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Japanese badger

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Meles anakuma

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Suborder
  
Caniformia

Subfamily
  
Mustelinae

Higher classification
  
Japanese badger u1ipernitycom682812208281b6ce6784500jpg

Similar
  
Meles, Bornean ferret‑badger, Asian badger, Malayan weasel, Indonesian mountain weasel

Japanese badger zoo yokohama japan


The Japanese badger (Meles anakuma) is a species of carnivoran of the family Mustelidae, the weasels and their kin. It is endemic to Japan, where it is found on Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku, and Shodoshima. It shares the genus Meles with the Asian and European badgers.

Contents

Japanese badger Japanese badger videos photos and facts Meles anakuma ARKive

Cute animals japanese badger couple at inokashira park zoo


Description

Japanese badger Japanese badger yuka dithmer Flickr

Japanese badgers are smaller (average length 79 cm (31 in) in males, 72 cm (28 in) in females) and less sexually dimorphic (except in the size of the canine teeth) than their European counterparts. Tail length is between 14 and 20 cm (5.5 and 7.9 in). Adults usually weigh from 4 to 8 kg (8.8 to 17.6 lb). The torso is blunt and limbs are short. The front feet are equipped with powerful digging claws. The claws on hind feet are smaller. The upper coat has long gray-brown hair. Ventral hair is short and black. The face has characteristic black-white stripes that are not as distinct as in the European badger. The dark color is concentrated around the eyes. The skull is smaller than in the European badger.

Origin

Japanese badger Japanese badger Meles anakuma Interesting Animals Pinterest

The absence of badgers from Hokkaido, and the presence of related M. leucurus in Korea, suggest that the ancestral badgers reached Japan from the southwest via Korea. Genetic studies indicate that there are substantial differences between Japanese and Asian badgers, which were formerly considered conspecific, and that the Japanese badgers are genetically more homogenous.

Habits

Japanese badger Japanese badger Wikipedia

Japanese badgers are nocturnal and hibernate during the coldest months of the year. Beginning at 2 years of age, females mate and give birth to litters of two or three cubs in the spring (March–April). They mate again shortly afterwards, but delay implantation until the following February. Japanese badgers are more solitary than European badgers; they do not aggregate into social clans, and mates do not form pair bonds. During mating season, the range of a male badger overlaps with those of 2 to 3 females.

Habitats

Japanese badgers are found in a variety of woodland and forest habitats.

Diet

Japanese badgers have an omnivorous diet that includes worms, beetles, berries and persimmons.

Threats

Although they remain common, their range has shrunk recently. Their range was estimated to cover about 29 per cent of the country in 2003, an area that had shrunk 7 per cent over the previous 25 years. Increased land development and agriculture, as well as competition from introduced raccoons are threats. Hunting is legal but has declined sharply since the 1970s.

References

Japanese badger Wikipedia