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Virginia opossum

The Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana), also known as the North American opossum, is the only opossum living north of Mexico, its range extending south into Central America. It is the northernmost marsupial in the world. In the United States and Canada, it is typically called a possum.[5] It is a solitary nocturnal animal about the size of a domestic cat, and a successful opportunist.

Virginia opossum[1]
North American opossum in winter
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Marsupialia
Order: Didelphimorphia
Family: Didelphidae
Genus: Didelphis
Species:
D. virginiana
Binomial name
Didelphis virginiana
(Kerr, 1792)
Range of habitat, showing both historic, native range and introductions in the west; these areas are currently expanding northward (e.g., into Wisconsin and Minnesota).[3]
Synonyms

Didelphis marsupialis virginiana[4]

Opossums are familiar to many North Americans as they frequently inhabit settled areas near food sources like trash cans, pet food, compost piles, gardens or housemice. Their slow, nocturnal nature and their attraction to roadside carrion make opossums more likely to become roadkill.

Name edit

The Virginia opossum is the original animal named "opossum", a word which comes from Algonquian wapathemwa, meaning "white animal". Colloquially, the Virginia opossum is frequently just called a "possum".[6] The name opossum is applied more generally to any of the other marsupials of the families Didelphidae and Caenolestidae. The generic name (Didelphis) is derived from Ancient Greek: di, "two", and delphus, "womb".[7]

The possums of Australia, whose name derives from their similarity to the opossums of the Americas, are also marsupials, but of the order Diprotodontia.

The Virginia opossum is known in Mexico as tlacuache, tacuachi, and tlacuachi, from the Nahuatl word tlacuatzin.

Range edit

The Virginia opossum's ancestors evolved in South America, but spread into North America as part of the Great American Interchange, which occurred mainly after the formation of the Isthmus of Panama about 3 million years ago. Didelphis was apparently one of the later migrants, entering North America about 0.8 million years ago.[8] It is now found throughout Central America and North America from Costa Rica to southern Ontario and is expanding its range northward, northwesterly and northeasterly at a significant pace.[6]

Its pre-European settlement range was generally as far north as Maryland; southern Ohio, Indiana and Illinois; Missouri and Kansas. The clearing of dense forests in these areas and further north by settlers allowed the opossum to move northward. Elimination of the opossum's main predators in these areas also contributed to their expansion. Since 1900, it has expanded its range to include most of New England (including Maine); New York, extreme southwestern Quebec; most of southern and eastern Ontario; most of Michigan and Wisconsin; most of Minnesota, southeastern South Dakota and most of Nebraska.

Areas such as Rhode Island and Waterloo Region and Simcoe County in southern Ontario rarely had sightings of opossums in the 1960s, but now have them regularly; some speculate that this is likely due to global warming causing winters to be warmer.[9] Some people speculate the expansion into Ontario mostly occurred by opossums accidentally being transferred across the St. Lawrence, Niagara, Detroit and St. Clair rivers by motor vehicles or trains they may have climbed upon. As the opossum is not adapted to colder winters or heavy snow, its population may be significantly reduced if a colder winter with heavier snow occurs in a particular northern region.

The Virginia opossum was not originally native to the West Coast of the United States. It was intentionally introduced into the West[6] during the Great Depression, probably as a source of food,[10] and now occupies much of the Pacific coast. Its range has been expanding steadily northward into British Columbia, Canada.

Description edit

 
Skull of a Virginia opossum
 
The back foot has an opposable "thumb".

Virginia opossums can vary considerably in size, with larger specimens found to the north of the opossum's range and smaller specimens in the tropics. They measure 33–55 cm (13–22 in) long from their snout to the base of the tail, with the tail adding another 25–54 cm (9.8–21.3 in). Males are slightly larger, with an average body length of 40.8 cm (16.1 in) with an average tail length of 29.4 cm (11.6 in), while females are 40.6 cm (16.0 in) long with a 28.1 cm (11.1 in) tail. Weight for males ranges from 2.1–2.8 kg (4.6–6.2 lb) and for females from 1.9–2.1 kg (4.2–4.6 lb).[11]

Their coats are a dull grayish brown, other than on their faces, which are white. Opossums have long, hairless, prehensile tails, which can be used to grab branches and carry small objects. They also have hairless ears and a long, flat nose. Opossums have 50 teeth, more than any other North American land mammal,[12] and opposable, clawless thumbs on their rear limbs. Opossums have 13 nipples, arranged in a circle of 12 with one in the middle.[13][14]

The dental formula of an opossum is 5.1.3.44.1.3.4.[15] No other mammal in North America has more than 6 upper incisors, but the Virginia opossum has 10.

Perhaps surprisingly for such a widespread and successful species, the Virginia opossum has one of the lowest encephalization quotients of any marsupial.[16] Its brain is one-fifth the size of a raccoon's.[17]

Tracks edit

 
Opossum tracks (photo center) in mud: Left-fore print appears on left center of photo, right-hind print appears right center. The small, circular tracks at bottom center of photo were made by a meadow vole. The yellow ruler (top) is in inches.
 
