Sense of smell was used by an M. e. muricus that Dixon (1931:72) watched as the ermine followed a three-fourths-grown pika. Concerning the ermine at Carberry, Manitoba, Seton (1929 (2):598-599) writes that "The smell of blood must be as far-reaching as it is attractive to these sanguinary little creatures. I have frequently hung new-killed Rabbits and partridges temporarily in trees, and, after an absence, in some cases of a few minutes only, have found an Ermine mauling the game, though there was no sign of such a visitor when the cache was made."

Enemies

George Measham, of Winnipeg, found sign in the snow indicating that a great snowy owl had killed an ermine and T. McIlwraith shot a bald eagle at Hamilton Bay which had the bleached skull of a weasel (probably of this species) clinging to the throat (Seton, 1929 (2):603).

A. B. Howell (1943:98) likens mustelid mammals to domestic cats in their manner of crossing roads and thinks that mustelids loiter at the side of the road until the stimulus of the approaching car causes them to make a dash whereupon they are caught by the wheels and killed. Three of four weasels seen to cross the road were killed, one even having apparently crossed the road before turning back and being killed under the car. One weasel killed was Mustela erminea cicognanii. Dalquest (1948:190) in writing of this species in the state of Washington, says "I have seen only one abroad in the daytime. It dashed from a roadside thicket . . . and was crushed beneath the wheels of a car."

Food

The killing of prey is described by Hamilton (1933:332) as follows: "A rapid dash, and the bird or mouse is grabbed over the back of the skull, the fore legs encircle the animal as though hugging it, and the hind legs are brought up to scratch wildly at the captive. . . . If [the prey is] a large animal, as a rat, the weasel usually lies on its side, while the diminishing struggles of the rodent continue, but if a mouse or a small bird [is the object of attack], the weasel is apt to crouch over its prey. Little time is lost over the first [mouse] . . . if two mice are present [;] a strong bite through the brain case . . . [is] sufficient. If only one animal is present, the weasel dawdles over its kill some time after life has departed."

Hamilton's (1933:333) study of the contents of the digestive tracts of bodies of ermines obtained from fur trappers and fur buyers in New York enabled him to publish the following "Frequency Indices of Mammal Genera in Fall and Winter Food of 191 Mustela cicognanii": Microtus, 35.7 per cent; mammals undetermined to genus but principally mice, 16.3; Blarina, 15.1; Peromyscus, 11.4; Sylvilagus, 9.0; Sorex, 4.9; Rattus, 4.4; Tamias, 3.6. Close correspondence is shown by the following data of Aldous and Manweiler (1942) for the ermine from Lake of the Woods, Minnesota: mice, 58.7 per cent by number and 54.5 by volume; shrews 22.5 and 21.8 per cent; birds, 2.7 and 5.0 per cent. Of the mice in stomachs, 40 per cent were microtines, 15 per cent were Peromyscus and 45 per cent were unidentified as to kind. Fragments of a small fish were found in one stomach. Summed up, the dominant winter foods were mice and shrews. Trapping of the mammal populations was done to see what the available food was and it was found that the small mammals were eaten in direct ratio to their relative abundance. Snowshoe rabbits and red squirrels were not eaten. The Minnesotan data were from 60 stomachs and 53 intestinal tracts recovered from 129 weasels trapped by use of scent (not bait) mostly from January 1 to February 7, 1939, although a few were trapped in 1938. Analyses of contents from stomachs gave approximately the same results as those from intestines. In 1939 at Lake of the Woods, weasels were concentrated where food was abundant but no such concentration was noted in the following winter.

Big short-tailed shrew (Blarina brevicauda).—In New York State, the ermine preys on Blarina as shown by Hamilton's (1933:330) seeing one being carried by a male ermine on May 6, 1931, and another being carried by a female on May 13, 1932. The same author (1928:249) found the remains of a Blarina in a small female from Malone, New York. Kirk (1921) observed, however, that the ermine (M. e. cicognanii) avoided the shrew, Blarina, caught in a trap and that Blarina avoided the weasel caught in a trap.