Neovison vison (*)
Superregnum: Eukaryota
Cladus: Unikonta
Cladus: Opisthokonta
Cladus: Holozoa
Regnum: Animalia
Subregnum: Eumetazoa
Cladus: Bilateria
Cladus: Nephrozoa
Superphylum: Deuterostomia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Infraphylum: Gnathostomata
Megaclassis: Osteichthyes
Cladus: Sarcopterygii
Cladus: Rhipidistia
Cladus: Tetrapodomorpha
Cladus: Eotetrapodiformes
Cladus: Elpistostegalia
Superclassis: Tetrapoda
Cladus: Reptiliomorpha
Cladus: Amniota
Cladus: Synapsida
Cladus: Eupelycosauria
Cladus: Sphenacodontia
Cladus: Sphenacodontoidea
Cladus: Therapsida
Cladus: Theriodontia
Cladus: Cynodontia
Cladus: Eucynodontia
Cladus: Probainognathia
Cladus: Prozostrodontia
Cladus: Mammaliaformes
Classis: Mammalia
Subclassis: Trechnotheria
Infraclassis: Zatheria
Supercohors: Theria
Cohors: Eutheria
Infraclassis: Placentalia
Cladus: Boreoeutheria
Superordo: Laurasiatheria
Cladus: Scrotifera
Cladus: Ferungulata
Cladus: Ferae
Cladus: Pancarnivora
Cladus: Carnivoramorpha
Cladus: Carnivoraformes
Ordo: Carnivora
Subordo: Caniformia
Infraordo: Arctoidea
Superfamilia: Musteloidea
Familia: Mustelidae
Subfamilia: Mustelinae
Genus: Neovison
Species: Neovison vison
Subspecies: N. v. aestuarina – N. v. aniakensis – N. v. energumenos – N. v. evagor – N. v. evergladensis – N. v. ingens – N. v. lacustris – N. v. letifera – N. v. lowii – N. v. lutensis – N. v. melampeplus – N. v. mink – N. v. nesolestes – N. v. vison – N. v. vulgivaga
Name
Neovison vison (Schreber, 1777)
Type locality: "Man findet das Vison in Canada un Pensilvanien". Larivière (1999c) listed type locality as "Eastern Canada".
Combinations
Mustela vison
References
Schreber, J. C. D. 1777. Die Säugthiere in Abbildungen nach der Natur mit Beschreibungen 1776-1778. Wolfgang Walther, Erlangen, 3(19): pl. 127.B [1777]; see aksi text, 3(26):463 [1777].
Serge Larivière, 1999. Mustela vison, Mammalian Species, American Society of Mammologists, 608: 1–9.
Links
Neovison vison in Mammal Species of the World.
Wilson, Don E. & Reeder, DeeAnn M. (Editors) 2005. Mammal Species of the World – A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Third edition. ISBN 0-8018-8221-4.
IUCN: Neovison vison (Schreber, 1777) (Least Concern)
Neovison vison (Schreber, 1777) – Taxon details on Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS).
Smithsonian Institution - North American Mammals: Neovison vison
Vernacular names
asturianu: Visón americanu
беларуская: Норка амерыканская
български: Американска норка
brezhoneg: Vizon Amerika
català: Visó americà
čeština: Norek americký
dansk: Amerikansk mink
Deutsch: Amerikanischer Nerz
English: American Mink
Esperanto: Amerika nutreolo
español: Visón americano
eesti: Ameerika naarits
euskara: Amerikar bisoi
suomi: Amerikkalainen minkki
Nordfriisk: Amerikoonsk nerts
français: Vison d'Amérique
galego: Visón americano
עברית: חורפן אמריקאי
hrvatski: Američka vidrica
magyar: Amerikai nyérc
íslenska: Ameríkuminkur
italiano: Visone americano
한국어: 밍크
lietuvių: Kanadinė audinė
latviešu: Amerikas ūdele
Nederlands: Amerikaanse Nerts
norsk: Amerikansk mink
polski: Norka amerykańska
português: Visom-americano
русский: Американская норка
slovenčina: Norok americký
svenska: Mink
Türkçe: Amerika vizonu
українська: Візон річковий
Tiếng Việt: Chồn nâu châu Mỹ
中文: 美洲水鼬
The American mink (Neogale vison) is a semiaquatic species of mustelid native to North America, though human introduction has expanded its range to many parts of Europe, Asia, and South America. Because of range expansion, the American mink is classed as a least-concern species by the IUCN.[1] The American mink was formerly thought to be the only extant member of the genus Neovison following the extinction of the sea mink (N. macrodon), but recent studies, followed by taxonomic authorities, have reclassified it and the sea mink within the genus Neogale, which also contains a few New World weasel species.[3] The American mink is a carnivore that feeds on rodents, fish, crustaceans, frogs, and birds. In its introduced range in Europe it has been classified as an invasive species linked to declines in European mink, Pyrenean desman, and water vole populations. It is the animal most frequently farmed for its fur, exceeding the silver fox, sable, marten, and skunk in economic importance.[4]
Evolution
As a species, the American mink represents a more specialized form than the European mink in the direction of carnivory, as indicated by the more developed structure of the skull.[5] Fossil records of the American mink go back as far as the Irvingtonian, though the species is uncommon among Pleistocene animals. Its fossil range corresponds with the species' current natural range. The American minks of the Pleistocene did not differ much in size or morphology from modern populations, though a slight trend toward increased size is apparent from the Irvingtonian through to the Illinoian and Wisconsinan periods.[6]
Although superficially similar to the European mink, studies indicate the European mink's closest relative is the Siberian weasel (kolonok) of Asia. The American mink has been recorded to hybridize with European minks and polecats in captivity, though the hybrid embryos of the American and European minks are usually reabsorbed.[7]
Subspecies
As of 2005,[8] 15 subspecies are recognised.