Pacing diagram for Virginia opossum - key: rectangles represent hind tracks, ellipses are fore tracks, left tracks are red, right are green. (a) the position of the four feet frozen in mid-pace. (b) the opossum brings right fore and hind feet forward. (c) the opossum brings left fore and hind feet forward. One grid square represents one square inch.

Virginia opossum tracks generally show five finger-like toes in both the fore and hind prints.[18] The hind tracks are unusual and distinctive due to the opossum's opposable thumb, which generally prints at an angle of 90° or greater to the other fingers (sometimes near 180°). Individual adult tracks generally measure 1.9 in long by 2.0 in wide (4.8 × 5.1 cm) for the fore prints and 2.5 in long by 2.3 in wide (6.4 × 5.7 cm) for the hind prints. Opossums have claws on all fingers fore and hind except on the two thumbs (in the photograph, claw marks show as small holes just beyond the tip of each finger); these generally show in the tracks. In a soft medium, such as the mud in this photograph, the foot pads clearly show (these are the deep, darker areas where the fingers and toes meet the rest of the hand or foot, which have been filled with plant debris by wind due to the advanced age of the tracks).

The tracks in the photograph were made while the opossum was walking with its typical pacing gait. The four aligned toes on the hind print show the approximate direction of travel.

In a pacing gait, the limbs on one side of the body are moved simultaneously, just prior to moving both limbs on the other side of the body. This is illustrated in the pacing diagram, which explains why the left-fore and right-hind tracks are generally found together (and vice versa). If the opossum was not walking (perhaps running), the prints would fall in a different pattern. Other animals that generally employ a pacing gait are raccoons, bears, skunks, badgers, woodchucks, porcupines, and beavers.

When pacing, the opossum's 'stride' generally measures from 7 to 10 in, or 18 to 25 cm (in the pacing diagram the stride is 8.5 in, where one grid square is equal to 1 in2). To determine the stride of a pacing gait, measure from the tip (just beyond the fingers or toes in the direction of travel, disregarding claw marks) of one set of fore/hind tracks to the tip of the next set. By taking careful stride and track-size measurements, one can usually determine what species of animal created a set of tracks, even when individual track details are vague or obscured.

Behavior edit

"Playing possum" edit

 
When injured or threatened (e.g., by a dog), the Virginia opossum is known to feign death or "play possum".

If threatened, an opossum will either flee or take a stand. To appear threatening, an opossum will first bare its 50 teeth, snap its jaw, hiss, drool, and stand its fur on end to look bigger.[19] If this does not work, the Virginia opossum is noted for feigning death in response to extreme fear.[20] This is the genesis of the term "playing possum", which means pretending to be dead or injured with intent to deceive.[21]

In this inactive state it lies limp and motionless on its side, mouth and eyes open, tongue hanging out, and feet clenched.[19] Fear can also cause the opossum to release a green fluid from its anus with a putrid odor that repels predators.[20][22] Heart rate drops by half, and breathing rate is so slow and shallow it is hardly detectable.[19] Death feigning normally stops when the threat withdraws, and it can last for several hours.[19][22] Besides discouraging animals that eat live prey, playing possum also convinces some large animals that the opossum is no threat to their young.[20] "Playing possum" in response to threats from oncoming traffic often results in death.[23]

Diet edit

Night camera shows video of an opossum considering a bagel before walking away

Opossums are omnivorous (sometimes said to be insectivorous) and eat a wide range of plant-based food, as well as animal-based food like small invertebrates, carrion, eggs, fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, small mammals, and other small animals.[24]

Insects such as grasshoppers, crickets, and beetles make up the bulk of the animal foods eaten by opossums.[25] It has been stated that opossums eat up to 95% of the ticks they encounter.[23][26] and may eat up to 5,000 ticks per season, helping to prevent the spread of tick-born illnesses, including Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever.[26] This interpretation has been challenged.[27] A widely publicized 2009 study by the Cary Institute indicated that Virginia opossums in a laboratory setting could eat thousands of ticks per week grooming.[28][29] However, subsequent studies of the stomach contents of wild Virginia opossums have not found any ticks in their diet.[30]

Small animals include young rabbits, meadow voles, mice, rats, birds, snakes, lizards, frogs, fish, crayfish, gastropods, and earthworms.[31][32][33][34][35] The Virginia opossum has been found to be very resistant to snake venom.[36][26] Attracted to carrion on the side of the highway, opossums are at an increased risk of being hit by motor vehicles.[22]

Plant foods are mainly eaten in late summer, autumn, and early winter.[25] These include raspberries, blackberries, apples, acorns, beechnuts, seeds, grains, bulbs, and vegetables.[25][35] Persimmons are one of the opossum's favorite foods during the autumn.[37] Opossums in urban areas scavenge from bird feeders, vegetable gardens, compost piles, garbage cans, and food dishes intended for dogs and cats.[25][31]

 
Virginia opossum in northeastern Ohio

Opossums in captivity are known to engage in cannibalism, though this is probably uncommon in the wild.[38] Because of this, placing an injured opossum in a confined space with its healthy counterparts is inadvisable.

