Mammals of SPR
Mammals of SPR
Mammals of SPR
Ondatra zibethicus
Raccoon
Procyon lotor
The muskrat is a large aquatic cousin to the vole. A versatile home builder, it may excavate a bank den along a stream or build a lodge of vegetation and mud in a pond or marsh. The muskrat feeds on a variety of aquatic plants, especially cattails. It can stay submerged for up to fifteen minutes.
From the Algonquin Indian word arakunem meaning hand-scratcher, the raccoon is thought to wash food to make it easier to swallow. Preferring stream or pond environments, raccoons feed on crayfish, frogs, insects, fruits, and berries. Around people they are very bold and no food bearing picnic cooler or garbage can is safe from their nimble paws.
diet also includes lush green plants, with nuts and fruits added in autumn. One to three fawns are born in spring following the autumn mating season.
Common Mammals
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Extirpated Mammals
These mammals are well known from our countrys history and cultural lore. They inhabited wilderness Indiana but were eliminated by settlement. Porcupine Fisher Black Bear Gray (Timber) Wolf Mountain Lion Bison (Buffalo) Elk
Fox Squirrel
The red fox has a white tipped tail, while the gray fox has a black tipped tail. Due to an absence of any early records, there was some question about the red foxs status as a native species. Some believed it was introduced from Europe. Today, most mammalogists consider it to be a North American native. The fox diet includes small animals such as mice, rabbits, birds, and large insects, plus occasional plant and fruit items. Their arching predatory pounce is an unforgettable sight!
DNR
Indiana Department of Natural Resources Division of State Parks and Reservoirs Interpretive Services 402 W. Washington Room W298 Indianapolis, IN 46204 317-232-4124
White-tailed Deer
Odocoileus virginianus
Indianas original deer herd was eliminated from the state by the year 1900. Reintroduction started in 1934 leading to the present day statewide abundance. Deer feed year round on the buds and young stems of trees and bushes. In spring and summer their
The mission of the Interpretive Services is to provide information and offer interpretive experiences with Indiana's natural and cultural resources to visitors, staff and a diverse public.
Eastern Mole
Scalopus aquaticus
Beaver
Castor canadensis
The mole uses powerful front legs with broad feet to burrow a few inches beneath the woodland surface (or perhaps your lawn!) in search of insects and worms. Active year round, it may easily eat half its weight in food daily to fuel its strenuous life style.
Woodchuck
Marmota monax
Bats
Of the twelve species of bats known to occur in Indiana, the big brown bat, Eptesicus fuscus, and little brown, Myotis lucifugus, are the most familiar. They are the attic bats. Red bats, Lasiurus borealis, are also common. Bats are the only mammals capable of true flight. They have good eyes, but use the echoes of high pitched vocalizations to direct their night flight and insect foraging activity. The enormous number of insects consumed by bats directly benefits our agricultural interests. Contrary to popular belief, very few bats carry rabies.
Virginia Opossum
Didelphis virginiana
The woodchuck (groundhog) awaking from hibernation is celebrated in American folklore as a harbinger of winters end. It is the largest of North Americas true hibernators. In late summer the woodchuck feeds constantly, putting on the half inch of body fat which will sustain it during the coming winter.
Weighing 30 to 70 pounds, the beaver is Indianas largest rodent. A broad flat tail, webbed feet, and special ear and nose valves equip the beaver for life in ponds and streams. A single beaver can fell hundreds of trees each year to provide food and material for lodges and dams.
White-footed Mouse
Peromyscus leucopus
The possum is North Americas only marsupial or pouched animal, related to the kangaroos of Australia. An opossum is so small at birth that two dozen could fit in a teaspoon! The young stay in the pouch, nursing and growing for ten weeks. Of course, the opossum is famous for its playing dead defense, complete with gaping mouth and limp body!
Short-tailed Shrew
Blarina brevicauda
Among the smallest of mammals, this four inch long sprite weighs only as much as six pennies. The shrew has an enormous appetite for insects, earthworms, slugs, and snails, and eats almost double its weight in food daily.
Rabbits are most active from sunset to sunrise (nocturnal). Food preferences include lush green plants and the buds and bark of woody plants. Females line bowl shaped nests with fur and grasses, annually producing several litters of four or five young each. Leave baby rabbits alone! Their mother is not far away, even if you cant see her!
The orange flanked fox squirrel prefers open wood lots and forest edges. Gray squirrels are denizens of the deep. unbroken forest. In todays fragmented woodlands both may be found in over lapping home ranges. It was the gray squirrel which figured so highly in pioneer table fare.
Unlike the gray house mouse which is an import from Europe, these native mice possess white bellies and brown fur above. Nests of soft grasses and downy materials are often found in low tree cavities, wood piles, and even atop low lying bird nests in bushes. White-footed mice may have three or four litters per year with four or five young per litter. They are endlessly pursued as food by predators.
Meadow Vole
Microtus ochrogaster
Feeding by night and sleeping in hollow tree dens by day, these small squirrels are rarely seen due to their strictly nocturnal (night time) habits. Flaps of skin running from front to back legs allow them to glide (not fly) among the trees.
These small mouse-like mammals of meadows and grassy areas are among the most prolific breeders in nature. Litters of four to seven young are produced almost monthly from March to December, with the young weaned at twelve days and capable of reproducing at twenty-five days of age! As with the mice, voles figure highly in the diets of predators such as hawks and foxes.