Egyptian weasel


The Egyptian weasel is a weasel species endemic to northern Egypt. It is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List.

Taxonomy

The Egyptian weasel is so similar to the least weasel that only in 1992, it was suggested to be a separate species. However, results of a phylogenetic study indicate that mitochondrial DNA supports the Egyptian weasel to be a subspecies of Mustela nivalis rather than a distinct species.

Characteristics

The Egyptian weasel has short legs, a small head, and small ears. Its tail is long and thin. The weasel has a broad snout. The upper part of the body is brown and the lower part is cream-colored.
Sizes for the Egyptian weasel are:
-Male head-body length: 36.1–43 cm
-Female head-body length: 32.6–39 cm
-Male tail length: 10.9-12.9 cm
-Female tail length: 9.4–11 cm
-Male weight: 60-130g
-Female weight: 45-60g.

Distribution and habitat

The Egyptian weasel occurs in northern Egypt from Alexandria eastward to Port Said and southward through the delta and as far south as Beni Suef, located south of Cairo. It lives in the same places as humans, including cities and villages and has been described as an obligate synanthrope.

Behaviour and ecology

The Egyptian weasel is omnivorous and includes a significant amount of vegetables and fruit in its diet, as well as waste human food and animals including rodents, chicks of poultry, rabbits, fish and insects. Their varied and opportunistic diet reflects their opportunistic synanthropic lifestyle.
The males of the Egyptian weasel male are solitary and highly territorial, marking the territorial boundaries with urine and faeces. The female may establish a territory within a male's territory within which she will make a nest in a cavity, wall crevice or rock pile. She defends this territory from other females.

Reproduction

During courtship the pair trill and chatter and copulation can be quite a loud affair. After copulating she may remain with the male or the pair may separate and seek other mates. The females gives birth in her nest to a litter of between four and nine young, up to three times a year, if food supply allows.

Threats

At present, it is not considered threatened. Future potential threats are chemicals such as rodenticides, predation by domestic dogs and diseases.