Subspecies Trinomial authority Description Range Synonyms
Description
Build
Skeleton of an American mink from the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle
American mink with porcupine quills in its face. Yarmouth, NS
A juvenile American mink.
The American mink differs from members of the genus Mustela (stoats and weasels), as well as the other members of Neogale, by its larger size and stouter form, which closely approach those of martens. It shares with martens a uniformly enlarged, bushy and somewhat tapering tail, rather than a slender, cylindrical tail with an enlarged bushy tip, as is the case in stoats.[10] The American mink is similar in build to the European mink, but the tail is longer (constituting 38–51% of its body length).[11]
The American mink has a long body, which allows the species to enter the burrows of prey. Its streamlined shape helps it to reduce water resistance while swimming.[12] The skull is similar to that of the European mink, but is more massive, narrower, and less elongated, with more strongly developed projections and a wider, shorter cranium. The upper molars are larger and more massive than those of the European mink.[13] The dental formula is 3.1.3.13.1.3.2.
Domestic mink, which are bred in fur farms and are substandard genetically, have 19.6% smaller brains, 8.1% smaller hearts, and 28.2% smaller spleens than wild mink.[14][15] The feet are broad, with webbed digits.[10] They generally have eight nipples, with one pair of inguinal teats and three pairs of abdominal teats.[11] The adult male's penis is 2.2 in (5.6 cm) long, and is covered by a sheath. The baculum is well-developed, being triangular in cross section and curved at the tip.[12]
Males measure 13–18 in (34–45 cm) in body length, while females measure 12–15 in (31–37.5 cm). The tail measures 6–10 inches (15.6–24.7 cm) in males and 6–8 in (14.8–21.5 cm) in females. Weights vary with sex and season, with males being heavier than females. In winter, males weigh 1–3 lb (500–1,580 g) and females 1–2 lb (400–780 g). Maximum heaviness occurs in autumn.[5]
American mink paws, as illustrated by Ernest Thompson Seton
Fur
The American mink's winter fur is denser, longer, softer, and more close-fitting than that of the European mink. The winter fur's tone is generally very dark blackish-tawny to light-tawny. Colour is evenly distributed over all the body, with the under side being only slightly lighter than the back. The guard hairs are bright and dark-tawny, often approaching black on the spine. The underfur on the back is very wavy and greyish-tawny with a bluish tint. The tail is darker than the trunk and sometimes becomes pure black on the tip. The chin and lower lip are white. Captive individuals tend to develop irregular white patches on the lower surface of their bodies, though escaped individuals from Tartaria gradually lost these patches. The summer fur is generally shorter, sparser and duller than the winter fur.[11] The thick underfur and oily guard hairs render the pelage water-resistant, with the length of the guard hairs being intermediate between those of otters and polecats, thus indicating the American mink is incompletely adapted to an aquatic life. It moults twice a year, during spring and autumn.[12] It does not turn white in winter.[16] A variety of different colour mutations have arisen from experimental breeding on fur farms.[7]
Locomotion
On land, the American mink moves by a bounding gait, with speeds of up to 6.5 km/h (4.0 mph). It also climbs trees and swims well.[17] During swimming, the mink propels itself primarily through undulating movements of the trunk. When diving, it undergoes bradycardia, which is likely an adaptation to conserve oxygen.[12] In warm water (24 °C (75 °F)), the American mink can swim for 3 hours without stopping, but in cold water it can die within 27 minutes.[18] It generally dives to depths of 12 in (30 cm) for 10 seconds, though depths of 3 m lasting 60 seconds have been recorded. It typically catches fish after five- to 20-second chases.[17]
Senses and scent glands
The American mink relies heavily on sight when foraging. Its eyesight is clearer on land than underwater. Its auditory perception is high enough to detect the ultrasonic vocalisations (1–16 kHz) of rodent prey. Its sense of smell is comparatively weak. Its two anal glands are used for scent marking, either through defecation or by rubbing the anal region on the ground. The secretions of the anal glands are composed of 2,2-dimethyl thietane, 2-ethylthietane, cyclic disulfide, 3,3-dimethyl-1,2-dithiacyclopentane, and indole. When stressed, the American mink can expel the contents of its anal glands at a distance of 12 in (30 cm).[12] Scent glands may also be located on the throat and chest.[19] The smell produced by these scent glands was described by Clinton Hart Merriam as more unbearable than that produced by skunks, and added it was "one of the few substances, of animal, vegetable, or mineral origin, that has, on land or sea, rendered me aware of the existence of the abominable sensation called nausea".[20]
Behavior
Social and territorial behaviours
Southern mink (N. v. vulgivagus) in a threatening posture
American mink emerges from a pond
American mink territories are held by individual animals with minimal intrasex overlap, but with extensive overlap between animals of the opposite sex. Most territories are in undisturbed, rocky coastal habitats with broad littoral zones and dense cover. Some are on estuaries, rivers and canals near urban areas. Home ranges are typically 1–6 kilometres (0.62–3.73 miles) long, with male territories larger than females'.[17] As long as it is close to water, the American mink is not fussy about its choice of den. Mink dens typically consist of long burrows in river banks, holes under logs, tree stumps, or roots and hollow trees, though dens located in rock crevices, drains, and nooks under stone piles and bridges are occasionally selected. The burrows they dig themselves are typically about four inches in diameter and may continue along for 10–12 feet (300–370 cm) at a depth of 2–3 feet (61–91 cm). The American mink may nest in burrows dug previously by muskrats, badgers and skunks, and may also dig dens in old ant hills. The nesting chamber is at the end of a four-inch tunnel, and is about a foot in diameter. It is warm, dry, and lined with straw and feathers.[21] The American mink's dens are characterized by a large number of entrances and twisting passages. The number of exits varies from one to eight.[18]
The American mink normally only vocalises during close encounters with other minks or predators. The sounds it emits include piercing shrieks and hisses when threatened and muffled chuckling sounds when mating. Kits squeak repeatedly when separated from their mothers.[19] Ernest Thompson Seton reported hearing minks growl and snarl when confronting a threat.[22] During aggressive interactions, mink assert their dominance by arching their backs, puffing up, lashing out their tails, and stomping and scraping the ground with their feet, while also opening their mouth in a threat-gape. Should this be unsuccessful, fights may result, with injuries to the head and neck.[19]
