In the early part (winter and spring) of 1939, at Ames, Iowa, Polderboer, Kuhn and Hendrickson (1941) studied four weasels living in four separate dens on 160 acres typical of Iowa farmland and excavated three of the dens. One den was in a weed patch in an old mole run. The nest chamber, approximately nine inches in diameter and six inches below the surface of the ground "was filled with grasses packed in a layer-like formation. In the center of this mass was a nest hollow lined with patches of mouse and shrew fur. Beneath this layer of fur and at the sides of the nest were skins, various bones, and skulls of partially eaten mice and shrews . . . scats [were in the nest]. . . . At intervals, layers of clean grass had been laid over the filth of the former bed, thus giving the nest a stratified appearance." A second den, of a large male, was in a field of sweet clover two feet high in the former burrow of a Franklin's ground squirrel. The nest cell, seven inches in diameter and nine inches below the surface of the ground, "was lined with grasses mixed with much rabbit and mouse fur. Some scats, and bones and fur of mice and shrews were matted together in layers at the bottom of the nest." When this den was abandoned the male weasel occupied, for a month, another burrow, 20 rods distant, of a Franklin ground squirrel, in the field of sweet clover. The nest cell measured 11 by nine inches and was 11 inches below the surface of the ground. "Two nest layers were present. The first, composed chiefly of coarse straw and grass, had apparently been occupied at some time by a spotted skunk. . . . On top of the skunk nest was the weasel nest composed of fine grasses, mouse fur, and skeletal remains of mice."
Relation of the Sexes to each other and to the young
Quick (1944:75) writes that on March 28, in Michigan, he found the tracks of a male and those of a smaller animal, supposedly a female, meeting. The two "then led along the fence for about 18 chains and both entered the den of the male. . . . Only the tracks of the smaller weasel left the den on the same date. Observation on April 12 showed that the large male still occupied the den." I am at a loss to explain this behavior since breeding would not be expected to occur in late March and since I suppose that the male and female do not live together except in the breeding season. Consequently, I wonder if the sign was wrongly read.
[Fig. 29.] Map showing the geographic ranges of the subspecies of Mustela frenata and Mustela africana.
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1. M. f.
noveboracensis 2. M. f. occisor 3. M. f. primulina 4. M. f. arthuri 5. M. f. olivacea 6. M. f. peninsulae 7. M. f. spadix 8. M. f. longicauda 9. M. f. oribasus 10. M. f. alleni 11. M. f. arizonensis 12. M. f. nevadensis 13. M. f. effera 14. M. f. washingtoni 15. M. f. saturata 16. M. f. altifrontalis 17. M. f. oregonensis 18. M. f. munda 19. M. f. xanthogenys 20. M. f. nigriauris 21. M. f. latirostra 22. M. f. pulchra |
23. M. f. inyoensis 24. M. f. neomexicana 25. M. f. texensis 26. M. f. frenata 27. M. f. leucoparia 28. M. f. perotae 29. M. f. macrophonius 30. M. f. goldmani 31. M. f. tropicalis 32. M. f. perda 33. M. f. nicaraguae 34. M. f. costaricensis 35. M. f. panamensis 36. M. f. meridana 37. M. f. affinis 38. M. f. aureoventris 39. M. f. helleri 40. M. f. macrura 41. M. f. agilis 42. M. f. boliviensis 43. M. a. africana 44. M. a. stolzmanni |
Hamilton (1933:328), however, writes that M. f. noveboracensis is to "be found in pairs when caring for the young. During mid-May, 1927, I several times saw a male of this species carrying food to a den of young ones." Green (1936), in May in Gratiot County, Michigan, remarks that while he was uncovering and examining a nest of four young weasels, two adults ran about excitedly and one removed a young weasel. In instances where several nearly full-grown young have been obtained from one den it has been my experience (Hall, 1946:191) that the only adult trapped there was the female; no adult male was found or in the one instance when found he was living alone in a den 200 yards away from the den of the female and her young. Data are too few to warrant a definite conclusion about the extent to which the male aids in rearing the young, but I have wondered if he might not do so when the young were less than half grown and then live alone when they were more than half grown.