Seasonality edit

The Virginia opossum is most active during the spring and summer.[25] It does not hibernate but reduces its activity during the winter.[24][39] It may not leave its den for several days if the temperature drops below −7 to −4 °C (19 to 25 °F).[25] Both males and females are at greater risk of injury during breeding season.[40] Males extend their range in search of mates which puts them at greater risk of injury from motor vehicles and predators due to unknown territory.[40] Females carrying young are slower moving and have to forage earlier in the evening and later into the night, also increasing their risk of injury from motor vehicles and predation.[40]

Reproduction edit

 
Carrying its young

The breeding season for the Virginia opossum can begin as early as December and continue through October with most young born between February and June.[40] A female opossum may have one to three litters per year.[40] During the mating season, the male attracts the female by making clicking sounds with his mouth.[40] The female's estrus cycle is 28 days and lasts 36 hours.[40] Gestation lasts 11–13 days and the average litter size is 8–9 infants, although over 20 infants may be born.[40] Opossums have a very high mortality rate of their young; only one in ten offspring survive to reproductive adulthood.[41]

Newborns are the size of a honeybee.[25] Once delivered through the median vagina or central birth canal, newborn opossums climb up into the female opossum's pouch and latch onto one of her 13 teats.[40] The young remain latched for two months and in the pouch for 2+12 months.[40] The young then climb onto the mother's back, where she carries them for the remainder of their time together.[40] It is during this time that the young learn survival skills.[40] They leave their mother after about four or five months.[42]

Like all female marsupials, the female's reproductive system is bifid, with two lateral vaginae, uteri, and ovaries.[43] The male's penis is also bifid, with two heads, and as is common in New World marsupials, the sperm pair up in the testes and only separate as they come close to the egg.[43]

Lifespan edit

Compared to other mammals, including most other marsupials except dasyuromorphians, opossums have unusually short lifespans for their size and metabolic rate.[44][45] The Virginia opossum has a maximal lifespan in the wild of only about two years.[46] Even in captivity, opossums live only about four years.[47] The rapid senescence of opossums is thought to reflect the fact that they have few defenses against predators; given that they would have little prospect of living very long regardless, they are not under selective pressure to develop biochemical mechanisms to enable a long lifespan.[48] In support of this hypothesis, one population on Sapelo Island, 5 miles (8 km) off the coast of Georgia, which has been isolated for thousands of years without natural predators, was found by Dr. Steven Austad to have evolved lifespans up to 50% longer than those of mainland populations.[48][49]

Historical references edit

An early description of the opossum comes from explorer John Smith, who wrote in Map of Virginia, with a Description of the Countrey, the Commodities, People, Government and Religion in 1608 that "An Opassom hath an head like a Swine, and a taile like a Rat, and is of the bignes of a Cat. Under her belly she hath a bagge, wherein she lodgeth, carrieth, and sucketh her young."[50][51] The opossum was more formally described in 1698 in a published letter entitled "Carigueya, Seu Marsupiale Americanum Masculum. Or, The Anatomy of a Male Opossum: In a Letter to Dr Edward Tyson", from Mr William Cowper, Chirurgeon, and Fellow of the Royal Society, London, by Edward Tyson, M.D. Fellow of the College of Physicians and of the Royal Society. The letter suggests even earlier descriptions.[52]

Relationship with humans edit

 
Virginia opossum cornered in a piano in Houston, Texas, shortly before its release

Opossums are not considered dangerous to humans.[53] Though their open-mouth hiss when frightened is often mistaken as rabid behavior, opossums are naturally resistant to rabies due to their low body temperature. Opossums can however host parasites and carry diseases such as tuberculosis, leptospirosis, and tularemia, among others.[54]

Like raccoons, opossums can be found in urban environments, where they eat pet food, rotten fruit, and human garbage. They also are considered a common predator of poultry farming in North America.[55][56] Research suggests that proximity to humans causes an increase in body size for opossums living in or near urban environments.[57] Though sometimes mistakenly considered to be rats, opossums are not closely related to rodents or any other placental mammals.

The opossum was once a favorite game animal in the United States, particularly in the southern regions which have a large body of recipes and folklore relating to it.[58] Their past wide consumption in regions where present is evidenced by recipes available online[59] and in books such as older editions of The Joy of Cooking.[60] A traditional method of preparation is baking, sometimes in a pie or pastry,[61] though at present "possum pie" most often refers to a sweet confection containing no meat of any kind.

Around the turn of the 20th century, the opossum was the subject of numerous songs, including "Carve dat Possum", a minstrel song written in 1875 by Sam Lucas.[62]

Although it is widely distributed in the United States, the Virginia opossum's appearance in folklore and popularity as a food item has tied it closely to the American Southeast. In animation, it is often used to depict uncivilized characters or "hillbillies". Not surprisingly, then, the Virginia opossum is featured in several episodes of the hit TV show The Beverly Hillbillies, such as the "Possum Day" episode in 1965.[63] The title character in Walt Kelly's long-running comic strip Pogo was an opossum. In an attempt to create another icon like the teddy bear, President William Howard Taft was tied to the character Billy Possum.[64][65] The character did not do well, as public perception of the opossum led to its downfall. In December 2010, a cross-eyed Virginia opossum in Germany's Leipzig Zoo named Heidi became an international celebrity.[66] She appeared on a TV talk show to predict the 2011 Oscar winners, similar to the World Cup predictions made previously by Paul the Octopus, also in Germany.[67]

The Perelman Building in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, an annex of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, was formerly the Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company Building. Built in the late 1920s its facade is decorated with polychrome sculptures of animals symbolizing various attributes of insurance, including a possum to represent "protection".