American mink in a burrow
Reproduction and development
American mink kits
The American mink is a promiscuous animal that does not form pair bonds.[17] The start of mating season ranges from February in its southern range to April in the north.[12] In its introduced range, the American mink breeds one month earlier than the European mink.[23] Males commonly fight during the mating season, which may result in the formation of loose, temporary dominance hierarchies governing access to receptive females.[17] The mating season lasts for three weeks, with ovulation being induced by the presence of males. The mating process is violent, with the male typically biting the female on the nape of the neck and pinning her with his forefeet. Mating lasts from 10 minutes to four hours. Females are receptive for seven- to 10-day intervals during the three-week breeding season, and can mate with multiple males. Along with the striped skunk, the American mink is among the only mammals to mate in spring that have a short delay before implantation. This delayed implantation allows pregnant minks to keep track of environmental conditions and select an ideal time and place for parturition.[12]
The gestation period lasts from 40 to 75 days, with actual embryonic development taking place for 30–32 days, indicating implantation delay can last from eight to 45 days. The young are born from April to June, in litters consisting of four kits on average.[12] The litters are often multiply sired.[24] Exceptionally large litters of 11 kits have been recorded in Tartaria and 16 in the United States.[23] The kits are blind at birth, weighing six grams and possessing a short coat of fine, silver-white hairs.[12] The kits are dependent on their mother's milk, which contains 3.8% lipids, 6.2% protein, 4.6% lactose and 10.66% mineral salts.[23] Their eyes open after 25 days, with weaning occurring after five weeks. The kits begin hunting after 8 weeks of age, but stay close to their mother until autumn, when they become independent. Sexual maturity is attained during the kit's first spring, when they are about 10 months old.[12]
Diet
American mink with fish, in Norway
The American mink is a carnivorous animal that feeds on rodents, fish, crustaceans, amphibians, and birds. It kills vertebrate prey by biting the back of the head or neck, leaving canine puncture marks 9–11 mm (0.35–0.43 in) apart.[25] The American mink often kills birds, including larger species like seagulls and cormorants, by drowning. In its natural range, fish are its primary prey. Although inferior to the North American river otter in hunting fish, Audubon and Bachman once reported seeing a mink carrying a foot-long trout. Mink inhabiting the prairie sloughs primarily target frogs, tadpoles, and mice.[26] It is a formidable predator of muskrats, which are chased underwater and killed in their own burrows. Among the rodents killed by the American mink in its native range are rats and mice of the genera Hesperomys, Microtus, Sigmodon, and Neotoma. Marsh rabbits are frequently taken in marshy or swampy tracts.[27]
In Tartaria, the American mink's most important food items are voles, fish, crustaceans, frogs, and aquatic insects. In winter, aquatic foods predominate, while land-based prey increases in importance during the spring. Within the Altai Mountains, the American mink feeds predominantly on mammals such as rodents, shrews, and moles, as well as birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish. Among the 11 different bird species preyed upon by minks in Altai are dippers and pine grosbeaks. Among fish, small species predominate in the diet of minks in Altai, and include minnows, gudgeons, and wide-headed sculpins. In the Sverdlovsk and Irkutsk Oblasts, mouse-like rodents are their most important foods, followed by birds, fish and insects. In the Russian Far East, where crustaceans are scarce, the American mink feeds extensively on amphipods.[28] In the British Isles, dietary composition varies seasonally and regionally. European rabbits are the most commonly taken prey in areas where they are common, especially in summer. A range of small rodents and insectivores are preyed upon, but to a lesser degree. European hares are occasionally attacked. Minks in Britain prey on several bird species, with ducks, moorhens, and coots being most frequently targeted on lakes and rivers, while gulls are taken in coastal habitats. Marine species preyed upon in Britain include European eels, rock-pool fish such as blenny, shore crabs and crayfish.[29] American minks have been implicated in the decline of the water vole in the United Kingdom and linked to the decline of waterfowl across their range in Europe. They are now considered vermin in much of Europe and are hunted for the purpose of wildlife management.[30] In South America's Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve, mammals, including both native and exotic rodents, are the American mink's main prey throughout the year, though birds are of equal importance during their summer nesting periods.[31]
The American mink may pose a threat to poultry. According to Clinton Hart Merriam[32] and Ernest Thompson Seton,[33] although the American mink is a potential poultry thief, it is overall less damaging than the stoat. Unlike the stoat, which often engages in surplus killing, the mink usually limits itself to killing and eating one fowl during each attack. Studies in Britain indicate poultry and game birds only constitute 1% of the animals' overall diets;[29] small mammals, especially rabbits, tend to dominate, followed by fish and birds, especially moorhens and coots.[34]
Relationships with other predators
The American mink replaces and sometimes kills the European mink wherever their ranges overlap.[35] The decline of European mink populations seems to coincide with the spread of the American mink, but "The early declines in Central Europe and later in Finland took place before the spread of the American mink."[36] The diets of the American mink and European otter overlap to a great extent. In areas where these two species are sympatric, competition with the otter for fish causes the American mink to hunt land-based prey more frequently.[37]
Large birds of prey, such as bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) and great horned owls (Bubo virginianus) occasionally hunt American mink.[38][39] In Finland, white-tailed eagles (Haliaeetus albicilla) have become the main natural control and may inhibit the mink from breeding via heavy predation.[40] Eurasian eagle-owls (Bubo bubo) also can be predators of mink in the introduced regions.[41]
Intelligence
An early behavioral study was performed in the 1960s to assess visual learning ability in minks, ferrets, skunks, and house cats. Animals were tested on their ability to recognize objects, learn their valences and make object selections from memory. Minks were found to outperform ferrets, skunks, and cats in this task, but this letter (short paper) fails to account for a possible conflation of a cognitive ability (decision making, associative learning) with a largely perceptual ability (invariant object recognition).[42]
Range
Natural
Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska.
