocabulary of the Anglo-Manx dialect. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  22. ^ Carr, W. (1828). The dialect of Craven: in the West-Riding of the county of York. London: W. Crofts. p. 56.
  23. ^ Robinson, C.C. (1862). The dialect of Leeds and its neighbourhood: illustrated by conversations and tales of common life, etc. To which are added a copious glossary; notices of the various antiquities, manners, and customs, and general folk-lore of the district. London: J.R. Smith. p. 388.
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  32. ^ Kurtén Björn (1980), Pleistocene mammals of North America, Columbia University Press, ISBN 0-231-03733-3
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  35. ^ Lewington 2000, pp. 3–5
  36. ^ Hemmer 1990, p. 108
  37. ^ Clutton-Brock, J. (1987). A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals. London: British Museum (Natural History). p. 208. ISBN 0-521-34697-5.
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  44. ^ Hemmer 1990, pp. 49–50
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  47. ^ a b Miller 1912, p. 419
  48. ^ Harris & Yalden 2008, p. 477
  49. ^ De Marinis, A.M. (1995). "Craniometric variability of polecat Mustela putorius L. 1758 from North-Central Italy". Hystrix. 7 (1–2): 57–68.
  50. ^ Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 1114–1115
  51. ^ Lodé, T. (1999). "Comparative measurements of terrestrial and aquatic locomotion in Mustela lutreola and M. putorius" (PDF). Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde. 64: 110–115.
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  53. ^ Lodé, T. (2001). "Genetic divergence without spatial isolation in polecat Mustela putorius populations". Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 14 (2): 228–236. doi:10.1046/j.1420-9101.2001.00275.x.
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  57. ^ a b c d Brehm 1895, p. 158
  58. ^ Lodé, T.; Holveck, M.J.; Lesbarreres, D. & Pagano, A. (2004). "Sex-biased predation by polecats influences the mating system of frogs". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences. 271 (S6): S399–S401. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2004.0195. PMC 1810108. PMID 15801586.
  59. ^ Lodé, T. (1995). "Activity pattern of polecats Mustela putorius L. in relation to food habits and prey activity". Ethology. 100 (4): 295–308. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0310.1995.tb00334.x.
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  61. ^ Lodé, T. (1996). "Predation of European polecat upon frog and toad populations at breeding sites in western France". Ethology Ecology & Evolution. 8: 115–124. doi:10.1080/08927014.1996.9522922.
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  64. ^ Lanszki, J. & Heltai, M. (2007). "Diet of the European polecat and the steppe polecat in Hungary". Mammalian Biology - Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde. 72 (1): 49–53. doi:10.1016/j.mambio.2006.07.002.
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  66. ^ Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 992
  67. ^ Poole, T.B. (1972). "Some behavioral differences between European polecat, Mustela putorius, ferret, M. furo, and their hybrids". Journal of Zoology. 166 (1): 25–35. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1972.tb04073.x.
  68. ^ Lodé, T.; Guiral, G. & Peltier, D. (2005). "European mink-polecat hybridization events: hazards from natural process?". Journal of Heredity. 96 (2): 89–96. doi:10.1093/jhered/esi021. PMID 15653561.
  69. ^ Tumanov, I.L. & Abramov, A.V. (2002). "A study of the hybrids between the European Mink Mustela lutreola and the Polecat M. putorius". Small Carnivore Conservation. 27: 29–31.
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  71. ^ Lovegrove 2007, p. 200
  72. ^ Hope-Jones, P. (1974). "Wildlife Records from Merioneth Parish Documents". Nature in Wales. 14 (1): 35–42.
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  75. ^ "Second Report by the UK under Article 17 on the implementation of the Habitats, Directive from January 2001 to December 2006". Peterborough: Joint Nature Conservation Committee. 2007.
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Bibliography edit

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  • Brehm, A. E. (1895). Brehm's Life of Animals. Chicago: A. N. Marquis & Company.
  • Harris, S. & Yalden, D. (2008). Mammals of the British Isles (Fourth Revised ed.). Mammal Society. ISBN 978-0-906282-65-6.
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  • Heptner, V. G. & Sludskii, A. A. (2002). "Forest, or Black, Polecat". Mammals of the Soviet Union. Vol. Volume II, part 1b, Carnivores (Mustelidae and Procyonidae) . Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Libraries and National Science Foundation. pp. 1107–1133. ISBN 90-04-08876-8.
  • Kurtén, B. (1968). Pleistocene mammals of Europe. Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
  • Lewington, J. (2000). Ferret husbandry, medicine, and surgery. Elsevier Health Sciences. ISBN 0-7506-4251-3.
  • Lovegrove, R. (2007). Silent fields: the long decline of a nation's wildlife. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-852071-9.
  • Lydekker, R. (1896). "Mustela putorius". The hand-book to the British Mammalia. London: Edward Lloyd. pp. 111–116.
