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         Ermine Wildlife:     more detail
  1. Mergus the Merganser Duckling: A journey up the River called Priest by Karen Dingerson, 2007-06-12

1. Ermine - Mustela Erminea
Common Names Shorttailed Weasel, Stout The ermine is found all over Canada, northern USA, and Eurasia. The ermine lives in northern biomes such as taigas and tundras. htm (22 January 2002). "ermine.", wildlife Explorer (1997) USA International Masters Publishers.
http://www.blueplanetbiomes.org/ermine.htm
Ermine
Common Names: Short-tailed Weasel, Stout
Genus:
Mustela
Species:
erminea environment. They make their dens in the old roots of a tree or in the crevice of a rock. Ermines are capable of having several dens. Ermines may make their dens in the roots of trees farther south, but there are no trees on the tundra. The ermine is a small animal that weighs between 3 - 15 ounces. The head and body length can range from 7 - 13 inches and the tail can grow up to 5 inches. The males are much longer than the females. In the spring and summer the ermine's coat is chocolate brown with a white underbelly and a black tip on the tail. In the winter the coat turns entirely white except for the black end of its tail. The ermine's flexible spine allows it to do the "marten run" in which the hind feet are tucked in by the front feet, causing the back to arch, and then extended. Since the ermine is a carnivore, it has 34 sharp teeth. It has short legs and a long body and neck. The head is triangular shaped with small round ears, small, bright eyes and long whiskers. The ermine is a carnivore and eats rabbits, small insects and rodents. Because of their sharp teeth they are able to catch animals larger than themselves.

2. Utah Division Of Wildlife Resources
ermine are brown with white bellies during the summer, but are almost completely UtahDivision of wildlife Resources, The Nature Conservancy, and NatureServe.
http://www.utahcdc.usu.edu/rsgis2/Search/Display.asp?FlNm=mustermi

3. Ermine (Mustela Erminea)
Photo of ermine and links to species information National wildlife Federation. Photo of ermine, track and sign characteristics, description, similar species, breeding,
http://www.nenature.com/Ermine.htm

Nature Journal

with Photos
Ermine (Short-tailed Weasel)
Mustela erminea
National Wildlife Federation
Photo of ermine, track and sign characteristics, description, similar species, breeding, habitat, range, discussion
Click to enlarge
Animal Diversity Web Geographic range, physical characteristics, food habits, reproduction, behavior, habitat and conservation information Utah Division of Wildlife Resouces Photo of ermine and brief description Friends of the Hylebos Wetlands Photo of ermine, appearance, taxonomy, geographical distribution and habitat, ecological lifestyle Mammal Field Guides From our Nature Bookstore - in association with Amazon.com Birds Butterflies Mammals Bookstore ... Outdoor Gear

4. ADF&G's Wildlife Notebook Series: Weasels
Weasels. There are two species of weasels in Alaska the shorttailed weaselor ermine (Mustela erminea) and the least weasel (Mustela rixosa).
http://www.state.ak.us/local/akpages/FISH.GAME/notebook/furbear/weasels.htm
Notebook Home Search Contact Us
Weasels
There are two species of weasels in Alaska: the short-tailed weasel or ermine Mustela erminea ) and the least weasel Mustela rixosa These furbearers are the smallest members of the family Mustelidae. Other species of mustelids in Alaska include mink, marten, river otter, sea otter, and wolverine. Weasels are more common than most people realize. Because they are small, they usually pass unnoticed unless caught in a trap or revealed by their tracks in fresh snow. Weasel tracks resemble those of the larger mink. They generally show four toe prints. The little toe seldom shows except in fresh snow or mud. Each weasel footprint is oval-shaped. In the snow, a single footprint will measure approximately 1 inch (2.5 cm) in length and slightly less in width. The front feet of a running weasel strike the ground before the hind feet. Usually, one of the front feet falls slightly ahead of the other. The hind feet usually land in the tracks made by the front feet. Thus, the trail often appears as pairs of slightly offset prints. The distance between sets of prints is approximately 13 inches (33 cm). General description: In summer, both weasels are medium to dark brown above, with yellowish white underparts. Both species turn white in winter. The larger of the two is the short-tailed species. It can reach 15 inches (38 cm) in length and 7 ounces (198 g) in weight. The least weasel well deserves its title of the smallest living carnivore. It reaches a maximum length of 10 inches (25 cm) and a weight of 3 ounces (85 g). The short-tailed weasel's tail is one-fourth to one-third of the total body length while the least weasel's tail length comprises only about 15 percent of total body length. During all seasons the tip of short-tailed weasel's tail is black. The tail of the least weasel contains only a few black hairs.