The species' natural range encompasses most of North America, from Alaska, through Canada and further into the United States except Arizona and the more arid areas of California, Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, and West Texas.[1]
Introduced
Argentina
The American mink was deliberately introduced for commercial fur production in several provinces of Patagonia in 1930. The animals escaped or were released from farms in Chubut Province and now occur in the Chubut and Río Negro Provinces and Tierra del Fuego.[43] In Argentina the mink is one of the major menaces of the Hooded grebe, which risks becoming extinct.[44]
South Chile
In Chile, American minks were introduced to Magallanes Region in the 1930s. Ever since minks were freed into nature during the crisis of the fur industry the mink has expanded its range across Chile. Actually it ranges from Araucanía Region in the north to Magallanes Region in the south. However, there are isolated territories in between where the mink is not found, probably due to biogeographic barriers. One of the latest areas where the mink has been found is Chiloé Archipelago,- minks were reported there for the first time 2013, making scientists suspect they may have arrived on a ship.[45]
Western Europe
Feral American minks in Europe are thought to be of domesticated stock derived from the N. v. vison, N. v. melampeplus and N. v. ingens subspecies. The first specimens were imported to Europe in 1920 for fur-farming purposes. The American mink was introduced in Italy in the 1950s, and currently resides mostly in the northeastern part of the Italian Peninsula. The majority of these populations do not appear to be self-sufficient, though minks in the Monti Prenestini and Simbruini in Lazio have reproduced successfully.[46]
Escapees of fur farms established a self-sustaining and expanding population on the Iberian Peninsula by the second half of the 20th century. In 2013, the Spanish government announced a plan to eradicate the species,[47] as a means to protect the falling populations of European mink and other endangered species affected such as the Pyrenean desman.
The first mink farm in Norway was built in 1927, with escapees establishing wild populations within 30 years of its establishment. The first feral mink populations arose in 1930, establishing territories in southwestern Norway. These feral minks, augmented by further escapees, formed the basis of a strong population in Hordaland by the end of World War II. Feral mink colonised eastern Norway in 1930 and had become established in most southeastern counties in the early 1940s. By 1950, feral mink reached central Norway, with further populations occurring in the northern counties of Nordland and Troms. During the post-World War II period until 1965, mink had colonised most of the country. In modern times, the American mink occupies all of the Norwegian mainland, but is absent on some islands.[48]
The American mink was first imported to Great Britain in 1929, though a series of escapes and releases led to the establishment of a self-sufficient feral population in Devon by the late 1950s, and others by the early 1960s. In Ireland, the American mink was not farmed until the early 1950s, thus feral populations established themselves there much later. The species is now widespread in mainland Great Britain and Ireland, though some places remain uncolonised. It has established itself on a few islands, including Arran and Lewis and Harris.[17] Until 2005, mink hunting with packs of hounds occurred in the UK. The total mink population in Great Britain is estimated at 110,000 (England: 46,750; Scotland: 52,250; Wales: 9,750). This population may be declining as European otter numbers increase. There are no estimates for the mink population in Ireland, but it is thought to be low, because of Ireland's strong otter population.[49]
Former USSR
An American mink in Lithuania's Kėdainiai district
In 1933, American minks were released into the Voronezh Oblast in European Russia. Until 1963, more minks were introduced in various quantities in the Voronezh and Arkhangelsk Oblasts, Karelia, in Kalininsk, Gorkovsk, Volgograd and Chelyabinsk Oblasts, and into Tatarstan and Bashkir, as well as the Lithuanian and Byelorussian SSRs. Beyond the Urals, American minks were introduced in the Sverdlovsk, Tyumen, Omsk, Kemerovo, Novosibirsk, Chita and Irkutsk Oblasts, in the Altai and Krasnoyarsk Krai, in the Tuvan, Buryat and Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republics, into the Magadan, Kamchatka and Amur Oblasts, into the Khabarovsk and Primorsky Krai, into the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug and several other locations, including Sakhalin and Urup Island. In the Caucasus region, American minks were released into North Ossetia. In Central Asia they were released in the Tien Shan region. Originally, captive-bred minks were used, but wild specimens were later released to facilitate the species' acclimatisation within Soviet territories. Several years after the first release, introductions into the ranges already held by native European minks were discontinued, with most releases from then on taking place in Siberia and the Far East. Although considerable areas were occupied by the American mink by the early 1960s, the species' Soviet range was never continuous, as most released populations were isolated from one another.[50]
Iceland
The species has been present in Iceland since the 1930s, and has become well established, despite it being heavily hunted since 1939. However, its population underwent a 42% decline during the years 2002–2006, which coincided with a decline in sand eel populations resulting in a drop in the seabird populations on which the minks feed.[51]
Diseases and parasites
The American mink often carries light tick and flea infestations. Tick species known to infest minks include Ixodes hexagonus, Ixodes canisuga, Ixodes ricinus, and Ixodes acuminatus. Flea species known to infest minks include Palaeopsylla minor, Malaraeus penicilliger, Ctenopthalmus noblis, Megabothris walkeri, Typhloceras poppei, and Nosopsyllus fasciatus. Endoparasites include Skrjabingylus nasicola and Troglotrema acutum.[49] Trematode Metorchis conjunctus can also infect American minks.[52]
Transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) is a prion disease of mink, similar to BSE in cattle and scrapie in sheep. A 1985 outbreak of TME in Stetsonville, Wisconsin resulted in a 60% mortality rate for the minks.[53] Further testing revealed this agent is transmissible between mink, cattle, and sheep. The Stetsonville outbreak may have been due to the mink being fed carcasses or otherwise consuming other infected animals.[54]
Toxoplasma gondii has been recorded in American minks in southern Chile, with 59% seroprevalence in the 73 mink analyzed in one study. Southern river otters of the area were also found to have high T. gondii seroprevalence in this study, showing a high exposure of semiaquatic mustelids to the parasite in this part of Chile.[55]
Decline of wild mink