References edit

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External links edit

virginia, opossum, other, uses, possum, possum, disambiguation, didelphis, virginiana, also, known, north, american, opossum, only, opossum, living, north, mexico, range, extending, south, into, central, america, northernmost, marsupial, world, united, states,. For other uses of possum see Possum disambiguation The Virginia opossum Didelphis virginiana also known as the North American opossum is the only opossum living north of Mexico its range extending south into Central America It is the northernmost marsupial in the world In the United States and Canada it is typically called a possum 5 It is a solitary nocturnal animal about the size of a domestic cat and a successful opportunist Virginia opossum 1 North American opossum in winterConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaInfraclass MarsupialiaOrder DidelphimorphiaFamily DidelphidaeGenus DidelphisSpecies D virginianaBinomial nameDidelphis virginiana Kerr 1792 Range of habitat showing both historic native range and introductions in the west these areas are currently expanding northward e g into Wisconsin and Minnesota 3 SynonymsDidelphis marsupialis virginiana 4 Opossums are familiar to many North Americans as they frequently inhabit settled areas near food sources like trash cans pet food compost piles gardens or housemice Their slow nocturnal nature and their attraction to roadside carrion make opossums more likely to become roadkill Contents 1 Name 2 Range 3 Description 3 1 Tracks 4 Behavior 4 1 Playing possum 4 2 Diet 4 3 Seasonality 4 4 Reproduction 5 Lifespan 6 Historical references 7 Relationship with humans 8 References 9 External linksName editThe Virginia opossum is the original animal named opossum a word which comes from Algonquian wapathemwa meaning white animal Colloquially the Virginia opossum is frequently just called a possum 6 The name opossum is applied more generally to any of the other marsupials of the families Didelphidae and Caenolestidae The generic name Didelphis is derived from Ancient Greek di two and delphus womb 7 The possums of Australia whose name derives from their similarity to the opossums of the Americas are also marsupials but of the order Diprotodontia The Virginia opossum is known in Mexico as tlacuache tacuachi and tlacuachi from the Nahuatl word tlacuatzin Range editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Virginia opossum s ancestors evolved in South America but spread into North America as part of the Great American Interchange which occurred mainly after the formation of the Isthmus of Panama about 3 million years ago Didelphis was apparently one of the later migrants entering North America about 0 8 million years ago 8 It is now found throughout Central America and North America from Costa Rica to southern Ontario and is expanding its range northward northwesterly and northeasterly at a significant pace 6 Its pre European settlement range was generally as far north as Maryland southern Ohio Indiana and Illinois Missouri and Kansas The clearing of dense forests in these areas and further north by settlers allowed the opossum to move northward Elimination of the opossum s main predators in these areas also contributed to their expansion Since 1900 it has expanded its range to include most of New England including Maine New York extreme southwestern Quebec most of southern and eastern Ontario most of Michigan and Wisconsin most of Minnesota southeastern South Dakota and most of Nebraska Areas such as Rhode Island and Waterloo Region and Simcoe County in southern Ontario rarely had sightings of opossums in the 1960s but now have them regularly some speculate that this is likely due to global warming causing winters to be warmer 9 Some people speculate the expansion into Ontario mostly occurred by opossums accidentally being transferred across the St Lawrence Niagara Detroit and St Clair rivers by motor vehicles or trains they may have climbed upon As the opossum is not adapted to colder winters or heavy snow its population may be significantly reduced if a colder winter with heavier snow occurs in a particular northern region The Virginia opossum was not originally native to the West Coast of the United States It was intentionally introduced into the West 6 during the Great Depression probably as a source of food 10 and now occupies much of the Pacific coast Its range has been expanding steadily northward into British Columbia Canada Description edit nbsp Skull of a Virginia opossum nbsp The back foot has an opposable thumb Virginia opossums can vary considerably in size with larger specimens found to the north of the opossum s range and smaller specimens in the tropics They measure 33 55 cm 13 22 in long from their snout to the base of the tail with the tail adding another 25 54 cm 9 8 21 3 in Males are slightly larger with an average body length of 40 8 cm 16 1 in with an average tail length of 29 4 cm 11 6 in while females are 40 6 cm 16 0 in long with a 28 1 cm 11 1 in tail Weight for males ranges from 2 1 2 8 kg 4 6 6 2 lb and for females from 1 9 2 1 kg 4 2 4 6 lb 11 Their coats are a dull grayish brown other than on their faces which are white Opossums have long hairless prehensile tails which can be used to grab branches and carry small objects They also have hairless ears and a long flat nose Opossums have 50 teeth more than any other North American land mammal 12 and opposable clawless thumbs on their rear limbs Opossums have 13 nipples arranged in a circle of 12 with one in