5. ARCTIC ANIMALS - Polar Bear, Caribou, Musk Ox, Wolverine, Arctic Fox, Lemming, G
ARCTIC wildlife. How animals are adapted to live in the Arctic. polar bear caribou- musk ox - wolf - wolverine arctic fox - ermine - lemming - arctic hare
http://www.saskschools.ca/~gregory/arctic/Awildlife.html
ARCTIC
WILDLIFE
How animals are adapted to live in the Arctic
polar bear - caribou - musk ox - wolf - wolverine
arctic fox - ermine - lemming - arctic hare
arctic ground squirrel - birds - whales - harp seal - walrus ANIMALS that live on LAND POLAR BEARS spend most of their time on the pack ice or in the water, where they can hunt their favorite food - the ringed seal. The white fur helps the bear sneak up on seals that are laying on the ice packs. If the bear sees a seal's breathing hole, it waits by the hole and drags the seal out as soon as its head appears. In the summer it is harder to catch seals, so before summer comes, the bears eat as much as they can to get fat, then live off the fat in their bodies. Females dig dens in the snow where they hibernate during the worst part of the winter. The cubs are born in the den. polar bear waits for a seal *** more about the POLAR BEAR CARIBOU are members of the deer family. They move across the Arctic in large herds. Caribou eat moss, lichen and green plants. For the winter they go to the forests of the south where trees give them protection from the wind and the snow. In the spring the caribou leave the forests and go to the tundra to have their calves. A baby caribou is able to stand and walk an hour after it is born. It can run when it is a day old. The baby has enemies like wolves, bears and eagles. *** more about the CARIBOU
THE MUSK OXEN have thick overcoats of shaggy long straight hair that hang down to the ground. Their undercoats are thick brown fleece. Some of the coat is shed in the summer. They huddle together in groups for protection and to keep warm. When wolves attack, the musk oxen form a circle around the calves. The adults face outward and use their sharp horns for defence.

6. LEMMINGS - Arctic Wildlife
The ermine (weasel), Arctic fox , Snowy Owl, wolf and wolverine are just someof their enemies. ermine (weasels) can fit down the lemmings' burrows.
http://www.saskschools.ca/~gregory/arctic/lemming.html
LEMMINGS
APPEARANCE
Lemmings look like fat furry hamsters. They have strong legs and claws for digging. Thick fur helps to keep them warm.
There are collared lemmings and brown lemmings. Collared lemmings' coats turn from brown to white for the winter.
HOMES
Lemmings live in the treeless areas of Northern Canada. In the winter lemmings live in burrows in the snow. They make many snow tunnels. They are safe from the cold and wind. Their underground burrows have rest areas, bathrooms and nesting rooms. Lemmings make nests out of grasses, feathers and musk ox wool.
FOOD
Lemmings eat plants, roots, berries and lichens. They gather seeds to eat in the wintertime.
ENEMIES
Lemmings are eaten by many animals. The ermine (weasel), Arctic fox , Snowy Owl, wolf and wolverine are just some of their enemies.
Arctic foxes can sniff out lemmings in their burrows under the snow.
Ermine (weasels) can fit down the lemmings' burrows. They chase the lemmings into their burrows and kill them by biting their necks. When there are fewer lemmings, there are fewer predators (animals that hunt lemmings for food).

7. Wildlife Art By Sosa. Ermine, Oil Painting
The World's First wildlife Art Online Source wildlife Art Paintings and Prints Website. Oils, prints and watercolors. Sosa Art.
http://www.manuelsosa.com/paginas/armino.html
Enjoy your journey through my Wildlife oils portraits Ermine
Hand signed and varnished ready to frame. 25'4" x 16,5" ( 42 x 65 cms.) aprox. 155 US$
artist and nature art of wildlife prints. nature art of wildlife prints. The amazing wildlife art of Manuel Sosa featuring partridges and hunt birds raptors mammals falcon falconry eagle art hunting in oils and watercolor technic. Print, for sale at a cheap price. European art. Fox, bear, moose, lynx, wolf, wolves, otter, weasel, lion, partridge, landscape, forest, oils for sale, nature painters. Wildlife art prints and cuadro de caza. Hunters, Hunt paintings. peregrine falcon. wildlife art prints for sale cheap, the best price

8. Web Victoria - Animals : Mammals : Wildlife : Weasels : Ermine
fold menu FULL WINDOW. GROUP HEADINGS
http://www.webvictoria.com/index.php?cat=Animals : Mammals : Wildlife : Weasels