Because of numerous incidents of domestic mink escaping from fur farms and establishing themselves in the wild, concern has arisen among conservationists of the possible repercussions such escapes may have on natural wild mink populations. Domestic mink are larger than wild mink, which may cause problems with the ecosystem when they escape. Minks are solitary, territorial animals and are intolerant of other minks. In times of overpopulation, they control their own numbers by either killing each other through direct conflict or by causing weaker minks to be driven from territory until starvation sets in.[56] When hundreds or thousands of released domestic minks flood an ecosystem, it causes a great disturbance for the wild minks, resulting in the deaths of the majority of the released mink and many of the wild ones from starvation or injuries incurred while fighting over territory.[56] When a domestic mink survives long enough to reproduce, it may cause problems for the wild mink populations.[57] The adding of weaker domestic mink genes into wild mink populations is believed by some to have contributed to the decline of mink populations in Canada.[57]
A 2006 study in Denmark concluded, due to frequent escapes from existing mink farms, "Closing mink farms may result in a crash of the free-ranging population, or alternatively it may result in the establishment of a better-adapted, truly feral population that may ultimately outnumber the population that was present before farm closures." The study reported more information would be necessary to determine the outcome.[58] Another Danish study reported a significant majority of the "wild" mink were mink which had escaped from fur farms. About 47% had escaped within two months, 31% had escaped prior to two months, and 21% "may or may not have been born in nature." The survival rate for recently released minks is reportedly lower than for wild minks, but if feral minks survive at least two months, their survival rate is the same as for wild minks. The authors suggest this is due to the rapid behavioural adaptation of the animals.[59]
Relationships with humans
Disease
The American mink and European mink[60] have both been found to transmit SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.
Fur use
American minks are primarily used in manufacturing fur coats, jackets, and capes. Pelts that are not able to be converted into these items are made into trimming for cloth and fur coats. Mink scarves and stoles are also manufactured. Jackets and capes are mostly made from small to medium-sized specimens, usually females and young males, while trimming, scarves and stoles are made from adult males.[61] The most valuable peltries come from eastern Canada which, although the smallest, are the silkiest and darkest.[62]
Trapping
Illustration of an American mink approaching a board or log trap
Although difficult to catch, the American mink, prior to being commercially farmed, was among the most frequently trapped furbearers as, unlike other furbearing mammals, it did not hibernate in winter, and could thus be caught on a nightly basis even in the far north.[63] Minks were legally trapped from early November to early April, when their pelts were prime.[64] Minks caught in traps cling to life with great tenacity, having been known to break their teeth in trying to extricate themselves from steel traps.[65] Elliott Coues described a trapped mink thusly:
One who has not taken a Mink in a steel trap can scarcely form an idea of the terrible expression the animal's face assumes as the captor approaches. It has always struck me as the most nearly diabolical of anything in animal physiognomy. A sullen stare from the crouched, motionless form gives way to a new look of surprise and fear, accompanied with the most violent contortions of the body, with renewed champing of the iron till breathless, with heaving flanks, and open mouth dribbling saliva, the animal settles again, and watches with a look of concentrated hatred, mingled with impotent rage and frightful despair. The countenance of the Mink, its broad, low head, short ears, small eyes, piggish snout, and formidable teeth, is always expressive of the lower and more brutal passions, all of which are intensified at such times. As may well be supposed, the creature must not be incautiously dealt with when in such a frame of mind.[65]
One Native American method involved using a bait (usually a slit open chicken carcass filled with fish oil and oysters) tied to a rope and dragged around an area laden with traps. A mink would thus follow the trail into one of the traps. Another indigenous method involved placing traps scented with muskrat and female mink musk on top of disused muskrat dens by water bodies. Attracted by the scent of food and a female, the mink would get caught in the trap and drown.[66] On the American prairies, only the steel trap was used, due to the lack of timber.[67]
Farming
Various American mink colour mutations
Breeding American minks for their fur began in the late 19th century, as increasing enthusiasm for mink pelts made the harvesting of wild minks insufficient to meet the new demands. American minks are easily kept in captivity, and breed readily.[68] In 2005, the US ranked fourth in production behind Denmark, China and the Netherlands. Minks typically breed in March, and give birth to their litters in May. Farmers vaccinate the young kits for botulism, distemper, enteritis, and, if needed, pneumonia. They are harvested in late November and December. Methods for killing animals on fur farms, as on all farms, are detailed in the American Veterinary Medical Association's Report on Euthanasia which is used as a voluntary guideline for state departments of agriculture which have jurisdiction over all farms raising domesticated livestock, including minks.[69] In the past, some mink farms successfully provided pools of water for the mink to swim;[70] however, this practice is unheard-of in modern mink production. Minks are motivated to access swimming water, and the absence of water is a source of frustration on modern farms.[71] The ideal diet for farm-bred minks consists of four to five ounces of horse meat and a quarter-pint of milk once daily.[70]
Colour mutations
Selective breeding has produced a number of different colour shades in mink peltries, ranging from pure white, through beiges, browns, and greys, to a brown that is almost black. The two standard strains are brown and "black cross" which, when paired, produce numerous colour variations. When an albino mink is born, it is standard procedure in fur farms to breed it to other colour mutations to produce grey and light-brown pastel shades. The following graph is a simplification of the main colour strains:[72]
Colour variant Image Description
As pets
Mink as pet
Wild mink can be tamed if caught young, but can be difficult to handle and are usually not handled bare-handed.[73] In the late 19th century, tame American minks were often reared for ratting, much as ferrets were used in Europe. Some modern ratters have revived this practice using farm-raised mink, sometimes alongside ratting dogs.[74] They are sometimes more effective ratters than terriers, as they can enter rat holes and drive rats from their hiding places.