the middle 13 14 The dental formula of an opossum is 5 1 3 4 4 1 3 4 15 No other mammal in North America has more than 6 upper incisors but the Virginia opossum has 10 Perhaps surprisingly for such a widespread and successful species the Virginia opossum has one of the lowest encephalization quotients of any marsupial 16 Its brain is one fifth the size of a raccoon s 17 Tracks edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Opossum tracks photo center in mud Left fore print appears on left center of photo right hind print appears right center The small circular tracks at bottom center of photo were made by a meadow vole The yellow ruler top is in inches nbsp Pacing diagram for Virginia opossum key rectangles represent hind tracks ellipses are fore tracks left tracks are red right are green a the position of the four feet frozen in mid pace b the opossum brings right fore and hind feet forward c the opossum brings left fore and hind feet forward One grid square represents one square inch Virginia opossum tracks generally show five finger like toes in both the fore and hind prints 18 The hind tracks are unusual and distinctive due to the opossum s opposable thumb which generally prints at an angle of 90 or greater to the other fingers sometimes near 180 Individual adult tracks generally measure 1 9 in long by 2 0 in wide 4 8 5 1 cm for the fore prints and 2 5 in long by 2 3 in wide 6 4 5 7 cm for the hind prints Opossums have claws on all fingers fore and hind except on the two thumbs in the photograph claw marks show as small holes just beyond the tip of each finger these generally show in the tracks In a soft medium such as the mud in this photograph the foot pads clearly show these are the deep darker areas where the fingers and toes meet the rest of the hand or foot which have been filled with plant debris by wind due to the advanced age of the tracks The tracks in the photograph were made while the opossum was walking with its typical pacing gait The four aligned toes on the hind print show the approximate direction of travel In a pacing gait the limbs on one side of the body are moved simultaneously just prior to moving both limbs on the other side of the body This is illustrated in the pacing diagram which explains why the left fore and right hind tracks are generally found together and vice versa If the opossum was not walking perhaps running the prints would fall in a different pattern Other animals that generally employ a pacing gait are raccoons bears skunks badgers woodchucks porcupines and beavers When pacing the opossum s stride generally measures from 7 to 10 in or 18 to 25 cm in the pacing diagram the stride is 8 5 in where one grid square is equal to 1 in2 To determine the stride of a pacing gait measure from the tip just beyond the fingers or toes in the direction of travel disregarding claw marks of one set of fore hind tracks to the tip of the next set By taking careful stride and track size measurements one can usually determine what species of animal created a set of tracks even when individual track details are vague or obscured Behavior edit Playing possum edit nbsp When injured or threatened e g by a dog the Virginia opossum is known to feign death or play possum If threatened an opossum will either flee or take a stand To appear threatening an opossum will first bare its 50 teeth snap its jaw hiss drool and stand its fur on end to look bigger 19 If this does not work the Virginia opossum is noted for feigning death in response to extreme fear 20 This is the genesis of the term playing possum which means pretending to be dead or injured with intent to deceive 21 In this inactive state it lies limp and motionless on its side mouth and eyes open tongue hanging out and feet clenched 19 Fear can also cause the opossum to release a green fluid from its anus with a putrid odor that repels predators 20 22 Heart rate drops by half and breathing rate is so slow and shallow it is hardly detectable 19 Death feigning normally stops when the threat withdraws and it can last for several hours 19 22 Besides discouraging animals that eat live prey playing possum also convinces some large animals that the opossum is no threat to their young 20 Playing possum in response to threats from oncoming traffic often results in death 23 Diet edit source source source source source source Night camera shows video of an opossum considering a bagel before walking awayOpossums are omnivorous sometimes said to be insectivorous and eat a wide range of plant based food as well as animal based food like small invertebrates carrion eggs fish amphibians reptiles birds small mammals and other small animals 24 Insects such as grasshoppers crickets and beetles make up the bulk of the animal foods eaten by opossums 25 It has been stated that opossums eat up to 95 of the ticks they encounter 23 26 and may eat up to 5 000 ticks per season helping to prevent the spread of tick born illnesses including Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever 26 This interpretation has been challenged 27 A widely publicized 2009 study by the Cary Institute indicated that Virginia opossums in a laboratory setting could eat thousands of ticks per week grooming 28 29 However subsequent studies of the stomach contents of wild Virginia opossums have not found any ticks in their diet 30 Small animals include young rabbits meadow voles mice rats birds snakes lizards frogs fish crayfish gastropods and earthworms 31 32 33 34 35 The Virginia opossum has been found to be very resistant to snake venom 36 26 Attracted to