9. MSN Learning & Research - Search Results - Ermine
ermine, name given to various species of weasel, particularly during wildlife Canadian wildlife heraldry Pennsylvania wildlife Scottish wildlife Siberian wildlife* more
http://encarta.msn.com/teleport/fromTools/find.asp?brand=elibrary&q1=ermine

10. MSN Learning & Research - Search Results - Ermine AND Street
ermine, name given to various species of weasel, particularly during wildlife Canadian wildlife heraldry Pennsylvania wildlife Scottish wildlife Siberian wildlife* more
http://encarta.msn.com/teleport/fromTools/find.asp?brand=elibrary&q1=Ermine+AND+

11. Utah Division Of Wildlife Resources
Note Approximately 100 additional vertebrate wildlife species (primarily birds) accidentally occur in Utah from time to time ermine, MUSTELA ermineA.
http://www.utahcdc.usu.edu/rsgis2/Search/SearchSelection.asp?Group=MAMMALIA&Spec

12. Send A Card
Send this card or browse our cards for a different one! © NWF Rockne Knuth ermine.The National wildlife Federation is the nation's largest membersupported
http://www.nwf.org/ecards/createCard.cfm?id=344

13. Predation By Ermine And Long-tailed Weasels On Duck Eggs
Buff ermine Moths. Richard Bell's nature diary for June, Calder Valley, West Yorkshire.
http://www.greatplains.org/npresource/1999/symabs/ermine.htm
Predation by Ermine and Long-tailed Weasels on Duck Eggs
JOSEPH P. FLESKES Davis Field Station, Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center,
6924 Tremont Road, Dixon, CA 95620
Ermine ( Mustela erminea ) and long-tailed weasel ( M. frenata Previous Section Egg Predation, Home Range, and Habitat Selection of American Crows in a Waterfowl Breeding Area
Return to Contents

Next Section
The Effectiveness of Nos. 120 and 220 Conibear Traps for Small Mammals
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14. Choose A Card - E-cards - National Wildlife Federation
National wildlife Federation Logo (R), National wildlife Federation (R), Home, ,Contact Us. Daisy. © NWF Daisy. ermine. © NWF ermine. Fox kit. © NWF Fox kit.Foxes.
http://www.nwf.org/ecards/browseCards.cfm?id=52

15. ALASKA.com | Alaska Wildlife Photo Gallery
Alaska wildlife Photo Gallery Other Galleries » Scenic Activities Denali. ermine's winter home. ermine's winter home An ermine
http://www.alaska.com/akcom/galleries/wildlife/v-6/
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or Business name Location Anchorage Barrow Bethel Delta Jct. Denali Park Dillingham Dutch Harbor Fairbanks Haines Homer Juneau Kenai (city) Ketchikan King Salmon Kodiak Kotzebue Nome Palmer Seward Sitka Skagway Soldotna Talkeetna Unalaska Wasilla Wrangell Alaska Wildlife Photo Gallery Scenic Activities Denali Previous photo Thumbnails Next photo Ermine's winter home An ermine peers out of a snowbank near Independence Mine north of Palmer. Ermine build a tunnel system beneath the snow, where they hide from predators and stay warm under a blanket of insulation. (Stephen Nowers / Anchorage Daily News) Previous photo Next photo Order a print of this photograph Name: Phone: E-mail address: After you press the "Order Photo" button, you will be asked for shipping and payment information on our secure server. Note: We can only accept orders for photos taken by Anchorage Daily News photographers. Images from other sources (including The Associated Press) are not available for sale. Order reprints of other photographs Contact ALASKA.com

16. Predation By Ermine And Long-tailed Weasels On Duck Eggs
ermine (Mustela erminea) and longtailed weasel (M. frenata) predation on duck eggswas studied at Union Slough National wildlife Refuge, Kossuth County, Iowa
http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/1999/symabs/ermine.htm
Predation by Ermine and Long-tailed Weasels on Duck Eggs
JOSEPH P. FLESKES Davis Field Station, Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center,
6924 Tremont Road, Dixon, CA 95620
Ermine ( Mustela erminea ) and long-tailed weasel ( M. frenata Previous Section Egg Predation, Home Range, and Habitat Selection of American Crows in a Waterfowl Breeding Area
Return to Contents

Next Section
The Effectiveness of Nos. 120 and 220 Conibear Traps for Small Mammals Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center
Home
Site Map Biological Resources

17. Collared Pika - Mammals - Department Of Environment - Government
Government of Yukon Departments Environment Fish wildlife Information Mammals Collared Pika such as a hawk, owl, grizzly or ermine (shorttailed
http://www.environmentyukon.gov.yk.ca/fishwild/pika.shtml