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  • Ritchie, J. (1920). The Influence of Man on Animal Life in Scotland; Study in Faunal Evolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

External links edit

european, polecat, this, article, about, species, mammal, referred, polecat, other, uses, polecat, disambiguation, mustela, putorius, also, known, common, polecat, black, polecat, forest, polecat, mustelid, species, native, western, eurasia, north, africa, gen. This article is about a species of mammal referred to as polecat For other uses see Polecat disambiguation The European polecat Mustela putorius also known as the common polecat black polecat and forest polecat is a mustelid species native to western Eurasia and North Africa It is of a generally dark brown colour with a pale underbelly and a dark mask across the face Occasionally colour mutations including albinos leucists isabellinists xanthochromists amelanists and erythrists occur 2 It has a shorter more compact body than other Mustela species 3 a more powerfully built skull and dentition 4 is less agile 5 and is well known for having the characteristic ability to secrete a particularly foul smelling liquid to mark its territory European polecatTemporal range Middle Pleistocene RecentWelsh polecat M p anglia at the British Wildlife Centre Newchapel SurreyConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraFamily MustelidaeGenus MustelaSpecies M putoriusBinomial nameMustela putoriusLinnaeus 1758Geographic rangeIt is much less territorial than other mustelids with animals of the same sex frequently sharing home ranges 6 Like other mustelids the European polecat is polygamous with pregnancy occurring after mating following induced ovulation 7 It usually gives birth in early summer to litters consisting of five to 10 kits which become independent at the age of two to three months The European polecat feeds on small rodents birds amphibians and reptiles 8 It occasionally cripples its prey by piercing its brain with its teeth and stores it still living in its burrow for future consumption 9 10 The European polecat originated in Western Europe during the Middle Pleistocene with its closest living relatives being the steppe polecat the black footed ferret and the European mink With the two former species it can produce fertile offspring 11 though hybrids between it and the latter species tend to be sterile and are distinguished from their parent species by their larger size and more valuable pelts 12 The European polecat is thought to be the sole ancestor of the ferret which was domesticated more than 2 000 years ago for the purpose of hunting vermin 13 The species has otherwise been historically viewed negatively by humans In Britain especially the polecat was persecuted by gamekeepers and became synonymous with promiscuity in early English literature During modern times the polecat is still scantly represented in popular culture when compared to other rare British mammals and misunderstandings of its behaviour still persist in some rural areas 14 Since 2008 it has been classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List due to its wide range and large numbers 1 Contents 1 Etymology and naming 1 1 Local and indigenous names 1 1 1 Dialectal English names 1 2 Latin name 2 Evolution 2 1 Domestication 2 2 Subspecies 3 Description 3 1 Build 3 2 Fur 4 Behaviour 4 1 Social and territorial behaviour 4 2 Reproduction and development 5 Ecology 5 1 Diet 5 2 Enemies and competitors 6 Hybridisation 7 Range history and conservation 7 1 Britain 7 2 France 7 3 Former Soviet Union 8 Diseases and parasites 9 Relationships with humans 9 1 Hunting and fur use 9 2 Tameability 9 3 In culture 10 Gallery 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Bibliography 12 External linksEtymology and naming editThe word polecat first appeared after the Norman Conquest of England written in Middle English as polcat While the second syllable is largely self explanatory the origin of the first is unclear It is possibly derived from the French poule meaning chicken likely in reference to the species fondness for poultry or it may be a variant of the Old English ful meaning foul In Middle English the species was referred to as foumart meaning foul marten in reference to its strong odour citation needed In Old French the polecat was called fissau which was derived from the Low German and Scandinavian verb for to make a disagreeable smell This was later corrupted in English as fitchew or fitchet which itself became the word fitch which is used for the polecat s pelt 15 The word fitchet is the root word for the North American fisher which was named by Dutch colonists in America who noted similarities between the two species 16 In some countries such as New Zealand the term fitch has taken on a wider use to refer to related creatures such as ferrets especially when farmed for their fur 17 18 A 2002 article in The Mammal Society s Mammal Review contested the European polecat s status as an animal indigenous to Britain on account of a scarce fossil record and linguistic evidence Unlike most native British mammals the polecat s Welsh name ffwlbart derived from the Middle English foulmart is not of Celtic origin much as the Welsh names of invasive species such as the European rabbit and fallow deer cwningen derived from the Middle English konyng and danas derived from the Old French dain respectively are of Middle English or Old French origin Polecats are not mentioned in Anglo Saxon or Welsh literature prior to the Norman conquest of England in 1066 with the first recorded mention of the species in the Welsh language occurring in the 14th century s Llyfr Coch Hergest and in English in Chaucer s The Pardoner s Tale 1383 In contrast attestations of the Welsh word for pine marten bele date back at least to the 10th century Welsh Laws and possibly much earlier in northern England 19 Local and indigenous names edit See also Wiktionary European polecat Translations Dialectal English names edit Probably no other animal on the British list has had as many colloquial names as the polecat In southern England it was generally referred to as fitchou whereas in the north it was foumat or foumard However there were a host of others including endless spelling variations philbert fulmer fishock filibart poulcat poll cat etc Charles Oldham identified at least 20 different versions of the name in the Hertfordshire Bedfordshire area alone Roger Lovegrove 2007 20 Indigenous names for Mustela putorius Linguistic group or area Dialectal nameAnglo Manx Foul cat 21 Craven Leeds South Lancashire Pow cat 22 23 24 Durham Foomart 25 Herefordshire Fitchuck 26 Lancashire Foomurt 27 Scots Foumart 28 Thummurt Thoomurt 29 Latin name edit As well as the several indigenous names referring to smell see above the scientific name Mustela putorius is also derived from this species foul smell The Latin putorius translates to stench or stink and is the origin of the English word putrid Evolution editThe earliest true polecat