Mink Fact Sheet
IDENTIFYING MINK & THEIR PRESENCE
Mink (Mustela vison) have dark brown fur and a long tail that
becomes progressively darker towards the tip. They also may
have white patches on their chest and throat. They weigh 1 ½
- 3 ½ pounds and have elongated slender bodies with short, stocky
legs. Females are slightly smaller than males. Males
grow to be about two feet long (22 - 28 inches). Evidence
that mink may be present in an area include dark brown or black
droppings that are 5-6 inches long, roughly cylindrical, with
occasional segmentation and bits of fur or bone that are deposited
on beaver lodges, rocks, logs and near dens. Burrow holes in
streams and riverbanks that have a four-inch diameter opening also
are an indication that mink are present. Mink tracks are
nearly round with a width of 1 ¼ - 1 ¾ inches for the front feet
and 2 ¼ inches long for the hind feet. The stride length of
their tracks is 12-26 inches apart and both hind and forefeet
prints almost touch. Skulls from mink have 34 teeth.
Mink can emit a strong musky odor with their scent glands, like
skunks, but the distance the odor can be detected is more
limited.
LIFE HISTORY & FEEDING HABITS
Mink are most active at night, early dawn and late
dusk. They are excellent swimmers and spend most of their
time hunting in ponds, streams and other wetland areas. They
have oily guard hairs that waterproof and protect their
coats. Predators such as foxes, bobcats, great horned owls
and alligators are not a serious threat to mink populations.
Mink may hiss, snarl, screech and/or excrete an odorous fluid from
their scent glands when threatened. Mating season for mink
occurs around January and March with an average of 3-4 young,
called kits, born in late April and May. Adult females can
have one litter, ranging from 1-8 kits, each year. Kits are
very playful and are weaned 8 - 9 weeks after birth, but stay
together as a family group until autumn.
Considered carnivores, mink are opportunistic feeders, meaning
they will readily consume a large variety of both aquatic and
terrestrial prey, based on availability. They will consume
fish, crawfish, insects, frogs, snails, muskrats, rats, mice,
squirrels, chipmunks, rabbits, snakes, young snapping turtles,
waterfowl and other birds, bird eggs and in saltwater areas,
crabs.
HABITAT AND RANGE
Mink are found in almost all 49 continental states, although they
may be extremely sparse or absent in dry areas of CA, NV, UT, NM,
west TX and all of AZ. Typically, they occupy various water
sources and wetland areas such as rivers, streams, creeks, beaver
ponds, lakes and saltwater and freshwater marshes. Home
ranges include areas immediately surrounding 1 - 4 miles of stream
length and average about 1 ½ miles of stream length. Males
tend to occupy larger ranges and have more den sites than
females. The availability of dens has been found to limit
mink distribution in some regions. While mink can dig their
own burrows, they highly prefer to use ready-made den sites such as
burrows under tree roots, bridge crossings, rock piles, log jams,
ditches, crevices, as well as abandoned beaver dams, muskrat
burrows, hollow logs and holes in streams and river banks.
Food and den availability can readily affect habitat selection by
season. In Georgia, mink most commonly are found in the
Piedmont, Ridge and Valley, Blue Ridge Mountains, and Atlantic
Coast Regions while absent in much of the Upper and Lower Coastal
Plain.
HISTORICAL & CURRENT SIGNIFICANCE
Mink, as well as several other species of furbearers, have an
important place in the history of mankind. For thousands of
years, furs and furbearer trapping were necessary for human
survival and still are in many places around the world.
However, uncontrolled use of DDT, PCPs, DDE and other pesticides in
the 1950s and 1960s caused widespread pollution throughout Americas
waterway systems that resulted in extremely low wild mink
populations. These low wild populations, combined with the
high demand for fur products and its production efficiency led to a
high number of mink ranches in the United States (~7,200 ranches
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture).
Because mink habitat is closely associated with aquatic systems
and since they are particularly sensitive to pesticides and
pollution, mink have and can continue to serve as an indicator
species for environmental contamination in watersheds. Modern
day furbearer trapping provides ecological, cultural, biological,
recreational and economic values for society. Trappers can
provide biologists with valuable data to help monitor areas for the
presence of environmental contamination, such as mercury.
Wetland conservation, like that promoted by waterfowl and wetland
conservationists, is currently the most valuable initiative for
maintaining healthy mink populations.
PDF FORMATTED FACT SHEET:
Click here for a formatted version of the above
information.