I stumbled-upon a technological hiccup with a recent upload of photos from our Snapshot Wisconsin (DNR) trail camera. It would appear that back in February a routine upload to the cloud network failed to send all of the photos. Last weekend that SD card found it's way back into the upload rotation and sure as shooting a big slug of photos from January and February showed-up. Good thing because this infrared gem was in the collection......
click on image to enlarge |
I captured my very first picture of one of these in February of 2019. Again in March and October of last year. And the end of January this year. Woot Woot!
This is Martes pennanti - the Fisher. One of the larger members
of the weasel family - only the river otter is bigger.
Characterized by a soft and supple pelt this highly-prized furbearer was oft referred-to as the American Sable. Once widely distributed
across Wisconsin - the great cutover of our northern forests and unregulated trapping eventually led to the
extirpation of this species. Only very small remnant populations retreating to the
northern-most reaches of Wisconsin and Minnesota. Nevertheless, the
species persists as a consequence of reintroduction efforts and reforestation of marginal farmland. Four photos over three consecutive years is not happenstance and it would appear that southern Door County is now part of an expanding range.
These are habitually solitary animals and while a pregnant
female will den-up for a period of time - males are always on
the prowl with a typical boy requiring as much as 150 square miles of
territory. March and April is mating season for the fisher and is characterized by a reproductive curiosity featuring a delayed implantation period of 10 to 11 months. Possibly stimulated by longer daylight - the
blastocyst (the earliest stage of the embryo) is then implanted in the uterus. Gestation is 6 weeks followed by the birth of three to four kits. Since mom is capable of mating immediately afterwards females spend virtually all of their adult lives either pregnant or lactating. By the end of summer the young will leave the den and disperse to establish their own territories. Males contribute nothing to the raising of the young.
Another fun fact is that this critter is an accomplished swimmer and quite comfortable in the water. You're probably thinking - how many fish can a fisher fish? The answer is none. The fisher does not fish. Their smaller mink cousins are better
fishermen than the fisher. An opportunistic feeder this animal will dine on mice, voles, dead fish, squirrels, rabbits, raccoons and an occasional house cat. Seasonally they'll help themselves to reptiles, amphibians, nuts, berries, eggs and fruit. Equipped with cat-like retractable claws this is
one of the few predators that will take-down a porcupine with little to
no ill-effect.
I'm positively tickled to capture another photo with an ever-patient, motion-activated woodland sentinel.
Raising a toast to big weasels and second-rate fishermen....
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