Martes melampus, Pinel, 1792

Don E. Wilson & Russell A. Mittermeier, 2009, Mustelidae, Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 1 Carnivores, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions, pp. 564-656 : 631

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5714044

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5714075

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038F87D4-CA5C-FFB3-CAF8-3A9CF95FFD9C

treatment provided by

Conny

scientific name

Martes melampus
status

 

14. View Plate 33: Mustelidae

Japanese Marten

Martes melampus View in CoL

French: Martre du Japon / German: Japanischer Marder / Spanish: Marta japonesa

Taxonomy. Mustela melampus Wagner, 1841 View in CoL ,

Japan.

Three subspecies are recognized.

Subspecies and Distribution.

M. m. melampus Wagner, 1841 — Japan (Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku Is).

M. m. coreensis Kuroda & Mori, 1923 — North and South Korea.

M. m. tsuensis Thomas, 1897 — Japan (Tsushima I).

Introduced on Sado and Hokkaido Is. View Figure

Descriptive notes. Head-body 47-54.5 cm, tail 17-223 cm; average weight is 1-5 kg for males and 1 kg for females. The Japanese Marten has a long body, short limbs, and a bushy tail. The pelage is yellowish-brown to dark brown, with a conspicuous white patch on the throat and upper chest.

Habitat. Broadleaf forests.

Food and Feeding. The diet includes small mammals, birds, amphibians, invertebrates (insects, centipedes, spiders, crustaceans, earthworms), fruits, and seeds. In the Kuju Highland on Kyushu, the mean frequencies of occurrence of food items in scats were 79-7% animals and 511% plants. The diet comprised mainly insects, mammals, crustaceans, and 36 plant species. There were high frequencies of insects from June to October, mammals in February, April and December, crustaceans in August and October, and plants in October and December. Scats collected from the Tsushima Islands revealed that small mammals comprised a relatively stable proportion of the diet throughout the year (range 8-2 to 16-8%), whereas birds showed a peak from January (11-3%) to March (14:6%). Amphibians, mostly small adult frogs (Rana tsushimensis), were most common in the diet in February (9-7%). Insects were the most common animal prey, but their proportions in the diet varied greatly from 10-5% in May to 27-8% in August, and they were consistently least common throughout the winter. Centipedes (mostly Scolopendra subspinipes) were frequently eaten during May andJune (16:9-17-4%). Plant materials were the most common of all foods throughout the year (28:8-53-9%). Berries and seeds occurred at the highest frequency in April (41%, especially Rubus hirsutus and Elaeagnus pungens) and in September (47-3%, especially Vitis ficifolia and Ficus electa).

Activity patterns. Primarily nocturnal. Resting sites are in trees and in ground burrows.

Movements, Home range and Social organization. On the Tsushima Islands, the mean home range size was 0-7 km? for eight males and 0-63 km? for three females; home ranges were not significantly different between the sexes and ranged from 0-5- 1 km?®. There waslittle overlap of home ranges.

Breeding. Nothing known.

Status and Conservation. Classified as Least Concern in The IUCN Red List. The subspecies M. m. tsuensisis classified as Vulnerable. The Japanese Marten is trapped forits fur during the hunting season (1 December to 31 January), except on Hokkaido Island. The subspecies M. m. tsuensis, found only on the Tsushima Islands, has been protected from trapping since 1971. Predation by feral dogs and highway mortality appear to be major threats.

Bibliography. Arai et al. (2003), Kuroda & Mori (1923), Otani (2002), Shusei et al. (2003), Tatara (1994), Tatara & Doi (1994), Wozencraft (2005).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Carnivora

Family

Mustelidae

Genus

Martes

Loc

Martes melampus

Don E. Wilson & Russell A. Mittermeier 2009
2009
Loc

Mustela melampus

Wagner 1841
1841
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