Mustelidae
Lutrinae
Melinae
Mellivorinae
Taxidiinae
Mustelinae
</table>
Mustelidae is a family of
carnivorous mammals. Many kinds of mustelids are maligned by humans. However, Mustelidae is among the most successful and diverse families in order Carnivora. Mustelids range from the
Least weasel, not much larger than a mouse, which can live in the high Arctic; to the
wolverine, a 50 pound (23 kg) animal that can dispatch
reindeer, crush bones as thick as the femur of a moose to get at the marrow, and has been known to drive
bears from kills; to the
ratel, which has a unique
symbiosis with a bird called the
honey guide bird; to the tropical, largely fruit-eating tayra; to the aquatic
otters. Other mustelids include
mink,
badgers,
weasels,
polecats, and
martens.
Mustelidae is one of the most species-rich families in order
Carnivora, as well as one of the older ones. Mustelid-like forms have existed for the past 40 million years and roughly coincided with the appearance of
rodents.
Several members of the family are aquatic to varying degrees, ranging from the semi-aquatic mink, the river otters, and the highly aquatic
sea otter. The Sea otter is also the only non-primate mammal known to use a tool while foraging. It uses "anvil" stones to crack open the shellfish that form a significant part of its diet. It is a "
keystone species," keeping its prey populations in balance so some do not outcompete the others and they do not destroy the
kelp in which they live.
Just as otters are adapted to swimming, several groups of badgers are adapted to digging. Many species of badgers and otters have evolved social groupings.
The
fisher, a type of marten, has a unique system to kill
porcupines—it targets the face until the animal is so weak it can be flipped over to its vulnerable belly. In some areas porcupines form as much as a quarter of the fisher's diet.
The Least weasel, adapted for eating small
rodents such as
mice and
voles, reproduces up to three times a year (unusual for carnivores, who typically reproduce annually) to take advantage of the fluctuations in rodent populations. Because of its small body size and fast metabolism it must eat every few hours to survive, so it runs through multiple cycles of sleep and wakefulness every day.
Mustelids also have some of the most exquisite furs—the mink, the
sable (a type of marten) and the ermine (stoat) are all members of the family. This has led to the ruthless slaughter of these animals, especially in the past. One species, the Sea mink (Mustela macrodon) of New England and Canada, was driven to extinction by fur trappers around the same time that the
Passenger pigeon was declining. Its appearance and habits are almost unknown because no one seems to have preserved even a single complete specimen, let alone conducted a systematic study. Today, some mustelids are in trouble for other reasons. The Sea otter, who almost shared the fate of the Sea mink, now risks being destroyed by oil spills and the side effects of overfishing; the
Black-footed ferret, a relative of the
European polecat, suffers from the disappearance of the American
prairie; and the
wolverine is in a long, slow decline because of habitat destruction and persecution.
Ferrets are kept as pets in some households.
- FAMILY MUSTELIDAE (55 species in 24 genera)
- Subfamily Lutrinae (Otters)
- Genus Amblonyx
- Genus Aonyx
- Genus Enhydra (sea otter)
- Genus Lontra
- Genus Lutra
- Genus Lutrogale
- Genus Pteronura
- Subfamily Melinae (badgers)
- Genus Arctonyx
- Genus Meles
- Genus Melogale
- Subfamily Mellivorinae (Ratels)
- Subfamily Taxidiinae (American badgers)
- Subfamily Mustelinae
The skunks (
Mephitinae) were moved into a new family,
Mephitidae, following a convincing paper ( and Honeycutt, 1997, Journal of Mammalology, 78(2): 426-443), that somewhat reorganized these two families based on DNA analyses.