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The '''wolverine''' (''Gulo gulo'', also occasionally called '''Glutton''' or '''Carcajou''') is the largest land-dwelling [[species]] of the [[Mustelidae]] (weasel) family in the [[genus]] '''''Gulo''''' (Latin: "glutton"). It is a stocky and muscular carnivore, resembling a small [[bear]] more than other mustelids. The wolverine has a reputation for ferocity and strength out of proportion to its size, with the documented ability to kill prey many times its size.
The '''wolverine''' (''Gulo gulo'', also occasionally called '''Glutton''' or '''Carcajou''') is the largest land-dwelling [[species]] of the [[Mustelidae]] (weasel) family in the [[genus]] '''''Gulo''''' (Latin: "glutton"). It is a stocky and muscular carnivore, resembling a small [[bear]] more than other mustelids. The wolverine has a reputation for ferocity and strength out of proportion to its size, with the documented ability to kill prey many times its size.


The wolverine is distributed primarily in remote reaches of the Northern [[boreal forests]] and [[subarctic]] and [[alpine tundra]] of the [[Northern hemisphere]], with the greatest numbers in Alaska, Canada, the [[Nordic countries]] of Europe and throughout [[western Russia]] and [[Siberia]]. Their populations have experienced a steady decline since the 19th century in the face of [[trapping]], range reduction and [[habitat fragmentation]], such that they are essentially absent in the southern end of their European range and are quite rare in the [[continental United States]].<ref name="iucn"/>
The wolverine is distributed primarily in remote reaches of the Northern [[boreal forests]] and [[subarctic]] and [[alpine tundra]] of the [[Northern hemisphere]], with the greatest numbers in Alaska, Canada, the [[Nordic countries]] of Europe and throughout [[western Russia]] and [[Siberia]]. Their populations have experienced a steady decline since the 19th century in the face of [[trapping]], range reduction and [[habitat fragmentation]], such that they are essentially absent in the southern end of their European range and are quite rare in the [[continental United States]].<ref name="iucn"/> On August 6, 2009, the wolverine died of [[throat cancer]] of the intestines.


== Taxonomy ==
== Taxonomy ==

Revision as of 00:17, 6 August 2009

Wolverine[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Gulo

Pallas, 1780
Species:
G. gulo
Binomial name
Gulo gulo
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Wolverine range

The wolverine (Gulo gulo, also occasionally called Glutton or Carcajou) is the largest land-dwelling species of the Mustelidae (weasel) family in the genus Gulo (Latin: "glutton"). It is a stocky and muscular carnivore, resembling a small bear more than other mustelids. The wolverine has a reputation for ferocity and strength out of proportion to its size, with the documented ability to kill prey many times its size.

The wolverine is distributed primarily in remote reaches of the Northern boreal forests and subarctic and alpine tundra of the Northern hemisphere, with the greatest numbers in Alaska, Canada, the Nordic countries of Europe and throughout western Russia and Siberia. Their populations have experienced a steady decline since the 19th century in the face of trapping, range reduction and habitat fragmentation, such that they are essentially absent in the southern end of their European range and are quite rare in the continental United States.[2] On August 6, 2009, the wolverine died of throat cancer of the intestines.

Taxonomy

Genetic evidence suggests that the wolverine is most closely related to the tayra and martens (Eira, and Martes respectively), all of which shared a Eurasian ancestor.[3]

Within the Gulo genus, there is a clear separation between two subspecies: the Old World form Gulo gulo gulo and the New World form G. g. luscus. Some authors had described as many as four additional North American subspecies, including ones limited to Vancouver Island (G. g. vancouverensis) and the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska (G. g. katschemakensis). However, the most currently accepted taxonomy recognizes either the two continental subspecies or recognize G. gulo as a single Holarctic taxon.[4]

Recently compiled genetic evidence suggests that most of North America's wolverines are descended from a single source, likely originating from Beringia during the last glaciation and rapidly expanding thereafter, though there is considerable uncertainty to this conclusion due to the difficulty of collecting samples in the extremely depleted southern extent of the range.[4]

Physical characteristics

Anatomically, the wolverine is a stocky and muscular animal. With short legs, broad and rounded head, and small eyes with short rounded ears, it resembles a bear more than other mustelids. Their legs are short, while its large five-toed paws and plantigrade posture facilitate movement through deep snow.[5]

The adult wolverine is about the size of a medium dog, with a length usually ranging from 65 – 87 cm (25 – 34 inches), a tail of 17 – 26 cm (7 – 10 inches), and a weight of 10-25 kg (22 – 55 lb), though exceptionally large males can weigh over 31 kg (70 lb).[6] The males are as much as 30 percent larger than the females. It is the largest of terrestrial mustelids; only the marine dwelling sea otter and giant otter are larger.

