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Mustelids
I think that of all the mammal families my
favourite must be the mustelids, the group that contains badgers,
otters, weasels and stoats. There's something very engaging about
the sociability of badgers and their exuberant playfulness, a quality
which they share with otters. There's more to life than the relentless
task of getting a living: an attitude which we pampered first-worlders
can recognise and identify with. Even those totally focused predators,
the stoats and weasels, have a family life full of joie de vivre
and graceful acrobatics. And, when they become adult and solitary,
they pursue their lives with such a vivid intensity, you feel they
are as completely alive as it's possible to be.
All these creatures are delightful to watch and - unusually for
this time of an increasingly long list of threatened species - they
seem to be holding their own. In fact, in Ilkley you have a good
chance of seeing badgers - in gardens or just trotting along the
tree-lined streets, especially if you live to the west of the town.
I actually saw one on a memorable evening last autumn when it visited
our garden in Ben Rhydding. It emerged from the bushes, strolled
across the lawn, gobbled up food put out for the fox and padded
off.
Otters have returned to the Wharfe and Washburn and, although you
would be lucky to glimpse one of these elusive creatures, their
signs in the form of spraint, left on rocks, under bridges, and
in other otter-important places, bear witness to an increasing presence.
Weasels, the smallest of our British mustelids, are perhaps less
common than they were but stoats are doing well. No closing down
during winter months for them. They have to be out hunting throughout
the year. As vegetation dies down, they are much easier to see:
investigating dry-stone walls, darting along field edges, or quartering
the river banks. They're inquisitive animals so, if you do glimpse
one, it's worth standing still and waiting for a few minutes; chances
are that it will reappear to get a better look at you!
There are other members of the mustelid family, not yet here in
Wharfedale, but part of our British list. For five years, the Vincent
Wildlife Trust has been collecting data on the numbers and distribution
of polecats by the simple method of recording road casualties. At
one time this rather larger, darker-coloured relative of the stoat,
with its distinctive white patches to either side of the nose and
face, was thought to be limited to the Welsh borders, but the new
evidence indicates that they are more widely distributed. The VWT
are looking for volunteers to continue the work and are interested
in compiling data for Yorkshire and Humberside. And what about the
pine marten? Most of us have now seen this rare and attractive mammal
on one of the many excellent natural history programmes on TV. We
are familiar with its rich brown coat, cream bib and predeliction
for raspberry jam sandwiches served up on convenient window-sills
in North-west Scotland. We may even be able to recognize the field
signs - curved scats which it obligingly distributes along wall
tops and the sides of forest tracks. Well, there is now evidence
that pine martens are spreading beyond their Scottish stronghold.
There have even been reported sightings from the forests of North
Yorkshire.
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