was Mustela stromeri which appeared during the late Villafranchian It was considerably smaller than the present form thus indicating polecats evolved at a relatively late period The oldest modern polecat fossils occur in Germany Britain and France and date back to the Middle Pleistocene The European polecat s closest relatives are the steppe polecat and black footed ferret with which it is thought to have shared Mustela stromeri as a common ancestor The European polecat is however not as maximally adapted in the direction of carnivory as the steppe polecat being less specialised in skull structure and dentition 6 30 31 32 The European polecat likely diverged from the steppe polecat 1 5 million years ago based on IRBP though cytochrome b transversions indicate a younger date of 430 000 years 33 It is also closely related to the European mink with which it can hybridise 34 Domestication edit nbsp Women hunting rabbits with a ferret in the Queen Mary PsalterMorphological cytological and molecular studies confirm the European polecat is the sole ancestor of the ferret thus disproving any connection with the steppe polecat which was once thought to have contributed to the ferret s creation 13 Ferrets were first mentioned by Aristophanes in 450 BC and by Aristotle in 350 BC Greek and Roman writers in the first century AD were the first to attest on the ferret s use in bolting rabbits from their burrows The first accurate descriptions of ferrets come from Strabo during 200 AD when ferrets were released onto the Balearic Islands to control rabbit populations As the European rabbit is native to the Iberian Peninsula and northwest Africa the European polecat likely was first domesticated in these regions 35 The ferret and European polecat are similar in both size and portions to the point that dark coloured ferrets are almost indistinguishable from their wild cousins though the ferret s skull has a smaller cranial volume and has a narrower postorbital constriction 13 Compared to the European polecat the ferret has a much smaller brain though this comparison has not been made with Mediterranean polecats from which ferrets likely derive 36 The theory of a Mediterranean origin is further strengthened because the ferret is less tolerant of cold than northern polecat subspecies 37 Unlike other subspecies which are largely solitary the ferret will readily live in social groups 38 The ferret is also slower in all its movements than the polecat and hardly ever makes any use of its anal scent glands 39 Overall the ferret represents a neotenous form of polecat 40 Subspecies edit As of 2005 update seven subspecies are recognised 41 Subspecies Trinomial authority Description Range SynonymsCommon polecatM p putorius Nominate subspecies nbsp Linnaeus 1758 Larger than mosquensis with darker fluffier and more lustrous fur 42 Western European Russia western Belarus western Ukraine Central and Western Europe and North Africa flavicans de Selys Longchamps 1839 foetens Thunberge 1789 foetidus Gray 1843 iltis Boddaert 1785 infectus Ogerien 1863 manium Barrett Hamilton 1904 putorius Blyth 1842 verus Brandt in Simashko 1851 vison de Selys Longchamps 1839 vulgaris Griffith 1827 Welsh polecatM p anglia nbsp Pocock 1936 England and WalesMediterranean polecatM p aureola nbsp Barrett Hamilton 1904 A small subspecies with yellowish underfur 43 it may be the ancestral subspecies from which the domestic ferret is derived based on the characteristics of the teeth 44 The southern and western portions of the Iberian Peninsula Scottish polecatM p caledoniae nbsp Tetley 1939 ScotlandDomestic ferretM p furo nbsp Linnaeus 1758 A domesticated form its skull is generally typical in conformation to the nominate subspecies though with features in common with the steppe polecat 31 Typically the dark facial fur does not extend to the nose while the pale cheek patches are very extensive and contrast poorly with the dark mask One or more paws may be white with white guard hairs often being well distributed over the body particularly on the hind quarters 45 Worldwide in association with humans albus Bechstein 1801 furoputorius Link 1795 subrufo Gray 1865 Middle Russian polecatM p mosquensis Heptner 1966 A small subspecies with relatively light slightly fluffy fur with little lustre 42 European Russia orientalis Brauner 1929 orientalis Polushina 1955 ognevi Kratochvil Carpathian polecatM p rothschildi Pocock 1932 A very lightly coloured subspecies its fur closely approaches that of the steppe polecat 46 Dobruja RomaniaDescription editBuild edit nbsp Skull nbsp Skeleton The appearance of the European polecat is typical of members of the genus Mustela though it is generally more compact in conformation and although short legged has a less elongated body than the European mink or steppe polecat 3 47 The tail is short about its body length 3 The eyes are small with dark brown irises The hind toes are long and partially webbed with weakly curved 4 mm long nonretractable claws The front claws are strongly curved partially retractable and measure 6 mm in length 48 The feet are moderately long and more robust than in other members of the genus 47 The polecat s skull is relatively coarse and massive more so than the mink s with a strong but short and broad facial region and strongly developed projections In comparison to other similarly sized mustelids the polecat s teeth are very strong large and massive in relation to skull size Sexual dimorphism in the skull is apparent in the lighter narrower skull of the female which also has weaker projections 4 The polecat s running gait is not as complex and twisting as that of the mink or stoat and it is not as fast as the mountain weasel solongoi stoat or least weasel as it can be outrun by a conditioned man Its sensory organs are well developed though it is unable to distinguish between colours 5 The dimensions of the European polecat vary greatly The species does not conform to Bergmann s rule with the pattern of size variation seeming to follow a trend of size increase along an east west axis 49 Males measure 350 460 mm in body length and females are 290 394 mm The tail measures 115 167 mm in males and 84 150 mm in females Adult males in middle Europe weigh 1 000 1 500 grams and females 650 815 grams Gigantism is known among polecats but specimens exhibiting this are likely the products of polecat mink hybridisation 50 Fur edit nbsp A young erythristic Welsh polecat at the British Wildlife Centre Surrey EnglandThe winter fur of the European polecat is brownish black or blackish brown the intensity of which is determined by the colour of the long guard hairs On the back and flanks the dark tone is brightened by bright whitish yellowish sometimes yellowish greyish underfur which shows through The lightly coloured underfur is not equally visible on different parts of the body On the back and hindquarters the underfur is almost completely covered by the dark guard hairs On the flanks though the lightening is well defined and contrasts sharply with the general