Wolverines have thick, dark, oily fur which is highly hydrophobic, making it resistant to frost. This has led to its traditional popularity among hunters and trappers as a lining in jackets and parkas in Arctic conditions. A light silvery facial mask is distinct in some individuals, and a pale buff stripe runs laterally from the shoulders along the side and crossing the rump just above a 25-35 cm bushy tail. Some individuals display prominent white hair patches on the throat or chest.[5]

Like many other mustelids, it has potent anal scent glands used for marking territory and sexual signalling. The pungent odor has given rise to the nicknames "skunk bear" and "nasty cat." Wolverines, like other mustelids, possess a special upper molar in the back of the mouth that is rotated 90 degrees, towards the inside of the mouth. This special characteristic allows wolverines to tear off meat from prey or carrion that has been frozen solid.[7][8]

Behavior

Wolverine pelts from Siberia (left) and Alaska (right)

The wolverine is, like most mustelids, remarkably strong for its size. It has been known to kill prey as large as moose, although most typically when these are weakened by winter starvation or caught in deep snow. Wolverines inhabiting the Old World (specifically, Fennoscandia) are more active hunters than their North American cousins.[9] This may be because competing predator populations in Eurasia are not as dense, making it more practical for the wolverine to hunt for itself than to wait for another animal to make a kill and then try to snatch it. They often feed on carrion left by wolves, so that changes in the population of wolves may affect the population of wolverines.[10] Wolverines are also known on occasion to eat plant material.[11]

Armed with powerful jaws, sharp claws, and a thick hide,[12] wolverines may defend kills against larger or more numerous predators.[13] There is at least one published account of a 27-pound wolverine's attempt to steal a kill from a black bear (adult males weigh 400 to 500 pounds). Unfortunately for the mustelid, the bear won what was ultimately a fatal contest.[14] Wolverines have been known to harass and attempt to intimidate wolves and cougars.

Mating season is in the summer, but the actual implantation of the embryo (blastocyst) in the uterus is stayed until early winter, delaying the development of the fetus. Females will often not produce young if food is scarce. The wolverine gestation period is 30-50 days. Litters of typically two or three young ("kits") are born in the spring. Kits develop rapidly, reaching adult size within the first year of a lifespan that may reach anywhere from five to (in exceptional individuals) thirteen years.[citation needed]

Adult wolverines have no natural predators, though they do come into conflict with (and may be killed by) other large predators over territory and food. Juveniles are more vulnerable; infants (kits) have been known on occasion to be taken by predatory birds such as eagles.[15]

Range

Wolverine on rocky terrain

The wolverine lives primarily in isolated northern areas, for example the arctic and alpine regions of Alaska, northern Canada, Siberia and Scandinavia; they are also native to Russia, the Baltic countries, and Northern China and Mongolia. In 2008 and 2009, wolverines were sighted as far south as the Sierra Nevada, near Lake Tahoe, for the first time since 1922.[16][17]. It is also found in low numbers in the Rocky Mountains and northern Cascades of the United States. However, most New World wolverines live in Canada.[11]

The Wildlife Conservation Society reported in June 2009 that a wolverine researchers had been tracking for almost three months had crossed into northern Colorado. Society officials had tagged the young male wolverine in Wyoming near Grand Teton National Park and it had traveled southward for approximately 500 miles. It was the first wolverine seen in Colorado since 1919, and its appearance was also confirmed by the Colorado Division of Wildlife.[11]

The world's total wolverine population is unknown. The animal exhibits a low population density and requires a very large home range.[10] The range of a male wolverine can be more than 620 km² (240 sq mi) while encompassing the ranges of several females (with smaller home ranges of roughly 130-260 km² (50-100 sq mi). Adult wolverines try for the most part to keep non-overlapping ranges with adults of the same sex.[8] Radio tracking suggests an animal can range hundreds of miles in a few months.