When mink of wild stock are confined with tame ones, the wild invariably dominate the tamed mink. They have also been known to dominate cats in confrontations.[75] Although intelligent, minks are not quick to learn tricks taught to them by their owners.[76] Because of their fondness for bathing, captive American minks may enter kettles or other open water-containing vessels.
Although domestic minks have been bred in captivity for almost a century, they have not been bred to be tame. Domestic minks have been bred for size, fur quality, and color. However, the U.S. Fur Commission claims "mink are truly domesticated animals", based on the number of years they have been kept on fur farms.[77]
Literature
As an invasive species in the United Kingdom, minks have been the subject of at least two novels. Ewan Clarkson's 1968 Break for Freedom (published as Syla, the Mink in the US) tells the story of a female mink escaped from a fur farm in a realistic style. On the other hand, A.R. Lloyd's 1982 Kine is a heroic fantasy with the minks as villains and the weasels and other indigenous animals as heroes.[citation needed]
Indigenous names
Abenaki language
Western Abnaki: mosbas
Penobscot: mósəpehso
Alabama: sakihpa
Aleut: ilgitux̂[78]
Arapaho: no'eihi'
Arikara: eérux
Assiniboine: íkusana
Blackfoot: aapssiiyai'kayi or soyii'kayi[79]
Cherokee: svki[citation needed]
Chickasaw: okfincha[80]
Comox: qayχ
Cree: sâkwes
Plains Cree: sâkwês ᓵᑫᐧᐢ
Swampy Cree: šâkwêšiw ᔖᑴᔑᐤ
Moose Cree: shakweshiw ᔕᑴᔑᐤ
Naskapi: achikaas ᐊᒋᑲᔅ
Innu: atshakash
James Bay Cree: achikaash ᐊᒋᑳᔥ
Crow: baapúxtakbialee
Dakelh
Nadleh Whut'en: telhjoos
Nak'azdli: techus
Dane-zaa: taadle
Dënesųłinë́: tthełjus[81]
Gitxsan: lis'in
Halkomelem
Hul'q'umi'num: chuchi'q'un'
Halqeméylem: ts'qáyex̱iya
Heiltsuk–Oowekyala: kvənn̓à
Haíɫzaqv: kvṇ̓á
Hidatsa: nagcúa
Ho-Chunk: jająksík[82]
Kaska: tets'ūtl'ęhį̄
Koasati: sa•kih•pa
Kutenai: ʔinuya
Kwak̓wala: ma̱tsa
Lakota: ikhúsą[83][84]
Lenape
Munsee: wiiníingwus[85]
Unami: wininkwës
Lillooet: t̓sexyátsen
Lushootseed
Northern Lushootseed: bəščəb[86]
Southern Lushootseed: c̓əbal̕qid[87]
Menominee: sāhkih
Miami-Illinois: šinkohsa
Mi'kmaq: mujpej
Nisga'a: lisy̓een
Nishnaabemwin: zhaangwesh
Nlaka'pamuctsin: c̓əx̣lécn
Nuxalk: t'uka
Nuu-chah-nulth
Ehattesaht: č̕aastumc
Tseshaht: č̓aastimc
Ojibwe: zhaangweshi[88]
Okanagan: c̓x̌licn
Omaha–Ponca: íki skă
Oneida: shotsya·káweˀ
Potawatomi: wnepshkwé
Salish: c̓xlicn̓
Senćoŧen: ćećiḵen
Shashishalhem: ḵáyx̱
Secwepemc: ts'exlétsen
Sm'álgyax: lis'yaan
Tuscarora: θenę́·ku·t[89]
Tse'khene: tantl'ehe
Umatilla: kuucpúu
Witsuwitʼen: tëc'ohts'iy
Wolastoqey-Passamaquoddy: ciyahkehs
See also
Aleutian disease
European mink
Sea mink
Fur farming
References
Reid, F.; Schiaffini, M. & Schipper, J. (2016). "Neovison vison". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T41661A45214988. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-1.RLTS.T41661A45214988.en.
Wozencraft, W. C. (2005). "Order Carnivora". In Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 619. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
Patterson, Bruce D.; Ramírez-Chaves, Héctor E.; Vilela, Júlio F.; Soares, André E. R.; Grewe, Felix (2021). "On the nomenclature of the American clade of weasels (Carnivora: Mustelidae)". Journal of Animal Diversity. 3 (2): 1–8. doi:10.52547/JAD.2021.3.2.1. ISSN 2676-685X. S2CID 236299740.
Heptner & Sludskii 2002, p. 745
Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 1397–1399
Kurtén 1980, p. 151
Harris & Yalden 2008, p. 488
Wozencraft, W. C. (2005). "Order Carnivora". In Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
Anthony 1928, pp. 109–110
Coues 1877, pp. 161–162
Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 1392–1394
Feldhamer, Thompson & Chapman 2003, pp. 663–664
Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 1394–1395
Kruska, D. (1996). "The effect of domestication on brain size and composition in the mink (Mustela vison)". Journal of Zoology. 239 (4): 645–661. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1996.tb05468.x.
Kruska, D.; Schreiber, A. (1999). "Comparative morphometrical and biochemical-genetic investigations in wild and ranch mink (Mustela vison: Carnivora: Mammalia)". Acta Theriologica. 44: 377–392. doi:10.4098/AT.arch.99-37.