tone of the back The throat lower neck chest and abdomen are black or blackish brown The limbs are pure black or black with brown tints while the tail is black or blackish brown completely lacking light underfur The area around and between the eyes is black brown with a longitudinal stripe of similar colour along the top of the nose The ears are dark brown and edged with white The summer fur is short sparse and coarse It is greyer duller and lacking in the lustre of the winter fur The underfur is more weakly developed in the summer fur and has a brownish grey or rusty grey colour 2 The polecat is a good swimmer 51 but its fur is not as well insulated against cold water as the American mink s while a mink will take 118 minutes to cool in a water temperature of 8 C 46 F the polecat cools down much faster at 26 28 minutes 52 Polecats were found in two major phenotypes a typic one and a dark fur one with no black mask 53 Colour mutations include albinos leucists isabellinists xanthochromists amelanists and erythrists In typical erythristic individuals the underfur is usually bright reddish The guard hairs on the trunk are bright reddish or reddish brown Black guard hairs are absent on the lower body and head In some rare cases the guard hairs are so light they are almost indistinguishable from the pale yellow underfur These individuals are called amelanistic In these cases the whole animal is a very light golden yellow colour 2 These individuals are called isabelline or xanthochromistic Behaviour edit nbsp A group of common polecats in SwedenSocial and territorial behaviour edit The European polecat has definite home ranges that vary according to season habitat sex and social status 54 Breeding females settle in discrete areas whereas breeding males and dispersing juveniles have more fluid home ranges and are more mobile 55 Both males and females share home ranges with other members of the same sex males have larger home ranges than females but evidence of territorial marking is sparse 6 European polecats use several den sites distributed throughout their home ranges and are often most active around rabbit warrens Some European polecats use farm buildings or haystacks as daytime resting sites in winter 6 Occasionally European polecats use abandoned European badger or red fox burrows 56 Like other mustelids the polecat is usually a silent animal though it will growl fiercely when angered and squeak when distressed It also emits a low mewling cry to its mate or offspring 10 Reproduction and development edit The European polecat is a seasonal breeder with no courtship rituals During the mating season the male grabs the female by the neck and drags her about to stimulate ovulation then copulates for up to an hour The species is polygamous with each male polecat mating with several females The gestation period lasts 40 43 days with litters usually being born in May early June Each litter typically consists of five to 10 kits At birth the kits weigh 9 10 g and measure 55 70 mm in body length they are blind and deaf At the age of one week the kits are covered in silky white fur which is replaced with a cinnamon brown greyish woolly coat at the age of 3 4 wk Weaning begins at three weeks of age while the permanent dentition erupts after 7 8 wk The kits become independent after two to three months 9 Females are very protective of their young and have even been known to confront humans approaching too closely to their litters 57 Ecology edit nbsp Scottish polecat guarding a rabbit carcass from a least weasel as painted by Archibald ThorburnDiet edit nbsp Common polecat attacking a grey partridge as exhibited at the Bulgarian National Museum of Natural HistoryThe European polecat s diet consists of mouse like rodents followed by amphibians and birds Its most frequent prey item in the former Soviet Union is the common vole and rarely the red backed vole In large river floodlands water vole are common prey In spring and winter amphibians especially grass frogs and green toads become important food items Selective predation on male frogs by the polecat decreases the occurrence of polyandry in frog populations 58 However because amphibians have little calorific value the polecat never grows fat on them no matter how many it consumes In Central Europe the diet in winter months is dominated by birds including quail grey partridges grouse chickens pigeons and passerines Seasonal changes in the activity rhythm is synchronised with the activity of the main prey 59 Some species only rarely preyed upon by the polecat include European hedgehogs asp vipers grass snakes lizards and insects 8 In Britain it commonly kills brown rats and European rabbits and is capable of killing larger prey such as geese and hares 9 One polecat was reported to frequently wait at a riverbank and catch eels which it took back to its burrow 60 The European polecat hunts its prey by stalking it and seizing it with its canine teeth killing the animal with a bite to the neck This killing method is instinctive but perfected with practice The polecat sometimes caches its food particularly during seasonal gluts of frogs and toads 61 Sometimes the polecat does not kill these but bites them at the base of the skull thus paralyzing them and keeping them fresh for later consumption 9 Although they are normally shy around humans naturalist Alfred Brehm in his Brehms Tierleben mentions an exceptional case in which three polecats attacked a baby in Hesse 57 During winter some European polecats raid beehives and feed on honey 62 Enemies and competitors edit Although the European polecat can coexist with the European mink it suffers in areas where the invasive American mink also occurs as the latter species feeds on the same mammals as the polecat much more frequently than the European mink and has been known to drive the polecat out of wetland habitats 63 In areas where the European polecat is sympatric with the steppe polecat the two species overlap greatly in choice of food though the former tends to consume more household foods and birds while the latter preys on mammals more frequently 64 There is at least one record of a beech marten killing a polecat 65 The European polecat may prey on the much smaller least weasel 66 Hybridisation editMain articles Polecat ferret hybrid and Polecat mink hybrid nbsp Heads of a 1 polecat 2 ferret and 3 polecat ferret hybridIn some parts of Britain the abandonment of domestic ferrets has led to ferret polecat crossbreeds living in the wild Ferrets were likely first brought to Britain after the Norman Conquest of England or as late as the fourteenth century 11 Crossbreeds between the two animals typically have a distinct white throat patch white feet and white hairs interspersed among the fur 13 Typically first generation crossbreeds between polecats and ferrets develop their wild parents fear of humans if left with their mothers during the critical socialisation period between 7 and 8 weeks of age 67 The European polecat can hybridise with the European mink