Country Population Area Year State of Population
Sweden 265+[5] Norrbotten[5] 1995-97[5] Stable[5]
Norway 150+[5] Snøhetta plateau and North[5] 1995-97[5] Decline[5]
Finland 115[5] Karelia and North[5] 1997[5] Stable[5]
Russia 1500[5] Taiga[5] 1970, 1990, [5] Decline[5]
Russia - Komi 885[5] - 1990[5] -
Russia - Archangelsk Oblast 410[5] Nenetsky Autonomous Area[5] 1990[5] Limited[5]
Russia - Kola Peninsula 160[5] Hunting Districts[5] 1990[5] Decline[5]
USA - Alaska[18] unknown[18] Kobuk Valley National Park[18], Selawik National Wildlife Refuge[18] 1998[18] Decline[18]
USA - Alaska[19] 3.0 (± 0.4 SE) wolverines/1,000 km2[19] Turnagain Arm and the Kenai Mountains[19] 2004[19] -[19]
USA - California[10] Unknown Tahoe National Forest[10] 2008[10] Unknown[10]
Canada - Yukon 9.7 (± 0.6 SE) wolverines/1,000 km2[19] Old Crow Flats[19] 2004[19] -[19]
Canada - Ontario[20] unclear[20] Red Lake – Sioux Lookout to Fort Severn – Peawanuck[20] 2004[20] Stable to Expanding[20]
Canada - Overall[21] 15000 to 19000[21] Overall[21] -[21] Stable[21]

This requirement for large territories brings wolverines into conflict with human development, and hunting and trapping further reduce their numbers, causing them to disappear from large parts of their former range; attempts to have them declared an endangered species have met with little success.[10]

Name

The wolverine's questionable reputation as an insatiable glutton (reflected in the Latin genus name Gulo) may be in part due to a false etymology. The animal's name in old Swedish, Fjellfräs, meaning "fjell (mountain) cat," worked its way into German as Vielfraß, which means roughly "devours much." Its name in other West Germanic languages is similar (e.g. Dutch Veelvraat).

The Finnish name is Ahma, derived from ahmatti, which is translated as "glutton." The Russian росомаха (rosomakha) and the Polish and Czech name rosomak, seem to be borrowed from the Finnish rasva-maha (fat belly). Similarly, the Hungarian name is rozsomák or torkosborz which means gluttonous badger.

Purported gluttony is reflected neither in English nor in North Germanic languages. The English word wolverine (alteration of the earlier form wolvering of uncertain origin) probably implies 'a little wolf'. The name in Old Norse, Jarfr, lives on in the regular Icelandic name jarfi, regular Norwegian name jerv, regular Swedish name järv and regular Danish name jærv.

As a symbol

Many cities, teams, and organizations use the wolverine as a mascot. For example, the U.S. state of Michigan is, by tradition, known as "The Wolverine State," and the University of Michigan takes the wolverine as its mascot. The association is well and long established: for example, many Detroiters volunteered to fight during the American Civil War and George Armstrong Custer, who led the Michigan Brigade, called them the "Wolverines." The origins of this association are obscure; it may derive from a busy trade in wolverine furs in Sault Ste. Marie in the 18th century or may recall a disparagement intended to compare early settlers in Michigan with the vicious mammal. Wolverines are, however, extremely rare in Michigan. A sighting in February 2004 near Ubly was the first confirmed sighting in Michigan in 200 years.[22]

The wolverine figures prominently in the mythology of the Innu people of eastern Québec and Labrador. In at least one Innu myth, it is the creator of the world.[23]

The wolverine is featured in the Redwall book, Rakkety Tam. They come from the land of 'Ice and snow'.