carrion on the side of the highway opossums are at an increased risk of being hit by motor vehicles 22 Plant foods are mainly eaten in late summer autumn and early winter 25 These include raspberries blackberries apples acorns beechnuts seeds grains bulbs and vegetables 25 35 Persimmons are one of the opossum s favorite foods during the autumn 37 Opossums in urban areas scavenge from bird feeders vegetable gardens compost piles garbage cans and food dishes intended for dogs and cats 25 31 nbsp Virginia opossum in northeastern OhioOpossums in captivity are known to engage in cannibalism though this is probably uncommon in the wild 38 Because of this placing an injured opossum in a confined space with its healthy counterparts is inadvisable Seasonality edit The Virginia opossum is most active during the spring and summer 25 It does not hibernate but reduces its activity during the winter 24 39 It may not leave its den for several days if the temperature drops below 7 to 4 C 19 to 25 F 25 Both males and females are at greater risk of injury during breeding season 40 Males extend their range in search of mates which puts them at greater risk of injury from motor vehicles and predators due to unknown territory 40 Females carrying young are slower moving and have to forage earlier in the evening and later into the night also increasing their risk of injury from motor vehicles and predation 40 Reproduction edit nbsp Carrying its youngThe breeding season for the Virginia opossum can begin as early as December and continue through October with most young born between February and June 40 A female opossum may have one to three litters per year 40 During the mating season the male attracts the female by making clicking sounds with his mouth 40 The female s estrus cycle is 28 days and lasts 36 hours 40 Gestation lasts 11 13 days and the average litter size is 8 9 infants although over 20 infants may be born 40 Opossums have a very high mortality rate of their young only one in ten offspring survive to reproductive adulthood 41 Newborns are the size of a honeybee 25 Once delivered through the median vagina or central birth canal newborn opossums climb up into the female opossum s pouch and latch onto one of her 13 teats 40 The young remain latched for two months and in the pouch for 2 1 2 months 40 The young then climb onto the mother s back where she carries them for the remainder of their time together 40 It is during this time that the young learn survival skills 40 They leave their mother after about four or five months 42 Like all female marsupials the female s reproductive system is bifid with two lateral vaginae uteri and ovaries 43 The male s penis is also bifid with two heads and as is common in New World marsupials the sperm pair up in the testes and only separate as they come close to the egg 43 Lifespan editCompared to other mammals including most other marsupials except dasyuromorphians opossums have unusually short lifespans for their size and metabolic rate 44 45 The Virginia opossum has a maximal lifespan in the wild of only about two years 46 Even in captivity opossums live only about four years 47 The rapid senescence of opossums is thought to reflect the fact that they have few defenses against predators given that they would have little prospect of living very long regardless they are not under selective pressure to develop biochemical mechanisms to enable a long lifespan 48 In support of this hypothesis one population on Sapelo Island 5 miles 8 km off the coast of Georgia which has been isolated for thousands of years without natural predators was found by Dr Steven Austad to have evolved lifespans up to 50 longer than those of mainland populations 48 49 Historical references editAn early description of the opossum comes from explorer John Smith who wrote in Map of Virginia with a Description of the Countrey the Commodities People Government and Religion in 1608 that An Opassom hath an head like a Swine and a taile like a Rat and is of the bignes of a Cat Under her belly she hath a bagge wherein she lodgeth carrieth and sucketh her young 50 51 The opossum was more formally described in 1698 in a published letter entitled Carigueya Seu Marsupiale Americanum Masculum Or The Anatomy of a Male Opossum In a Letter to Dr Edward Tyson from Mr William Cowper Chirurgeon and Fellow of the Royal Society London by Edward Tyson M D Fellow of the College of Physicians and of the Royal Society The letter suggests even earlier descriptions 52 Relationship with humans edit nbsp Virginia opossum cornered in a piano in Houston Texas shortly before its releaseOpossums are not considered dangerous to humans 53 Though their open mouth hiss when frightened is often mistaken as rabid behavior opossums are naturally resistant to rabies due to their low body temperature Opossums can however host parasites and carry diseases such as tuberculosis leptospirosis and tularemia among others 54 Like raccoons opossums can be found in urban environments where they eat pet food rotten fruit and human garbage They also are considered a common predator of poultry farming in North America 55 56 Research suggests that proximity to humans causes an increase in body size for opossums living in or near urban environments 57 Though sometimes mistakenly considered to be rats opossums are not closely related to rodents or any other placental mammals The opossum was once a favorite game animal in the United States particularly in the southern regions which have a large body of recipes and folklore relating to it 58 Their past wide