Haida ermine explained

The Haida ermine (Mustela haidarum) is a mustelid species endemic to a few islands off the Pacific Northwest of North America, namely Haida Gwaii in Canada and the southern Alexander Archipelago in the U.S. state of Alaska.[1]

Indigenous names

In the Haida language, this species is known as daayáats’ in its brown summer coat and tlag in its winter coat.[2]

Taxonomy

The three subspecies of the Haida ermine were originally considered subspecies of the common stoat (M. erminea). However, in 2013, they were recognized as distinct from any other ermine, and a 2021 study further found them to comprise a distinct species. M. haidarum is thought have originated about 375,000 years ago (during the Pleistocene), and is thought to be the result of ancient hybrid speciation between the Beringian ermine (M. erminea) and American ermine (M. richardsonii). The islands are thought to have been glacial refugia during the Last Glacial Maximum, with both species of ermine being isolated on the islands and hybridizing with one another, while the ice sheets separated them from the rest of the world—thus leading to the formation of a new species.[3] [4] [5] It is recognized as a distinct species by the American Society of Mammalogists.

Distribution

The species is found on a few islands off the coast of British Columbia and southeast Alaska. In Canada, it is found on the Haida Gwaii archipelago in Graham and Moresby islands, while in Alaska it is found on Prince of Wales Island and possibly Suemez Island. It is found in a temperate rainforest habitat.

Description

Aside from genetic differences, M. haidarum can be distinguished from M. erminea and M. richardsonii by its elongated skull.

Subspecies

Three subspecies are thought to exist.

SubspeciesTrinomial authorityDescriptionRangeSynonyms
Haida ermine (previously the Queen Charlotte Islands stoat or Haida stoat)[6]

M. h. haidarum

Preble, 1898Smallest size of 20 ermine subspecies in North America. The colour of its summer coat is mostly chocolate brown. During the winter, the Ermine is all white with a black tipped tail, despite lesser snow coverage throughout lower elevations on Haida Gwaii.[7] Haida GwaiiMustela erminea haidarum
Prince of Wales Island ermineM. h. celendaHall, 1944Prince of Wales IslandMustela erminea celenda
Suemez Island ermineM. h. seclusaHall, 1944Suemez IslandMustela erminea seculsa

Conservation

The habitat for the Haida ermine has been intensively reduced over the past few centuries due to old-growth timber harvest in the Tongass National Forest, an important protected area for the species, as well as industrial-scale mining on the islands, which disproportionately affects insular endemics such as M. haidarum. Expanding human populations and increasing tourism may increase the risk of pathogen spillover to M. haidarum, including pathogens common to pets such as canine distemper and parvoviruses, which have negatively impacted other wild mustelids. Due to the rudimentary understanding of the true level of endemism in these northern archipelagos, these threats must be better quantified to protect species from them. The Pacific martens (M. caurina) inhabiting Haida Gwaii also represent a distinct lineage from other populations, indicating that the habitat of the islands may have allowed other distinct species or subspecies to evolve.[8] [9]

Behavior

The Haida ermine traverse their environment with quick momentum from their small legs. They root around in search of holes and crevices often scouting their surroundings on their hind legs. They hunt in short periods often in ten to fourteen minute increments up to four hours, interchanging between break periods every three to five hours of the day. They typically hunt prey that are several times their own weight by precise lunges at the neck. Except for rabbits which have too much fur around their neck for the bite to penetrate but instead are gripped at the nape and scratched with their hind legs. Haida ermine are known to lick the blood created by them off their prey first. They kill when given the chance and store what isn't required at the time in their nests.

Notes and References

  1. Mustela haidarum Preble, 1898. 1006532. 2021-07-12.
  2. Book: Lachler, Jordan. Dictionary of Alaskan Haida. 2010. Sealaska Heritage Institute. 978-0-9825786-5-0. 645501778.
  3. Colella. Jocelyn P.. Frederick. Lindsey M.. Talbot. Sandra L.. Cook. Joseph A.. 2021. Extrinsically reinforced hybrid speciation within Holarctic ermine (Mustela spp.) produces an insular endemic. Diversity and Distributions. en. 27. 4. 747–762. 10.1111/ddi.13234. 1472-4642. 2021DivDi..27..747C .
  4. Web site: Adorable Killer Ermines Found To Contain Three Distinct Species Of Fluffy Weasels. 2021-07-12. IFLScience. 15 April 2021 . en.
  5. Web site: Scientists discover hybrid ermine species isolated in Haida Gwaii for 300,000 years. 2021-07-12. ca.news.yahoo.com. 13 April 2021 . en-CA.
  6. Web site: Jung. Christina. Scientists discover hybrid ermine species isolated in Haida Gwaii for 300,000 years. 14 April 2021. CBC.ca.
  7. Web site: Kirk. David. COSEWIC Assessment and Status Report on the Ermine haidarum subspecies Mustela erminea haidarum in Canada. 14 April 2021. www.sararegistry.gc.ca/. Environment Canada.
  8. Web site: Denning. Angela. Petersburg. KFSK-. 2021-03-30. New ermine species found on Southeast Alaska island. 2021-07-12. Alaska Public Media. en-US.
  9. Web site: King . Carolyn . 8 April 1983 . Mammalian species . en-us.