THE MAMMALS
CALIFORNIA COON. Procyon lotor psora Gray
Field characters.Body
size that of dachshund; legs and tail both short; toes of all feet long.
Head and body 18 to 23 inches (460-585 mm.), tall 10-1/2 to 12 inches
(264-308 mm.), ear 2 to 2-1/2 inches (52-65 mm.), weight 9 to 15-1/2
pounds (4.1-7 kg.) [these figures from specimens taken elsewhere in
California]. Body coloration grayish brown, hairs on back tipped with
black; tail with alternating rings of black and pale ashy brown; face
crossed by a conspicuous black band. Track: 'hand-like';
impressions of all five toes and of 'palm' showing
distinctly.
Occurrence.Common
resident in Lower and Upper Sonoran zones, less common in lower part of
Transition Zone, on west side of Sierra Nevada. Recorded from Snelling
and Lagrange eastward to El Portal and Hazel Green. Lives chiefly in
vicinity of streams, foraging on ground but taking shelter in hollow
trees. Solitary; nocturnal.
The California Coon, or "raccoon" in the book
terminology, is abundant in the lowland and foothill districts of the
Yosemite region. It is essentially an inhabitant of the stream-side and
seldom ventures any great distance away from the banks of rivers or
creeks. Yet its requirements with regard to water are rather simple and
it will often be found in cañon bottoms where in summer there is
little more than a trickle of water or a series of disconnected seepage
pools.
Hand-like tracks in the mud of creek banks, in
evidence of a coon's presence, are much more likely to be seen than the
animal itself. For coons are exclusively night prowlers and spend the
daytime in hollow trees or other similar retreats. In the Yosemite
region we found tracks in the neighborhood of every camp below 4000 feet
altitude, and on one occasion tracks were noted along a creek near Hazel
Green, altitude 5665 feet. In the latter case the animal had probably
wandered up the creek from some lower station to the south. At Snelling
the species seemed to be of maximum abundance; one trapper had 25 skins
which had been obtained from his headquarters at a ranch a mile west of
the town.
Throughout much of their local range coons must
depend upon natural food, rather than that obtainable around human
habitations. This food is no doubt varied, and includes both animal and
vegetable materials. At Smith Creek, according to Mr. Donald D. McLean,
coons live, in some part, on frogs. On Sweetwater Creek in late October
the coons had been visiting a garden where grapes and other fruits were
growing.
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