Seton 1909, p. 873
Harris & Yalden 2008, pp. 489–490
Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 1410–1411
Harris & Yalden 2008, p. 491
Merriam 1886, p. 67
Seton 1909, pp. 879–880
Seton 1909, p. 877
Heptner & Sludskii 2002, p. 1413
Thom, Michael D.; MacDonald, David W.; Mason, Georgia J.; Pedersen, Vidi; Johnson, Paul J. (2004). "Female American mink, Mustela vison, mate multiply in a free-choice environment" (PDF). Animal Behaviour. 67 (5): 975–984. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2003.09.008. hdl:10214/4719. S2CID 4945467.
Harris & Yalden 2008, p. 487
Seton 1909, pp. 883–884
Coues 1877, p. 178
Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 1407–1408
Harris & Yalden 2008, p. 492
Haworth, Jenny (February 3, 2009). "National cull may exterminate UK mink". The Scotsman. Edinburgh, UK.
Ibarra, J.T.S.; Fasola, L.; MacDonald, D.W.; Rozzi, R.; Bonacic, C.N. (2009). "Invasive American mink Mustela vison in wetlands of the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve, southern Chile: What are they eating?". Oryx. 43: 87. doi:10.1017/S0030605308099997.
Merriam 1886, p. 63
Seton 1909, p. 885
Macdonald, D.W.; Barreto, G.R.; Ferreras, P.; Kirk, B.; Rushton, S.; Yamaguchi, N.; Strachan, R. (1999). "The impact of American mink, Mustela vison, as predators of native species in British freshwater systems". In Cowan, D.P.; Freare, C.J. (eds.). Advances in Vertebrate Pest Management. Furth: Filander Verlag. pp. 5–24. ISBN 3930831163 – via researchgate.net.
Heptner & Sludskii 2002, p. 1414
Maran, T.; Henttonen, H. (1995). "Why is the European mink, Mustela lutreola disappearing? – a review of the process and hypotheses" (PDF). Annales Fennici Zoologici. 32: 47–54.
Bonesi, L.; Chanin, P.; MacDonald, D.W. (2004). "Competition between Eurasian otter Lutra lutra and American mink Mustela vison probed by niche shift" (PDF). Oikos. 106 (1): 19–26. Bibcode:2004Oikos.106...19B. doi:10.1111/j.0030-1299.2004.12763.x.[permanent dead link]
Watson, James W. (2002). "Comparative home ranges and food habits of bald eagles nesting in four aquatic habitats in Western Washington". Northwestern Naturalist. 83 (3). Society for Northwestern Vertebrate Biology: 101–108. doi:10.2307/3536608. JSTOR 3536608.
Bent, A. C. 1938. Life histories of North American birds of prey, Part 2. U.S. National Museum Bulletin 170:295-357.
Salo, P.; Nordström, M.; Thomson, R.L.; Korpimäki, E. (2008). "Risk induced by a native top predator reduces alien mink movements". Journal of Animal Ecology. 77 (6): 1092–1098. Bibcode:2008JAnEc..77.1092S. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2656.2008.01430.x. PMID 18624744.
Sidorovich, V.E. (2011). Analysis of Vertebrate Predator-Prey Community. Minsk, Ukraine: Tesey.
Doty, B.A.; Jones, C.N.; Doty, L.A. (1967). "Learning-set formation by mink, ferrets, skunks, and cats". Science. 155 (3769): 1579–1580. Bibcode:1967Sci...155.1579D. doi:10.1126/science.155.3769.1579. PMID 6020488. S2CID 6419439.
Bonino, Never (1995). Introduced Mammals into Patagonia, Southern Argentina: Consequences, problems and management strategies (PDF). Integrating peoples and wildlife for a sustainable future. International Wildlife Management Congress, 1ro. Bethesda, MD: Wildlife Society. pp. 406–409. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 18, 2011 – via inta.gov.ar.
"Conservación del Macá Tobiano (Podiceps gallardoi): factores que afectan la viabilidad de sus poblaciones". Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Universidad de Buenos Aires.
Vergara, Gonzalo; Valenzuela, Jorge (2015). "Presencia de visón americano (Neovison vison, Schreber, 1777) en Chiloé, Chile: ¿Inicio de una invasión biológica?". Ecosistemas. 24 (1): 29–31. doi:10.7818/ECOS.2015.24-1.05.
Spagnesi, M.; Toso, S.; de Marinins, A.M. (2002). I Mammiferi d'Italia [The Mammals of Italy] (PDF) (Report) (in Italian). Italy: Ministero dell'Ambiente e della Tutela del Territorio e Istituto Nazionale per la Fauna Selvatica – via minambiente.it.[permanent dead link]
"El visón europeo y su primo peligroso" [The European mink and its dangerous cousin]. El País (in Spanish). November 11, 2013.
Bevanger, K.; Henriksen, G. (1995). "The distributional history and present status of the American mink (Mustela vison Schreber, 1777) in Norway" (PDF). Annales Zoologici Fennici. 32 (1): 1–14. JSTOR 23735558.
Harris & Yalden 2008, p. 493
Heptner & Sludskii 2002, pp. 1399–1403
Hersteinsson, Pall; Stefansson, Robert Arnar; von Schmalensee, Menja; Rushton, Steven; Angerbjorn, Anders; Magnusdottir, Rannveig (c. 2007). The impact of climate change on the American mink in Iceland. Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (research proposal). Department of Zoology. Oxford, UK: University of Oxford. Archived from the original on July 27, 2011.
Wobeser, G.; Runge, W.; Stewart, R.R. (1983). "Metorchis conjunctus (Cobbold, 1860) infection in wolves (Canis lupus), with pancreatic involvement in two animals". Journal of Wildlife Diseases. 19 (4): 353–356. doi:10.7589/0090-3558-19.4.353. PMID 6644936. S2CID 35587314.
Tenembaum, David (2007) Unfolding the Prion Mystery. cals.wisc.edu
"Scientific papers on Spongiform Disease by R.F. Marsh". mad-cow.org.