consumption in regions where present is evidenced by recipes available online 59 and in books such as older editions of The Joy of Cooking 60 A traditional method of preparation is baking sometimes in a pie or pastry 61 though at present possum pie most often refers to a sweet confection containing no meat of any kind Around the turn of the 20th century the opossum was the subject of numerous songs including Carve dat Possum a minstrel song written in 1875 by Sam Lucas 62 Although it is widely distributed in the United States the Virginia opossum s appearance in folklore and popularity as a food item has tied it closely to the American Southeast In animation it is often used to depict uncivilized characters or hillbillies Not surprisingly then the Virginia opossum is featured in several episodes of the hit TV show The Beverly Hillbillies such as the Possum Day episode in 1965 63 The title character in Walt Kelly s long running comic strip Pogo was an opossum In an attempt to create another icon like the teddy bear President William Howard Taft was tied to the character Billy Possum 64 65 The character did not do well as public perception of the opossum led to its downfall In December 2010 a cross eyed Virginia opossum in Germany s Leipzig Zoo named Heidi became an international celebrity 66 She appeared on a TV talk show to predict the 2011 Oscar winners similar to the World Cup predictions made previously by Paul the Octopus also in Germany 67 The Perelman Building in Philadelphia Pennsylvania an annex of the Philadelphia Museum of Art was formerly the Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company Building Built in the late 1920s its facade is decorated with polychrome sculptures of animals symbolizing various attributes of insurance including a possum to represent protection References edit Gardner A L 2005 Order Didelphimorphia In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 6 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Perez Hernandez R Lew D Solari S 2016 Didelphis virginiana IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T40502A22176259 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 1 RLTS T40502A22176259 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Gardner A L Sunquist M E 2003 Opossum Didelphis virginiana In Feldhamer G A Thompson B C Chapman J A eds Wild Mammals of North America Biology Management and Conservation JHU Press pp 3 29 ISBN 978 0 8018 7416 1 John J McManus July 1970 Behavior of Captive Opossums Didelphis marsupialis virginiana American Midland Naturalist 84 1 144 169 doi 10 2307 2423733 JSTOR 2423733 Possum vs Opossum Is There a Difference Merriam Webster Retrieved 2023 11 12 Textbooks encyclopedias and science publications favor opossum but when it comes to general speech and writing possum is and has been the far more common choice a b c Gingerich Jerry Lee 1994 Florida s Fabulous Mammals Tampa FL World Publications p 2 ISBN 978 0 911977 13 4 Day Leslie 10 May 2013 Field Guide to the Natural World of New York City JHU Press p 225 ISBN 978 1 4214 1149 1 Woodburne M O 2010 07 14 The Great American Biotic Interchange Dispersals Tectonics Climate Sea Level and Holding Pens Journal of Mammalian Evolution 17 4 245 264 doi 10 1007 s10914 010 9144 8 PMC 2987556 PMID 21125025 Walsh L L Tucker P K 2017 Contemporary range expansion of the Virginia opossum Didelphis virginiana impacted by humans and snow cover Canadian Journal of Zoology 96 2 107 115 doi 10 1139 cjz 2017 0071 hdl 1807 81311 The Opossum Its Amazing Story William J Krause and Winifred A Krause University of Missouri Columbia 2006 p 23 ISBN 0 9785999 0 X 9780978599904 ADW Didelphis virginiana Information 1974 05 02 animaldiversity ummz umich edu Retrieved 2011 09 15 Wildlife Directory Virginia Opossum Living with Wildlife University of Illinois Extension Archived 2018 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Web extension illinois edu Retrieved on 2011 09 15 With the Wild Things Transcripts Archived 2013 03 23 at the Wayback Machine Digitalcollections fiu edu Retrieved on 2011 09 15 Mary Stockard AWRC Mammal Supervisor 2001 Raising Orphaned Baby Opossums AWRC org Virginia Opossum Didelphis virginiana www nsrl ttu edu Retrieved 2018 11 11 Ashwell K w s April 2008 Encephalization of Australian and New Guinean Marsupials Brain Behavior and Evolution 71 3 181 199 doi 10 1159 000114406 ISSN 0006 8977 PMID 18230970 S2CID 7544968 Virginia Opossum Mass Audubon Archived from the original on December 29 2010 Retrieved May 11 2011 Opossums are frequently encountered as corpses along highways Some biologists believe that many die as they feed on road killed animals a favorite food Others believe that the opossums small brain 5 times smaller than that of a raccoon sic erroneous logic suggests that they may just be too dumb to get out of the way of vehicles Krause William J Krause Winifred A 2006 The Opossum Its Amazing Story Archived 2012 12 11 at the Wayback Machine Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences School of Medicine University of Missouri Columbia Missouri 80 pages a b c d Virginia Opossum www psu edu Archived from the original on 2010 06 01 Retrieved 2020 09 28 a b c Opossum Defense Mechanisms Opossum Society of the United States Retrieved 2020 09 28 PLAY POSSUM definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary dictionary cambridge org Retrieved 2020 09 28 a b c Give opossums a break Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies 30 March 2015 Retrieved 2020 09 30 a b Why you should brake for