enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. American ermine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_ermine

    The American ermine has a body plan typical of weasels. It has short legs, a long body and neck, and a small triangular head with short round ears. It has a brown dorsum with a white venter (except during winter when the coat is fully white) and a short, black-tipped tail.

  3. Stoat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoat

    The stoat is similar to the least weasel in general proportions, manner of posture, and movement, though the tail is relatively longer, always exceeding a third of the body length, [clarification needed] [24] though it is shorter than that of the long-tailed weasel. The stoat has an elongated neck, the head being set exceptionally far in front ...

  4. Short-tailed weasel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-tailed_Weasel

    The short-tailed weasel is the common name in North America for two species once considered a single species: Stoat or Beringian ermine (Mustela erminea), native to Eurasia and the northern portions of North America; American ermine (Mustela richardsonii), found in most of North America aside from the northern areas

  5. Mustelidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mustelidae

    Sthenictis sp. (American Museum of Natural History). Mustelids vary greatly in size and behaviour. The smaller variants of the least weasel can be under 20 cm (8 in) in length, while the giant otter of Amazonian South America can measure up to 1.7 m (5 ft 7 in) and sea otters can exceed 45 kg (99 lb) in weight.

  6. List of mammals of Pennsylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_mammals_of_Pennsylvania

    This list of mammals in Pennsylvania consists of 66 species currently believed to occur wild in the state. This excludes feral domesticated species such as feral cats and dogs . Several species recently lived wild in Pennsylvania, but are now extirpated (locally, but not globally, extinct).

  7. Why one country spent a small fortune to kill a single ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-one-country-spent-small...

    So in August 2022, when conservation workers on the island identified a single male stoat, a weasel-like mammal native to Eurasia and North America that preys on a variety of animals and birds ...

  8. Weasel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weasel

    In Montagne Noire (France), Ruthenia, and the early medieval culture of the Wends, weasels were not meant to be killed. [9] According to Daniel Defoe also, meeting a weasel is a bad omen. [10] In English-speaking areas, weasel can be an insult, noun or verb, for someone regarded as sneaky, conniving or untrustworthy.

  9. Long-tailed weasel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-tailed_weasel

    Skulls of a long-tailed weasel (top), a stoat (bottom left) and least weasel (bottom right), as illustrated in Merriam's Synopsis of the Weasels of North America. The long-tailed weasel is the product of a process begun 5–7 million years ago, when northern forests were replaced by open grassland, thus prompting an explosive evolution of small, burrowing rodents.