Barros, Macarena; Cabezón, Oscar; Dubey, Jitender P.; Almería, Sonia; Ribas, María P.; Escobar, Luis E.; et al. (June 20, 2018). "Toxoplasma gondii infection in wild mustelids and cats across an urban-rural gradient". PLoS One. 13 (6): e0199085. Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1399085B. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0199085. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 6010287. PMID 29924844.
Dunstone, N. (1993). The Mink. London, UK.
Bowman, J.; Kidd, A.; Gorman, R.; Schultehostedde, A. (2007). "Assessing the potential for impacts by feral mink on wild mink in Canada" (PDF). Biological Conservation. 139 (1–2): 12–18. Bibcode:2007BCons.139...12B. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2007.05.020. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 16, 2014.
Hammershøj, M.; Travis, J.M.J.; Stephenson, C.M. (2006). "Incorporating evolutionary processes into a spatially-explicit model: Exploring the consequences of mink-farm closures in Denmark". Ecography. 29 (4): 465–476. Bibcode:2006Ecogr..29..465H. doi:10.1111/j.2006.0906-7590.04492.x.
Hammershøj, M. (2004). Population ecology of free-ranging American mink Mustela vison in Denmark (PDF) (PhD thesis thesis). Kalø, DK: National Environmental Research Institute.
"Genomic epidemiology of novel coronavirus – Europe-focused subsampling". nextstrain.org. Maintained by the Nextstrain team. Retrieved November 13, 2020.
Bachrach 1953, p. 326
Bachrach 1953, p. 327
Harding 1906, p. 19
Seton 1909, p. 895
Coues 1877, pp. 175–176
Harding 1906, pp. 53–56
Harding 1906, pp. 57–69
Seton 1909, pp. 896–897
AVMA Guidelines on Euthanasia Archived July 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, June 2007, American Veterinary Medical Association
Gates 1915, p. 50
Mason, Georgia; Cooper, Jonathon (2001). "Frustrations of fur-farmed mink" (PDF). Nature. 410 (6824): 35–36. doi:10.1038/35065157. PMID 11242031. S2CID 39542739.
Bachrach 1953, p. 335
Harding 1906, p. 2
Carter, Joseph (2014). The New Sport of Minkenry: The art of taming, training, and hunting with one of nature's most intense predators. USA: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. p. 1. ISBN 978-1500400668.
Coues 1877, pp. 181–183
Gates 1915, p. 32
Mink Farming in the United States (PDF) (Report). Colorado: U.S. Fur Commission. 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 19, 2006.
Bergsland (1994). Aleut Dictionary. Alaska Native Language Center. ISBN 1-55500-047-9.
Frantz; Russell (1989). Blackfoot Dictionary. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-2691-5.
Munro; Willmond (1994). Chickasaw: An analytical dictionary. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2687-6.
Chipewyan Dictionary. Canada: South Slave Divisional Education Council. 2012. ISBN 978-0-9878616-0-3.
Helmbrecht; Lehmann (2010). Hocąk teaching materials. Vol. 1: Elements of grammar/learners dictionary. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-1-4384-3339-4.
Elementary Bilingual Dictionary English–Lakhóta, Lakhóta-English. University of Colorado. 1976.
Buechel, Eugene (1983). Lakota–English Dictionary. Red Cloud Indian School. LCCN 74-114669.
O'Meara (1996). Delaware–English, English–Delaware Dictionary. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-0670-7.
Bates, Dawn; Hess, Thom; Hilbert, Vi (1994). Lushootseed Dictionary. University of Washington Press.
Bates, Dawn; Hess, Thom; Hilbert, Vi (1994). Lushootseed Dictionary. University of Washington Press.
Nichols; Nyholm (1995). A Concise Dictionary of Minnesota Ojibwe. University of Minnestota Press. ISBN 0-8166-2428-3.
Rudes (1999). Tuscarora–English, English–Tuscarora Dictionary. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-4336-4.
Sources
Anthony, Harold Elmer (1928). "Field Book of North American Mammals". Nature. 124 (3135): 836. Bibcode:1929Natur.124S.836.. doi:10.1038/124836c0. hdl:2027/mdp.39015020808831. "Descriptions of every mammal known north of the Rio Grande, together with brief accounts of habits, geographical ranges, etc."
Bachrach, Max (1953). Fur: A practical treatise (3rd ed.). New York, NY: Prentice-Hall.
Coues, Elliott (1877). Fur-Bearing Animals: A monograph of North American mustelidae (Report). Washington, DC: Government Printing Office.
Feldhamer, George A.; Thompson, Bruce Carlyle; Chapman, Joseph A. (2003). Wild Mammals of North America: Biology, management, and conservation. JHU Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-7416-1.
Gates, William Gilford (1915). The Propagation of Mink and Marten. Spokane, Shaw, & Borden Co.
Harding, Arthur Robert (1906). Mink Trapping. Columbus, OH: A.R. Harding (self published). "A book of instruction giving many methods of trapping"
Merriam, C. Hart (1886). The Mammals of the Adirondack Region, Northeastern New York. New York, NY: Holt. "With an introductory chapter treating of the location and boundaries of the region, its geological history, topography, climate, general features, botany and faunal position"
Harris, Stephen; Yalden, Derek (2008). Mammals of the British Isles (4th, revised ed.). Mammal Society. ISBN 978-0-906282-65-6.
Heptner, V.G.; Sludskii, A.A. (2002). Mammals of the Soviet Union. Vol. II, part 1b, Carnivores (Mustelidae and Procyonidae). Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Libraries and National Science Foundation. ISBN 978-90-04-08876-4.
Kurtén, Björn (1980). Pleistocene Mammals of North America. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-03733-4.
Seton, Ernest Thompson (1909). Life-Histories of Northern Animals: An account of the mammals of Manitoba. New York, NY: Scribner.
Stone, Witmer; Cram, William Everett (1902). "American animals". Nature. 124 (3135): 836. Bibcode:1929Natur.124S.836.. doi:10.1038/124836c0. hdl:2027/mdp.39015020808831.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/"
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License