THE MAMMALS
STRIPED SKUNK. Mephitis occidentalis Baird
Field characters.Size of
adult about that of domestic cat; tail nearly as long as head and body
and very bushy. Head and body 12-1/2 to 17-1/4 inches (318-440 mm.),
tail 11 to 13-1/2 inches (280-345 mm.), ear about 3/4 inch (15-20 mm.),
weight 3-1/3 to 8-1/3 pounds (1.5-3.8 kg.). Coloration black except for
a narrow line of white up middle of forehead, and a white area beginning
on hind neck and continuing backwards, dividing into two stripes which
extend to rump and usually run out on either side of tail; more or less
white also on bases of tail hairs. 'Skunky' odor
characteristic.
Occurrence.Common
resident at lower altitudes on both slopes of Sierra Nevada. Recorded on
west slope from Snelling and Lagrange eastward to Sweetwater Creek,
Yosemite Valley, and Chinquapin; east of mountains in vicinity of
Williams Butte. Lives in holes in ground and in culverts and under rocks
and buildings; forages far and wide at dusk and during night.
The Striped Skunk needs no introduction. It has long
been sought after because of its valuable fur, and it is also well known
in the environment of farms even in settled portions of the country.
Persons who walk abroad in the early evening along the country roads of
the Yosemite foothills are likely to encounter this animal as it starts
out on its nightly forays; for the skunk, unlike most other wild
animals, does not take to cover at the approach of a human being.
The Striped Skunk is nearly twice the length of, and
from 4 to 6 times as heavy as, the Little Spotted Skunk. Its body is
heavy and the fur is relatively long. The hairs on the tail are often as
much as 5 inches in length, and give to this member a plume-like
appearance. Indeed, when held aloft, as it is when the skunk is
disturbed, the tail constitutes its most conspicuous feature.
In the lower portion of the Yosemite region skunks
make extensive use of ground squirrel burrows as dens, appropriating
those which are deserted or possibly, even, holes from which the
rightful owners have been evicted. It likewise uses deserted badger
holes to a considerable extent. On the mesa-prairie near Snelling,
Striped Skunks were trapped fully three-fourths of a mile from the
nearest bluff of the foothills; and it seemed as though the animals must
have been foraging abroad fully this distance, as no burrows were found
short of the bluffs.
Relatively large numbers of Striped Skunks are
trapped by the residents of the region both for their fur and because of
the depredations which they commit about poultry houses. But despite
this draft on the population the species has maintained itself in goodly
numbers. The tracks are to be seen commonly in the morning along dusty
roads through the foothills.
As one of us was motoring up the Coulterville Road
not far above Lagrange one moonless night in August, a Striped Skunk was
sighted in the road ahead. The beast was traveling up-grade in the
right-hand wheel rut, ambling along at the regulation matter-of-fact
rate characteristic of the species. As the machine approached, going in
'low,' the skunk accelerated its pace in no perceptible degree; neither
did it leave the rut. In order to avoid the consequences of a rear-end
collision, the driver, the last instant it was yet possible, simply
had to turn out to the left, leaving the skunk still pursing its
own course when the shadow-limit from the lights cut it from view.
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