[SYSTEMATIC ACCOUNTS OF SPECIES AND SUBSPECIES]
MUSTELA ERMINEA Linnaeus
Ermine
(Synonymy under subspecies)
Type.—Mustela erminea Linnaeus, Systema Naturae, 10th ed., p. 46, 1758.
Range.—From the British Isles and Atlantic Coast of Europe across Eurasia and North America including Greenland, from the northernmost land, south, in North America, to the lower margin of the Canadian Life-zone; geographically south to Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, northeastern Ohio, southern Michigan, Wisconsin, northern Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, in the Rocky Mountains to northern New Mexico, in the Sierra Nevada to Mono County, California, and on the Pacific Coast to the Golden Gate.
Characters for ready recognition.—Differs from Mustela rixosa in presence of black pencil on tail, tail-vertebrae more than a fourth of length of head and body, and in regions where the two species occur together, basilar length of skull more than 32.5 in males and more than 31.0 in females; from Mustela frenata, in regions where the two species occur together, by tail less than 44 per cent of length of head and body and by postglenoidal length of skull more than 46 per cent of condylobasal length in males and more than 48 per cent in females.
Characters of the species.—Size medium to small (total length 225 to 340 mm. in males and 190 to 290 mm. in females); tail 30 to 45 per cent of length of head and body, with distinct black pencil; caudal vertebrae 16 to 19; skull with long braincase and short precranial portion; postglenoidal length, when expressed as a percentage of the condylobasal length, more than 48 in females and ordinarily more than 46 in males; upper parts brown; underparts whitish, ordinarily continuous from chin to inguinal region but in subspecies in the humid region along the Pacific Coast interrupted in some individuals by brown of upper parts encircling body in the abdominal region. The soles of the feet in each of the subspecies are densely haired in winter and have only a relatively small area of the foot-pads exposed in summer, the intervening areas being well haired even at that season. The uniformity throughout the species as regards hairiness of the foot-soles and also the character of the vibrissae makes it unnecessary to describe these features in the accounts of the subspecies of erminea.
Geographic variation.—In the Old World 16 or more subspecies are currently recognized and there are 20 in North America. The features in which geographic variation is especially prominent are: First, size, as expressed by external measurements and weight, second, color pattern, depending on the extent, in relation to one another, of the dark-colored upper parts and light-colored underparts, and third, breadth and depth of the rostral region of the skull. Except in size, the variation in the skull is less than in M. frenata. Likewise in tone and shade of upper parts and hue or tint of underparts, erminea is less variable than frenata and has the face all of one color without the contrasting color-pattern of the face and head seen in many subspecies of frenata. M. erminea exceeds frenata as regards variation of the size of the area occupied by the light-colored underparts. At one extreme is the subspecies arctica in which the area of the light color extends well up on the sides of the body, down the insides of the legs, over the feet and far out on the lower side of the tail whereas at the other extreme are the races streatori and olympica in which the light-colored underparts are restricted to two areas, one on the chin, throat and chest, and the other on the inguinal region. These areas may or may not be connected by a thin line of white color along the midline of the underparts. In size of animal, erminea probably exhibits the maximum variation among American species of weasels; an average-sized male of the race arctica weighs 4 times as much as one of the race muricus, and in the species frenata I doubt that the difference is quite as great between individuals of the smallest race, effera, on the one hand, and either of the largest races, texensis or macrophonius, on the other hand although actual weights are not available for these races of frenata. As elsewhere indicated, the small-sized individuals of M. erminea are of the southern races and the large-sized individuals are of the northern races. This decrease in size southward occurs both in Asia and in America.
Natural History.—Habitat and numbers.—Along the International Boundary east of the Turtle Mountains, Soper (1946:136) found this species present only in timbered areas and absent from many untimbered areas. Of the same species to the westward he comments "so far as I know at present, there is no evidence to show that any short-tailed weasels inhabit a broad strip of treeless territory immediately north of the International Boundary in Canada from southwestern Alberta to southeastern Saskatchewan." The same author (1942) reports that in the general area of Wood Buffalo Park, Northwest Territory, south of Great Slave Lake, the ermine is uncommon on pine-grown sand ridge and rolling upland and common in lower spruce-aspen parklands, stream-side coniferous belts, and grassy, semi-wooded swamplands.