18. Littleport Wildlife Observations In June 2001
June 27th 2001 Several moths caught overnight including Elephant Hawkmoth, Buffermine(2) , White ermine (5), Flame (2) Heart and Dart (2), Lesser Swallow
http://www.littleport-natural-history.org.uk/june.htm
OBSERVATIONS IN JUNE
To have your Observations listed below email them to me
June 30th 2001
Three Red Admiral Butterflies in a frantic chase around the garden for well over half an hour, they have been recorded on most days this week around the parish June 28th 2001
The first record of a Bat roost in Littleport in a house roof in Elmside June 27th 2001
Several moths caught overnight including Elephant Hawk-moth, Buff Ermine(2) , White Ermine (5), Flame (2) Heart and Dart (2), Lesser Swallow Prominent, Magpie (1), June 26th 2001
A report of a Bittern seen on the Old Beet factory settlement beds June 24th 2001
Several Dragonflies and Damselflies including a Banded Demoiselle along the river bank between Sandhill and Littleport Bridges, Great Crested Grebe also seen, Common Terns flying regularly along the river, In the drain along Station Road a pair of Moorhen with 3 chicks, June 22nd 2001
M.V light moth trap set up overnight, 15 moths caught, Eight different species including Buff Ermine (3), White Ermine (2), Small Magpie (2), Magpie (1), Heart and Dart (4), Flame (1) Yellow Underwing (2) June 18th 2001
Red Admiral Butterfly seen near Sandhill Bridge and Magpie Moth in Victoria Street, Also several Blue tailed Damselflies around the pond today

19. Littleport Wildlife Observations In July 2001
Magpie (3), Dot moth (4), Shuttle Shaped Dart (12), White Satin (1). Ruby Tiger(1), Dark Arches (9), Silver Y (5), Grey Dagger (1), Buff ermine (2), Early
http://www.littleport-natural-history.org.uk/july.htm
OBSERVATIONS IN JULY
To have your Observations listed below email them to me
July 29th 2001
M.V light set up overnight in Victoria Street several moths caught including Leopard moth (1), Herald (1), Large Yellow Underwing (7), Lesser Yellow Underwing (14), Swallow Prominent (3), Small Magpie (3), Dot moth (4), Shuttle Shaped Dart (12), White Satin (1). Ruby Tiger (1), Dark Arches (9), Silver Y (5), Grey Dagger (1), Buff Ermine (2), Early Thorn (1), Poplar Kitten (1)
In the garden during the day large numbers of Peacock Butterflies, Red Admirals and small Whites in small numbers, the odd small Tortoiseshell and Small Blue,
submitted by mick July 27th 2001 A record for a Puss moth Larve seen feeding on Willow in a garden in Ely,
Submitted by Andrew July 25th 2001
More butterflies seen in the last few days encouraged by sunshine and warm weather, with Peacock, Red Admiral and a single Comma seen near Sandhill Bridge July 15th 2001
Irrigation pit Grange Lane, large numbers of Common Blue and Blue tailed Damselflies also several Ruddy Darter Dragonflies around the hedgerows close to the pit, Butterflies included Meadow Brown, Gatekeeper, Small White and Small Tortoiseshell, Cinnabar larve found feeding on Ragwort

20. April 2003
Jack Whitman, a wildlife biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game,once encountered an ermine that challenged him for a Dall sheep liver.
http://www.state.ak.us/adfg/wildlife/geninfo/wildlife_news/april03/weasels.htm
April 2003
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Weasels in the Woods
Q: A little white weasel with a black-tipped tail jumped in front of me when I was hiking recently. What was it? A: You saw an ermine, also known as a short tailed weasel. These sleek little predators are much more common than people realize, but because they're small, quick and camouflaged they often go unnoticed. Ermine are about a foot long and weigh seven or eight ounces. An ermine skull looks like a tiny wolverine skull, and that makes sense, as the ermine is the second-smallest member of the weasel family. The wolverine is the biggest, at about 50 pounds, and in Alaska this family of agile predators ranges in size from otters and wolverines to fishers, cat-size marten, mink, ermine and the little least weasel, the smallest carnivore on earth at just two ounces. Other mustelids - or weasel cousins - include ferrets, skunks and badgers. Ermine are one of the most widespread carnivores in the northern hemisphere. They're called stoats in Europe, and they're found across Eurasia, northern North America and throughout Alaska, except in the Western Aleutians and Bering Sea islands.

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