Word from the Smokies: Wondering where the weasels are

Weasels are members of the diverse family of fur-bearing carnivores called mustelids. Though rarely seen, their exceptional agility, strength, and tenaciousness make them some of the most successful predators on the planet.
Weasels are members of the diverse family of fur-bearing carnivores called mustelids. Though rarely seen, their exceptional agility, strength, and tenaciousness make them some of the most successful predators on the planet.

Most visitors to Great Smoky Mountains National Park will never encounter a weasel. Yet these small members of a diverse family of stealthy carnivores are here in Southern Appalachia — and are likely watching us even when we cannot see them.

The name “weasel” conjures up images of slippery, deceitful characters who often play the distastefully memorable villains of literature or film. This connotation, of course, is derived from what limited knowledge we have of these nimble, fur-bearing creatures that can “weasel out of” anything and make an honest, if ruthless, living by being vicious and unrelenting predators.

I know because my ponds north of Asheville have been raided over the last two weeks. More than a hundred wood frog tadpoles disappearing virtually overnight, and then a large koi was attacked. At first it seemed the culprit was a long-tailed weasel, which was caught dining upon a 16-inch-long fish, though it was twice its size. However, two days later I spotted a mink on the edge of the pond, and it was later seen visiting after midnight on the trail cam. After a bit of research and speaking with some experts, I now suspect the weasel was simply feasting on what the mink left behind.

Mink are bold and relentless, taking on adversaries many times their size. One had to be euthanized at the Oconaluftee Mountain Farm Museum in Great Smoky Mountains National Park after it killed several chickens and even charged a park ranger.
Mink are bold and relentless, taking on adversaries many times their size. One had to be euthanized at the Oconaluftee Mountain Farm Museum in Great Smoky Mountains National Park after it killed several chickens and even charged a park ranger.

Both the mink and the long-tailed weasel are mustelids, one of the world’s most varied animal groups comprising 65 species. Some you have probably heard of are ferret, marten, stoat, fisher, sable, polecat, badger, wolverine, and otter.

“Mammals of the Smokies” tells us that mink live in the vicinity of any waterway to be found in Great Smoky Mountains National Park “where there is sufficient cover and seclusion. Mink are extremely inquisitive and intelligent. In 2006 a mink had to be killed at the Oconaluftee Mountain Farm Museum after it killed several chickens and charged a park ranger!”

Long-tailed weasels also live along the watercourses, but they also prefer to be near standing water and bird life. “Because of the small size and elongated body, long-tailed weasels have a high metabolism and are highly active day and night searching for prey,” says “Mammals.” “Like other mustelids, long-tailed weasels move in a series of gallops, arching their back with each bound. They use their keen sense of smell and hearing to locate prey.”

With an elongated body and a high metabolism, long-tailed weasels are highly active as they search for prey day and night. Like other mustelids, they move in a series of gallops, arching their back with each bound.
With an elongated body and a high metabolism, long-tailed weasels are highly active as they search for prey day and night. Like other mustelids, they move in a series of gallops, arching their back with each bound.

For some time, Smokies scientists have been wondering where the least weasels are. Science Coordinator Paul Super was working to confirm their presence in the park when one showed up under his next-door neighbor's bird feeder in Waynesville, presumably the victim of a cat.

“This species could live throughout the park,” Super said. “But it has been found only twice, with dead specimens discovered at Clingmans Dome (2014) and near Gatlinburg (1997) now in our collections.”

Least weasels are extremely agile, bold, and inquisitive as they prowl and poke into small spaces seeking rodents to prey on. Researchers collaborating with Super expect they will be most common along the forest edge of open field and scrub areas such as Cades Cove, Cataloochee, and The Purchase.

“This elusive and uncommon mammal invariably occurs in the park, but for years the only known Tennessee record was from Roan Mountain in 1962 despite the habitat similarity there to many high-elevation peaks in GSMNP,” said Kevin Hamed, Ph.D., a wildlife biologist at Virginia Tech who has been researching the least weasel for a decade. “More recently, least weasels have now been documented in most counties along the Tennessee and North Carolina border in the national forest, providing more evidence that least weasels also inhabit high peaks in GSMNP.”

For years, scientists have been working to find live examples of the least weasel in the Smokies. Despite its diminutive size, this smallest member of the mustelid family and the smallest carnivore in the world has a more forceful bite pound-for-pound than a lion, tiger, or bear.
For years, scientists have been working to find live examples of the least weasel in the Smokies. Despite its diminutive size, this smallest member of the mustelid family and the smallest carnivore in the world has a more forceful bite pound-for-pound than a lion, tiger, or bear.

The least weasel is the smallest member of the mustelid family, the smallest carnivore in North America, and even the smallest carnivore in the world. Yet despite its diminutive size, reinforced by its name, pound for pound, this tiny creature has a more forceful bite than a lion, tiger, hyena, or any of the bears. Adam Hartstone-Rose, Ph.D., of North Carolina State University, specializes in the study of bite force. He found that the combination of a shorter jaw in relation to the size of its skull, powerful muscles delivering the force of the bite, and the concentration of the force in the weasel’s pointy canine teeth makes this tiny mammal a super predator unparalleled on the planet.

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Hamed said that, according to wildlife ecologist David Jachowski at Clemson University, weasel populations appear to be rapidly declining in the United States as trapping records indicated a 96% reduction in the number of weasels trapped in the past 60 years. A changing climate is also predicted to negatively impact this more “northern” species.

“Given the fast metabolism of least weasels, they predominately hunt during temperatures requiring the least amount of additional metabolic demands to compensate for temperature differences,” Hamed said. “Therefore, a changing climate could impact activity patterns throughout the year. So, understanding the distribution of least weasels in GSMNP is critical to developing more detailed management strategies for our smallest carnivore and its prey communities.”

An extremely inquisitive and intelligent predator, the American mink is one of the 65 species of mustelids found around the world. Other mustelids include badgers, ferrets, fishers, otters, martens, polecats, sables, and wolverines.
An extremely inquisitive and intelligent predator, the American mink is one of the 65 species of mustelids found around the world. Other mustelids include badgers, ferrets, fishers, otters, martens, polecats, sables, and wolverines.

Funded by a Carlos Campbell Fellowship from the Great Smoky Mountains Conservation Foundation, Hamed and his students recently deployed nine wooden boxes that are essentially unbaited camera traps for detecting weasels in the park using a system that was developed in the Netherlands.

“The weasel’s instinct to explore holes entices them to enter the box where they are photographed,” Hamed said. “In the park, we have documented several small mammal species, but we have yet to find a least weasel. In Virginia, September to December is the best time to observe weasels in our Mostela boxes, and so we are excited for fall.”

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A few years ago, I was riding in a van through a natural area Costa Rica with a group of friends. We suddenly saw what looked like a large black otter crossing the road a few feet beyond our vehicle. Even our local naturalist guide was amazed as we watched the elusive and rarely seen tayra, another member of the mustelid family, lumber up into the forest, its unusually long spine creating an awkward, arching gait as it ran. That sighting, coupled with my recent pond pilfering, has piqued my interest in these secretive and solitary members of the animal kingdom, about which I plan to write more for Smokies Life journal.

Frances Figart
Frances Figart

Frances Figart (rhymes with Tiger) is the editor of Smokies Life and the Creative Services Director for the 29,000-member Great Smoky Mountains Association, an educational nonprofit partner of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Reach her at frances@gsmassoc.org.

This article originally appeared on Asheville Citizen Times: Word from the Smokies: Wondering where the weasels are