producing offspring termed khor tumak by Russian furriers 34 and khonorik by fanciers 12 Such hybridisation is very rare in the wild and typically only occurs where the European mink population is in decline 68 A polecat mink hybrid has a poorly defined facial mask yellow fur on the ears grey yellow underfur and long dark brown guard hairs It is fairly large with a male attaining the peak sizes known for European polecats weighing 1 120 1 746 g 2 lb 7 1 2 oz 3 lb 13 9 16 oz and measuring 41 47 cm 16 18 1 2 in in length a female is much larger than a female European minks weighing 742 g 26 3 16 oz and measuring 37 cm 14 1 2 in in length 63 The majority of polecat mink hybrids have skulls bearing greater similarities to those of polecats than to minks they can swim well and burrow for food like polecats but are difficult to tame and breed as males are sterile 69 The first captive polecat mink hybrid was created in 1978 for fur but breeding of these hybrids declined as European mink populations decreased 12 Studies on the behavioural ecology of free ranging polecat mink hybrids in the upper reaches of the Lovat River indicate that hybrids stray from aquatic habitats more readily than minks and tolerate both parent species entering their territories though the hybrid s larger size especially the male s deters intrusion During summer the diets of wild polecat mink hybrids are more similar to those of minks than to the polecats as they feed predominantly on frogs During winter their diets overlap more with those of polecats and will eat a larger proportion of rodents than in the summer though they still rely heavily on frogs and rarely scavenge ungulate carcasses as polecats do 63 The European polecat can also hybridise with the Asian steppe polecat or the domestic ferret to produce fertile offspring 11 European steppe polecat hybrids are very rare despite their sympatry in several areas Nevertheless hybrids have been recorded in southern Ukraine the Kursk and Voronezh Oblasts the Trans Carpathians and several other localities 70 Range history and conservation editThe European polecat is widespread in the western Palaearctic to the Urals in the Russian Federation though it is absent from Ireland northern Scandinavia and much of the Balkans and eastern Adriatic coast It occurs only marginally in northern Greece It is found in Morocco in the Rif Mountains from sea level to 2400 m Its domesticated form the ferret was introduced in Britain and some Mediterranean islands and New Zealand 1 Britain edit There are some extreme examples but the fact remains that throughout England and Wales polecats were consistently persecuted at a greater intensity than any other species of mustelid Did this level of persecution have an effect on overall numbers or did it purely satisfy local vengeance The polecat may be the best example of a species for which the level of killing really did make a difference to the population The developing sporting estates then administered the coup de grace Roger Lovegrove 2007 71 In Britain the European polecat was regarded as a serious poultry predator prior to the introduction of wire netting therefore eliminating it was considered the only option to protect stock This extreme enmity does not appear to have been universal however Speaking of Merioneth Gwynedd Peter Hope Jones reported that for a county supposedly well placed within the known past distribution of this species Merioneth has relatively very few records of Polecats amongst its parish bounty payments Perhaps this animal was not generally considered to be an important pest but whatever the real reason in only two parishes are direct references made to this species by the name by which we know it today In the years from 1729 to 1732 about twenty were killed in Towyn parish where 2 6 was paid for a full grown polecat and half this sum for a young kittin Records for Llanfor show that only 42 were killed in the 39 year period from 1720 to 1758 the payment being exactly half the going rate for a fox i e 2 6 for a full grown polecat and 1 3 for a young animal 72 In Kent for example at least 42 parishes paid bounties for polecats of which three extended into the 19th century though by this time only single individuals were recorded and usually after gaps of many years 20 In the Kingdom of Scotland during the reign of David II an export duty of 4d was imposed on each polecat fur trimmer which was raised to 8d in 1424 The species held an important place in Scotland s fur markets the annual Dumfries Fur Fair 1816 1874 sold 400 polecat pelts in 1829 and 600 in 1831 The following year a contemporary account described polecat skins as a drug on the market In 1856 the number of sold pelts decreased to 240 168 in 1860 12 in 1866 and none in 1869 73 The decline was halted with the decrease in the intensity of gamekeeping during the 20 year interval between the First and Second World Wars 74 The European polecat is afforded both national and European protection it is listed on Schedule 6 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 and Regulation 41 of the Conservation Natural Habitats amp c Regulations 1994 and is listed on Annex V of the Habitats Directive 75 A survey carried out by the Vincent Wildlife Trust in 2015 found that the polecat had spread into areas such as East Anglia and South Yorkshire where they had not been seen for 100 years Naturalist Chris Packham termed the spread one of the great natural recoveries 76 The New Forest in Hampshire also now has a small polecat population a fact discovered after scientists set up cameras to film pine martens 77 France edit The European polecat is present in all of France s territories excepting Corsica and has been in a state of decline for several decades 78 Nevertheless it is listed as Least Concern on France s Red Data Book The European polecat is rare in numerous regions or departements In the Rhone Alps region its population has undergone a sizeable decline since the 1990s largely as a consequence of poisoning campaigns against muskrats A 1999 study on the decline of polecats in this region indicated the species has little chance of surviving there Elsewhere it is considered either rare or sporadic in 22 districts and absent or extirpated in 22 others In Drome for example polecat populations have been decreasing since 1975 and have disappeared in 27 communes in Isere Its numbers are declining in Morvan and Ariege and is thinly distributed in Brittany Although present in Aquitaine its numbers have been dropping since the 1950s and is very rare in the mountain regions In Normandy the speed of the polecat s decline has somewhat decreased In the alpine departements its range is limited by altitude as the species relies on more Mediterranean climates to thrive It is however especially abundant in the irrigated Crau but is absent on the eastern part of the area apparently being restricted by the valleys of the Durance and Rhone Rivers The largest populations occur in Northern France Pas de Calais Central France Alsace