WHY THE SKUNK NEVER HURRIES
In addition, skunks have an even more potent weapon in the secretion of a vile-smelling liquid which is sprayed on a dangerous enemy. So confident are skunks in the efficacy of this weapon that they are extremely calm and unhurried in their manners and take little trouble to avoid an encounter with man or beast. Their odorous weapon is not used among themselves and appears to be held for service against more dangerous enemies.
Scent glands are common among rodents, carnivores, and insectivores, but are ordinarily used for purposes of communication with others of their kind, sometimes to attract the opposite sex and sometimes merely to give notice of their presence in a locality.
The hard school of experience holding through the ages has taught many of our rodents the necessity of lying up stores of food to meet periods of scarcity. Many species store food in a desultory way whenever a surplus is available, but when harvest time comes, at the close of summer, the work is taken up as a serious occupation during many busy hours each day or night by the species living where the severe northern winters make the stores a necessity.
The storage instinct is possessed as well by many of the southern desert species, where climatic conditions permit activity throughout the year. In such regions the supplies serve during storms and in periods of drought, when the yield of plant food is limited.
Photograph by Howard Taylor Middleton.
ARMED NEUTRALITY: A DOG AND A SKUNK PREPARE FOR COMBAT
Once in a lifetime the photographer of wild life gets an opportunity such as is recorded here. Luck was with the camera man, but not with the terrier, as a moment after this picture was made the dog was a very nauseated and embarrassed animal, the skunk having employed its natural weapon with overpowering odoriferous effect.