THE MAMMALS
SIERRA LEAST WEASEL. Mustela muricus Bangs
Field characters.Size
small and form slender; our smallest carnivore (fig. 9a); body
about as large as that of Tahoe Chipmunk; tail small, round, about 1/3
length of head and body. Head and body 6-1/2 inches (159-161 mm.), tail
2-1/3 inches (59 mm.), ear 1/3 inch (8 mm.), weight about 2 ounces
(56-62 grams.). Coloration in summer season chocolate brown above, under
surface white; end of tail blackish.
Occurrence.Sparse
resident in Hudsonian Zone along Sierra Nevada. Recorded at Ten Lakes
(9200 feet altitude), October 10, 1915, and at Vogelsang Lake (10,350
feet), August 31, 1915. Lives in or about rock slides.
Solitary.
The Sierra Least Weasel, as its name suggests, is
much smaller than its better known relative, the Mountain Weasel. We
obtained two specimens, as recorded above, and no others were seen; it
would seem from our experience both in the Yosemite region and elsewhere
that the species is decidedly less numerous than is the Mountain Weasel.
The Least Weasel is a member of a rather wide ranging group which fills
some small corner in the economy of nature not occupied by the larger
species. So far as our local information indicates, the Least Weasel is
an associate of the Pine Marten, Yosemite Cony, and Bushy-tailed Wood
Rat.
At Vogelsang Lake on August 31, 1915, the senior
author, while making the rounds of his traps before sunrise, heard two
conies across the lake basin (pl. 18a) 'screeping' vociferously.
Upon going to the rock slide, he saw these animals running excitedly in
and out of the crevices between the rocks. Presently a Least Weasel
appeared, crossing between two rocks. Soon, it put its head out from
under a flat rock within 30 feet of the observer, who shot it. The
inference that this weasel is a regular enemy of the conies and is so
recognized by them seems justified.
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