Lorraine and the areas of the Loire with the Vendee which holds the largest record of polecat observations It is common in all the departements of Champagne Ardenne 79 Former Soviet Union edit The western border of the European polecat s range in the former Soviet Union begins from the mouth of the Danube in the south approximately to northwest of Suoyarvi on the Finnish border in the north In Karelia its northern border extends from the former point towards the southeast to the Spassk Bay of Lake Onega thereby passing around the West Karelian uplands from the south and then passing around these uplands from the east it suddenly ascends directly to the north passing in particular near the western shore of Segozer and reaches Rugozer From there the border line turns northeast crossing the Lakhta and reaching Kem on the White Sea From Archangelsk the border reaches Mezen thus attaining the species most northerly range From the Mezen River s mouth the border abruptly returns south approaching closer to the upper Mezen near 64 lat From there the polecat s northern border goes on to the upper Vychegda River and descends further on southwards and in the Urals Its eastern range apparently extends along the Urals embracing Sverdlovsk from the west It is probably absent in the southern Urals where the steppe polecat occurs The southern border of the polecat s range starts in the west of the Danube s mouth and extends eastward along the coast of the Black Sea reaching the mouth of the Dnepr from which it moves back from the shore of the Azov Sea and along it goes to the mouth of the Don From the mouth and lower course of the Don its range passes into the steppe region of western and middle Ciscaucasia The European polecat is absent from the Saratov steppes of Transvolga instead being encountered only in the extreme lower Bolshoy and Maly Irgiz Rivers Further on the border goes to the north along the Volga River It steeply returns east somewhat south at the Samara bend passing around Obshchy Syrt reaching the Urals at the latitude of Magnitogorsk The range of the polecat within the former Soviet Union has expanded northwards From 1930 to 1952 for example the polecat colonised northwestern Karelia and southern Finland 80 Prior to the First World War the Russian Empire produced more than 50 of global polecat skins The harvesting of polecats in Russia increased substantially after the October Revolution which coincided with Western Europe s decline in polecat numbers The Russian population of polecats decreased somewhat after the Second World War and their hunting was subsequently discouraged as polecats were acknowledged to limit harmful rodent populations 81 Diseases and parasites editThe European polecat may suffer from distemper influenza the common cold and pneumonia Occasionally it is affected by malignant tumours and hydrocephaly It commonly has broken teeth and on rarer occasions fatal abscesses on the jaw head and neck In mainland Europe it is a carrier of trichinosis leptospirosis toxoplasmosis and adiaspiromycosis Incidences of polecats carrying rabies are high in some localized areas 82 Ectoparasites known to infest polecats include flea species such as Ctenocephalides felis Archaeospylla erinacei Nosopsyllus fasciatus and Paraceras melis The tick Ixodes hexagonus is the polecat s most common ectoparasite which is sometimes found in large numbers on the neck and behind the ears Another less common species to infest polecats is I canisuga The biting louse Trichodectes jacobi is also known to infest polecats 82 Endoparasites carried by polecats include the cestodes Taenia tenuicollis and T martis and the nematodes Molineus patens Strongyloides papillosus Capilliaria putorii Filaroides martis and Skjrabingylus nasicola 82 Relationships with humans editHunting and fur use edit nbsp Polecat skins fitch in CopenhagenThe polecat has earned for itself a most unenviable fame having been long celebrated as one of the most noxious pests to which the farmyard is liable Slightly smaller than the marten and not quite so powerful it is found to be a more deadly enemy to rabbits game and poultry than any other animal its size John George Wood 83 European polecat hunting was once a favourite sport of the Westmorland dalesmen and the Scots who hunted them at night in midwinter However the majority of polecat deaths caused by humans have been accidental having mostly been caused by steel traps set for rabbits 84 Hunting polecats by moonlight was also a popular diversion among midland schoolboys 62 Until the mid 19th century polecats in Britain were hunted from early February to late April with mixed packs of hunting dogs on the Welsh hills and Lakeland fells though otterhounds were used on the fells the Border country and the Scottish Lowlands 85 John Tucker Edwardes the creator of the Sealyham terrier used captured wild male polecats to test the gameness of yearling terriers 86 In the former Soviet Union polecats are hunted chiefly in late autumn and early winter with guns and hunting dogs as well as foothold traps and wooden snares However even in season hunters rarely catch more than 10 15 polecats The species does not constitute an important element in former Soviet commercial hunting and is usually only caught incidentally 81 The European polecat is a valuable fur bearer whose pelt fitch is more valuable than the steppe polecat s 81 Its skin is used primarily in the production of jackets capes and coats It is particularly well suited for trimmings for women s clothing The tail is sometimes used for the making of paintbrushes 87 One disadvantage of polecat skin however is its unpleasant odour which is difficult to remove 57 The European polecat was first commercially farmed for its fur in Great Britain during the 1920s but was only elevated to economic importance in Finland in 1979 It never became popular in the United States and Canada due to import laws regarding non native species It did gain economic importance in the USSR though 88 nbsp Welsh polecat being fed at the British Wildlife Centre Newchapel SurreyTameability edit Unlike the stoat and least weasel the European polecat is easy to breed in captivity 86 According to Aubyn Trevor Battye the European polecat is difficult to tame but is superior to its domesticated form the ferret in bolting rats from their holes due to its greater agility It is prone to attempting escape once finished bolting rats but can be easily outrun 89 Polecat kits can be successfully raised and suckled by mother cats 57 According to Owen s Welsh Dictionary the Gwythelians early Irish settlers in northern Wales kept polecats as pets 90 Attempts to tame the European polecat are generally hampered by the adult s nervous and unsociable disposition First generation hybrids between polecats and ferrets conceived to improve the latter s bloodlines produce animals with personalities similar to their wild parent s 40 In culture edit In Britain the polecat historically has had a negative reputation References to the polecat in early