opossums Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies 23 July 2012 Retrieved 2020 09 28 a b Virginia opossum Smithsonian s National Zoo 2018 01 05 Retrieved 2020 09 28 a b c d e f g Opossum Adirondack Ecological Center SUNY ESF College of Environmental Science and Forestry www esf edu Retrieved 2020 09 28 a b c Maurer Steph The Helpful Opossum Wildlife Medical Clinic at Illinois Archived from the original on 2021 07 16 Retrieved 2022 04 24 Hennessy C Hild K September 2021 Are Virginia opossums really ecological traps for ticks Groundtruthing laboratory observations Ticks and Tick Borne Diseases 12 5 101780 doi 10 1016 j ttbdis 2021 101780 PMID 34298355 Retrieved 2022 04 20 Kirchner Jane 13 June 2017 Opossums Unsung Heroes in the Fight Against Ticks and Lyme Disease National Wildlife Federation Retrieved 26 August 2019 Bayly Julia 24 March 2022 Turns out opossums may not actually like eating ticks Bangor Daily News Retrieved 27 October 2022 Hennessy Cecilia Hild Kaitlyn 15 July 2021 Are Virginia opossums really ecological traps for ticks Groundtruthing laboratory observations Ticks and Tick Borne Diseases 12 5 101780 doi 10 1016 j ttbdis 2021 101780 PMID 34298355 Retrieved 18 January 2021 a b Opossum Management Guidelines UC IPM ipm ucanr edu Retrieved 2020 09 28 Virginia Opossum Chesapeake Bay Program www chesapeakebay net Basic Information Sheet Virginia Opossum June 11 2018 Virginia opossum September 11 2020 a b Martina Leila Siciliano Didelphis virginiana Virginia opossum Animal Diversity Web Sharon A Jansa Robert S Voss 2011 Adaptive evolution of the venom targeted vWF protein in opossums that eat pitvipers PLOS ONE 6 6 e20997 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 620997J doi 10 1371 journal pone 0020997 PMC 3120824 PMID 21731638 Sparano Vin T 2000 The Complete outdoors encyclopedia St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 26722 3 Cannibalism in the Opossum Opossum Society Accessed May 7 2007 Virginia Opossum Didelphis virginiana eNature com Shearwater Marketing Group Archived from the original on 2011 05 17 Retrieved 2009 03 24 a b c d e f g h i j k l Reproduction Life Cycle Opossum Society of the United States Retrieved 2020 09 30 Tyndale Biscoe Hugh 2008 Life of marsupials New ed Collingwood CSIRO pp 105 138 ISBN 9780643092204 Reproduction Life Cycle Opossum Society of the United States opossumsocietyus org a b Krause William J 2005 The Opossum Its Amazing Story Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences School of Medicine University of Missouri Columbia Missouri ISBN 0 9785999 0 X Krause William J Krause Winifred A 2006 The Opossum Its Amazing Story Archived 2012 12 11 at the Wayback Machine Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences School of Medicine University of Missouri Columbia Missouri 80 pages Fisher Diana O Owens Ian P F Johnson Christopher N 2001 The ecological basis of life history variation in marsupials PDF Ecology 82 12 3531 3540 doi 10 1890 0012 9658 2001 082 3531 TEBOLH 2 0 CO 2 Archived PDF from the original on 2017 08 24 Virginia Opossum Didelphis virginiana Archived 2007 10 24 at the Wayback Machine Great Plains Nature Center accessed Oct 15 2007 The Life Span of Animals Accessed Oct 15 2007 a b Karen Wright Staying Alive Discover Magazine November 6 2003 Accessed Oct 15 2007 State Of Tomorrow Rising Challenges Higher Education Solutions www stateoftomorrow com Chrysti the Wordsmith gt Radio Scripts gt Opossum Retrieved 2009 12 29 Possum History Archived 2011 07 15 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2009 12 29 Langworthy Orthello R 1932 The Panniculus Carnosus and Pouch Musculature of the Opossum a Marsupial Journal of Mammalogy 13 3 241 251 doi 10 2307 1373999 JSTOR 1373999 Are opossums dangerous They can be but they re also good for your backyard USA TODAY Retrieved 2023 12 25 Weinberger Dawn 2023 10 19 Are Opossums Dangerous To Humans Pets And Property Forbes Home Retrieved 2023 12 25 Predators of Poultry Ohioline Ohio State University 2018 12 20 Retrieved 2022 04 21 Predator Management for Small and Backyard Poultry Flocks Cooperative Extension Poultry Retrieved 2022 04 21 Wright 2012 Influences of an Urban Environment on Home Range and Body Mass of Virginia Opossums Didelphis virginiana Northeastern Naturalist 19 1 77 86 doi 10 1656 045 019 0106 JSTOR 41429417 S2CID 86663111 Keith Sutton Possum days gone by ESPN Outdoors January 12 2009 Retrieved 2009 12 29 Wild Game Recipes online Retrieved 2009 12 29 The joy of the Joy of Cooking circa 1962 Archived 2006 10 30 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2009 12 29 opossum pie Archived 2011 07 18 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2009 12 29 Carve dat possum Library of Congress Retrieved 2020 11 09 Possum Day October 13 1965 via IMDb Possum Politics Archived 2006 12 16 at the Wayback Machine Possum Network Last accessed November 19 2006 Political Postcards Cyberbee learning Last accessed November 19 2006 Kelsey Eric January 11 2011 Cross eyed opossum capturing hearts Reuters Retrieved January 12 2011 Kelsey Eric 28 February 2011 German celebrity opossum misses one Oscar pick Reuters Retrieved 6 March 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Didelphis virginiana nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Didelphis virginiana The National Opossum Society Opossum Society of the United States Virginian Opossum Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Virginia opossum amp oldid 1193754201, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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