References

  1. ^ Wozencraft, W. C. (2005). "Order Carnivora". In Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 532–628. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  2. ^ a b Template:IUCN2008
  3. ^ Koepfli, Klaus-Peter (February 2008), "Multigene phylogeny of the Mustelidae: Resolving relationships, tempo and biogeographic history of a mammalian adaptive radiation", BMC Biology, 6: 10, doi:10.1186/1741-7007-6-10{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link) CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  4. ^ a b Eric Tomasik and Joseph A. Cook (2005). "MITOCHONDRIAL PHYLOGEOGRAPHY AND CONSERVATION GENETICS OF WOLVERINE (GULO GULO) OF NORTHWESTERN NORTH AMERICA". Journal of Mammalogy. 86: 386–396. doi:10.1644/BER-121.1.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Arild Landa, Mats Lindén and Ilpo Kojola (2000). "Action Plan for the conservation of Wolverines (Gulo gulo) in Europe" (PDF). Nature and environment, No. 115. Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats (Bern Convention). Retrieved 2008-01-25. {{cite web}}: line feed character in |publisher= at position 31 (help)
  6. ^ http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/646740/wolverine
  7. ^ Pratt, Philip. "Dentition of the Wolverine". The Wolverine Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
  8. ^ a b Taylor, Ken (1994). "Wolverine" (HTML Public). Wildlife Notebook Series. Alaska Department of Fish & Game. Retrieved 2007-01-21.
  9. ^ World Wildlife Fund–Sweden: 1st International Symposium on Wolverine Research and Management (PDF)
  10. ^ a b c d e f g "Wolverine wonder", Grist.org, March 4, 2008; also Associated Press (2008-03-10). "Student's camera snaps wolverine in California". CNN.com. Retrieved 2008-03-11.
  11. ^ a b c Rickert, Eve (June 28, 2007), "The perils of secrecy", High Country News{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link) Cite error: The named reference "rickert" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  12. ^ World Biomes: Wolverine
  13. ^ YouTube: Wolverine challenges bear to leave
  14. ^ "When Predators Attack (Each Other): Researchers Document First-known Killing Of A Wolverine By A Black Bear In Yellowstone" (Press release). Science Daily. 2003-05-06. Retrieved 2007-01-16. {{cite press release}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  15. ^ Hinterland Who’s who: Wolverine
  16. ^ Knudson, Tom (April 5, 2008), "Sighting prompts California to expand search for elusive wolverine", Sacramento Bee{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  17. ^ Griffith, Martin (March 22, 2009), "A year later, wolverine spotted again in Sierra", San Francisco Chronicle{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  18. ^ a b c d e f Brad Shults, Gene Peltola, Jerrold Belant and Kyran Kunkel (12/17/98). "population ecology of wolverines within Kobuk valley national park and Selawik national wildlife refuge". Rocky Mountain Research Station, US Department of Agriculture - Forest Service. Retrieved 2008-01-26. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i Howard N. Goldena, J. David Henryb, Earl F. Beckera, Michael I. Goldsteinc, John M. Mortond, Dennis Frost, and Aaron J. Poef (12/17/98). "Estimating wolverine Gulo gulo population size using quadrat sampling of tracks in snow". Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Division of Wildlife Conservation; Parks Canada - Kluane National Park; US Forest Service - Alaska Regional Office; United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Kenai National Wildlife Refuge; North Yukon Renewable Resources Council; United States Forest Service, Chugach National Forest;. Retrieved 2007. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  20. ^ a b c d e Dr. Audrey Magoun, Neil Dawson, Dr. Geoff Lipsett-Moore, Dr. Justina C. Ray (2004). "Boreal Wolverine: A Focal Species for Land Use planning in Ontario's Northern Boreal Forest - Project Report" (PDF). The Wolverine Foundation, Inc., Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, Ontario Parks, Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS)/University of Toronto. Retrieved 2008-01-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  21. ^ a b c d e Brian Slough; et al. (2003). "COSEWIC Assessment and Update Status Report on the Wolverine (Gulo gulo) - Eastern Population Western Population in Canada" (PDF). COSEWIC (committee on the status of endangered wildlife in Canada) 2003. COSEWIC assessment and update status report on the wolverine Gulo gulo in Canada. Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada. Ottawa. vi + 41 pp. Retrieved 2008-01-26. {{cite web}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |author= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  22. ^ "First Michigan wolverine spotted in 200 years". Associated Press. 25 Feb 2004. Retrieved 23 Dec 2008. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |name= ignored (help)
  23. ^ Armitage, Peter (1992). "Religious ideology among the Innu of eastern Quebec and Labrador" (PDF). Religiologiques. 6. Retrieved 2007-06-29. (PDF)