English literature are often vilifying usually being synonymous with prostitutes and generally immoral people as is the case in Shakespeare s The Merry Wives of Windsor Out of my door you witch you hag you baggage you polecat you runyon In some rural areas the belief persists that the polecat chews off the ears of sleeping sheep and can paralyse or kill men by jumping on them from behind and biting their necks 14 However in some regions it was widely believed among farmers that allowing a polecat to nest in a chicken coop would ensure the animal would not kill the poultry out of gratitude and instead kill vermin Cases in which polecats did kill poultry were attributed to animals which were guests at other farms 83 In Wales polecats were widely believed to migrate in large numbers every spring to the great peat bog of Tregaron to feed on the breeding frogs there This was later proven to be incorrect as the climate in Tregaron is too wet for the European polecat and it does not hold large frog populations 85 Compared to other British carnivores such as otters and badgers the polecat has received little exposure in popular media A study conducted on rural school children showed only 3 8 of the surveyed children could identify polecats in photographs whereas 83 7 correctly identified otters 14 Gallery edit nbsp Buffon s illustration of a polecat in volume 4 of Natural history general and particular nbsp Skulls of a black footed ferret 1 and European polecat 2 as illustrated in Merriam s Synopsis of the Weasels of North America nbsp Comparative illustration of a European polecat least weasel and stoat as illustrated in Carnegie s Practical Game preserving nbsp Welsh polecat profile nbsp A light coloured amelanistic morphReferences editNotes edit a b c Skumatov D Abramov A V Herrero J Kitchener A Maran T Kranz A Sandor A Saveljev A Savoure Soubelet A Guinot Ghestem M Zuberogoitia I Birks J D S Weber A Melisch R Ruette S 2016 Mustela putorius IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T41658A45214384 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 1 RLTS T41658A45214384 en Retrieved 20 November 2021 a b c Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 1109 1111 a b c Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 p 1108 a b Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 1112 1113 a b Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 p 1130 a b c d Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 480 481 Williams Elizabeth S Thorne E Tom Kwiatkowski Donald R Lutz Kim Anderson Sandy L 1992 Comparative vaginal cytology of the estrous cycle of black footed ferrets Mustela nigripes Siberian polecats M eversmanni and domestic ferrets M putorius furo Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation 4 1 38 44 doi 10 1177 104063879200400109 PMID 1554767 S2CID 11010465 a b Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 1127 1129 a b c d Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 482 483 a b Johnston 1903 p 155 a b c Davison A Birks J D Griffiths S H I Kitchener A C Biggins D amp Butlin R K 1999 Hybridization and the phylogenetic relationship between polecats and domestic ferrets in Britain Biological Conservation 87 2 155 161 doi 10 1016 S0006 3207 98 00067 6 a b c Khonorik Hybrids between Mustelidae Russian Ferret Society Archived from the original on 31 July 2020 Retrieved 9 May 2011 a b c d Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 485 487 a b c Bidder Owen 2009 The European Polecat Unsung Species Archived 2011 11 19 at the Wayback Machine Natur Cymru Summer Haf 09 Johnston 1903 p 154 Powell R A 1981 Mammalian Species Martes pennanti PDF The American Society of Mammalogists 156 1 6 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help DOC s work with ferrets Archived 2014 04 21 at the Wayback Machine New Zealand Department of Conservation Retrieved 20 April 2014 Ferrets Wild about New Zealand Retrieved 20 April 2014 Brown Duncan 2002 The foulmart what s in a name Archived 2011 09 03 at the Wayback Machine Mammal Rev Volume 32 No 2 145 149 a b Lovegrove 2007 p 198 Moore A W 1924 Foul cat A vocabulary of the Anglo Manx dialect Oxford Oxford University Press Carr W 1828 The dialect of Craven in the West Riding of the county of York London W Crofts p 56 Robinson C C 1862 The dialect of Leeds and its neighbourhood illustrated by conversations and tales of common life etc To which are added a copious glossary notices of the various antiquities manners and customs and general folk lore of the district London J R Smith p 388 Bobbin T 1850 The dialect of South Lancashire or Tim Bobbin s Tummus and Meary with his rhymes and an enlarged glossary of words and phrases chiefly used by the rural population of the manufacturing districts of South Lancashire London J R Smith p 185 Dinsdale F 1849 Foomart A glossary of provincial words used in Teesdale in the County of Durham London J R Smith p 48 Lewis G C 1839 Fitchuck A glossary of provincial words used in Herefordshire and some of the adjoining counties London John Murray p 41 mawdesley village org uk www mawdesley village org uk Archived from the original on May 10 2013 Dictionaries of the Scots Language SND foumart Wilson J 1923 Thummurt The dialect of Robert Burns as spoken in central Ayrshire Oxford Oxford University Press p 190 Kurten 1968 pp 98 100 a b Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 1115 1117 Kurten Bjorn 1980 Pleistocene mammals of North America Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 03733 3 Sato J T Hosada W Mieczyslaw K Tsuchiya Y Yamamoto H Suzuki 2003 Phylogenetic relationships and divergence times among mustelids Mammalia Carnivora based on nucleotide sequences of the nuclear interphotoreceptor retinoid binding protein and mitochondrial cytochrome b genes Archived 2011 10 03 at the Wayback Machine Zoologial Science 20 243 264 a b Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 1086 1088 Lewington 2000 pp 3 5 Hemmer 1990 p 108 Clutton Brock J 1987 A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals London British Museum Natural History p 208 ISBN 0 521 34697 5 Brown Susan A 17 January 2010 Inherited behavior traits of the domesticated ferret weaselwords com Retrieved 29 January 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hemmer 1990 p 86 a b Lewington 2000 pp 93 Wozencraft W C 2005 Species Mustela putorius In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 1125 1126 Miller 1912 p 425 Hemmer 1990 pp 49 50 Kitchener A 2002 Polecats and Ferrets How to tell them apart PDF The Vincent Wildlife Trust ISBN 0946081476 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 04 Retrieved 2013 10 04 Pocock R I 1936 The Polecats of the Genera Putorius and Vormela in the British Museum Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 106 3 691 724 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1936 tb06282 x a b Miller 1912 p 419 Harris amp Yalden 2008 p 477 De Marinis A M 1995 Craniometric variability of polecat Mustela putorius L 1758 from North Central Italy Hystrix 7 1 2 57 68 Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 1114 1115 Lode T 1999 Comparative measurements of terrestrial and aquatic locomotion in Mustela lutreola and M putorius PDF Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde 64 110 115 Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 p 1411 Lode T 2001 Genetic divergence without spatial isolation in polecat Mustela putorius populations Journal of Evolutionary Biology 14 2 228 236 doi 10 1046 j 1420 9101 2001 00275 x Lode T 2011 Habitat selection and mating success in a mustelid International Journal of Zoology 159462 Lode T 2001 Mating system and genetic variance in a polygynous mustelid the European polecat Genes and Genetic systems 76 221 227 Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 p 1129 a b c d Brehm 1895 p 158 Lode T Holveck M J Lesbarreres D amp Pagano A 2004 Sex biased predation by polecats influences the mating system of frogs Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B Biological Sciences 271 S6 S399 S401 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2004 0195 PMC 1810108 PMID 15801586 Lode T 1995 Activity pattern of polecats Mustela putorius L in relation to food habits and prey activity Ethology 100 4 295 308 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 1995 tb00334 x Lydekker 1896 pp 115 Lode T 1996 Predation of European polecat upon frog and toad populations at breeding sites in western France Ethology Ecology amp Evolution 8 115 124 doi 10 1080 08927014 1996 9522922 a b Maxwell W H 1833 The Field Book Or Sports and Pastimes of the United Kingdom Comp from the Best Authorities Ancient and Modern London E Wilson a b c Sidorovich V E MacDonald D W Kruuk H amp Krasko A 2000 Behavioural interactions between the naturalized American mink Mustela vison and the native riparian mustelids NE Belarus with implications for population changes PDF Small Carnivore Conservation 22 1 5 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 16 Retrieved 2011 05 21 Lanszki J amp Heltai M 2007 Diet of the European polecat and the steppe polecat in Hungary Mammalian Biology Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde 72 1 49 53 doi 10 1016 j mambio 2006 07 002 Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 902 Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 992 Poole T B 1972 Some behavioral differences between European polecat Mustela putorius ferret M furo and their hybrids Journal of Zoology 166 1 25 35 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1972 tb04073 x Lode T Guiral G amp Peltier D 2005 European mink polecat hybridization events hazards from natural process Journal of Heredity 96 2 89 96 doi 10 1093 jhered esi021 PMID 15653561 Tumanov I L amp Abramov A V 2002 A study of the hybrids between the European Mink Mustela lutreola and the Polecat M putorius Small Carnivore Conservation 27 29 31 Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 1144 1145 Lovegrove 2007 p 200 Hope Jones P 1974 Wildlife Records from Merioneth Parish Documents Nature in Wales 14 1 35 42 Ritchie 1920 p 162 Lovegrove 2007 pp 275 276 Second Report by the UK under Article 17 on the implementation of the Habitats Directive from January 2001 to December 2006 Peterborough Joint Nature Conservation Committee 2007 Morelle Rebecca 2016 Conservationists Polecats spreading across Britain BBC News Retrieved 29 January 2016 Pine martens thriving and breeding in New Forest conservationists discover Advertiser and Times 2024 01 14 Retrieved 2024 01 14 Lode T 2006 Can low densities of carnivores result in genetic depletion An investigation within European polecat populations Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics 123 3 122 158 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0388 2006 00585 x PMID 16706919 Soubelet A 2011 Situation actuelle de la Martre Martes martes la Belette Mustela nivalis et du Putois Mustela putorius en France Proposition d une methode de suivi PDF in French Paris Service du Patrimoine Naturel Museum National d Histoire Naturelle Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 19 Retrieved 2011 06 22 Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 1117 1122 a b c Heptner amp Sludskii 2002 pp 1133 1134 a b c Harris amp Yalden 2008 p 484 a b Wood Rev J G 1870 Wood s Animal Kingdom Lydekker 1896 pp 114 a b Perry Richard 1978 Wildlife in Britain and Ireland Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 85664 306 8 a b Plummer David Brian amp Knowleden Martin 2000 Tales of a Rat Hunting Man Coch Y Bonddu Books ISBN 0 9533648 7 9 Bachrach 1953 pp 348 352 Roth Harald H Merz Gunter 1997 Wildlife resources a global account of economic use Springer ISBN 3 540 61357 9 Lydekker 1896 pp 116 Sullivan Jeremiah 1857 Cumberland amp Westmorland ancient amp modern the people dialect superstitions and customs Whittaker and co Bibliography edit Bachrach M 1953 Fur A Practical Treatise Third ed New York Prentice Hall OCLC 498697660 Batten H M 1920 Habits and characters of British wild animals London etc W amp R Chambers Limited Brehm A E 1895 Brehm s Life of Animals Chicago A N Marquis amp Company Harris S amp Yalden D 2008 Mammals of the British Isles Fourth Revised ed Mammal Society ISBN 978 0 906282 65 6 Johnston H H 1903 British mammals an attempt to describe and illustrate the mammalian fauna of the British islands from the commencement of the Pleistocene period down to the present day London Hutchinson Hemmer H 1990 Domestication the decline of environmental appreciation Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 34178 7 Heptner V G amp Sludskii A A 2002 Forest or Black Polecat Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol Volume II part 1b Carnivores Mustelidae and Procyonidae Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Libraries and National Science Foundation pp 1107 1133 ISBN 90 04 08876 8 Kurten B 1968 Pleistocene mammals of Europe Weidenfeld and Nicolson Lewington J 2000 Ferret husbandry medicine and surgery Elsevier Health Sciences ISBN 0 7506 4251 3 Lovegrove R 2007 Silent fields the long decline of a nation s wildlife Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 852071 9 Lydekker R 1896 Mustela putorius The hand book to the British Mammalia London Edward Lloyd pp 111 116 Miller G S 1912 Catalogue of the Mammals of Western Europe Europe Exclusive of Russia in the Collection of the British Museum London Printed by order of the Trustees Ritchie J 1920 The Influence of Man on Animal Life in Scotland Study in Faunal Evolution Cambridge Cambridge University Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mustela putorius nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Mustela putorius The Polecat Project Pictures sightings and distribution maps of European polecats in the Netherlands European polecat Mustela putorius ARKive org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title European polecat amp oldid 1205316920, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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