Sunday, 8 March 2026

Black Bears and the Uncertain Apex

The concept of the food pyramid is a central one in ecology. The idea is that since consumption cannot ever be 100% efficient, every type of animal must necessarily be less common than whatever it is that it feed on, at least in terms of its total biomass. Plants are more common than herbivores are more common than small carnivores are more common than larger carnivores.

The actual picture is more complicated than this. Many "carnivores" are at least partly omnivorous, and they often eat large herbivores more regularly than they eat small carnivores. Plus, we also need to consider the detritivores and parasites. But the general pattern holds, and at the top of the pyramid, we find the apex predators

It's possible to argue as to what exactly constitutes an apex predator. The general idea, however, is that they feed on other animals without being preyed upon themselves. At least among terrestrial mammals, an average body mass of more than about 15 kg (33 lbs) is generally about enough that predators need to manage their own population (through competition, territoriality, infanticide, etc.) rather than having to worry about something larger and scarier managing it for them. 

Sunday, 1 March 2026

Viverrids: Half-Weasel Palm Civets

Banded palm civet
The word "civet", as currently used in English, is a rather broad term, referring to a wide range of vaguely similar-looking animals. Not all of these are even members of the "civet family" as we currently understand it, and even those that are don't form a natural biological group within that family. 

The word was originally Arabic (pronounced something like "zabad") and would have referred to the animals that medieval Arabs were familiar with, which, given how far they traded, would have included both African and South Asian species. These are still regarded as "true civets" today, but the word now also appears in the name of the "palm civets", long thought to be merely a variant of the true sort.

Sunday, 22 February 2026

Beavers in the Wetlands

The North American beaver (Castor canadensis) is one of two living species of beaver, along with its Eurasian counterpart. They are, of course, rodents - they are related to gophers - and relatively large ones at that. They are found across all but the most treeless parts of the US and Canada, as well as the border regions of northern Mexico; they have even been introduced to Finland, Belgium, and Argentina. They are a relatively common species across much of this range, something that has been helped in recent decades by restrictions on hunting.

Nonetheless, while not endangered themselves, they can be key to maintaining ecosystems, not least because they are one of the few nonhuman species that substantially modifies the land around them. Their ability to alter wetland habitats by dam-building has been identified as a key factor in maintaining other species at greater risk, such as amphibians in the Rocky Mountains. On top of which, their habit of cutting down trees affects the composition of the forests in which they live.

Sunday, 15 February 2026

Eocene (Pt 2): In the Jungles of Europe

Heterohyus
During the Eocene epoch, Europe was very different from the way it is today. For one thing, it was still separated from Asia, with the Turgai Strait running between the two, roughly from what would now be the Black Sea to the Arctic Ocean. But, were you to look at a map without any modern day context, you probably wouldn't call it a continent, because it wasn't a single landmass, but a chain of large islands.

The biggest of these lay to the north, encompassing Scandinavia and the lands to the east. Just south of that, the second-largest was the one that would later become Britain, France, Germany, and some of their smaller neighbours. A smaller, but still sizable, Iberian island lay to the southwest, and a collection of low-lying ones occupied the south and east, with the more mountainous parts of that region having yet to form.

But, even if you didn't know the changes in the geography, if you could simply travel back in time to the Early Eocene and look around you, it wouldn't feel much like Europe. The continent was closer to the equator than it was now - northern Germany was about where Milan is today - but, even ignoring that, the world as a whole was much hotter. This is part of the reason for the islands, since there were no ice caps back then, but it means that our hypothetical time traveller would be, in almost any part of the landmass, standing in a jungle.

Sunday, 8 February 2026

Viverrids: Genets of Central and Southern Africa

Rusty-spotted genet
The genets are one of the most speciose of the carnivoran genera, with at least fourteen species living across Africa and, in the case of the common genet, just beyond it. However, the majority of the species have been little studied. As small, nocturnal carnivores often dwelling in hard-to-reach places, it is relatively hard to do so, and they lack the cachet that applies to larger, more glamorous animals such as cheetahs, hyenas, or even wild cats. 

It probably doesn't help that there is not a great visual or (so far as we know) behavioural difference between them. In many cases, the easiest way to tell them apart is simply to note where they were found. There are subtle differences between them, to be sure, but you may have to look quite closely, and the variations are often matters of degree. Nonetheless, let's see what I can say as I take a look at the seven confirmed species that I didn't cover in the last one.

Saturday, 31 January 2026

Rabbits in the Ice Ages

The rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) is one of the more familiar mammal species to most people in the developed world, not least because it has been partially domesticated. Moreover, wild and feral rabbits are found across wide parts of the world, living on every continent except Antarctica. They are adaptable animals, able to survive in a wide range of different habitats, from hot semidesert to forests and bleak moorland. So much so, in fact, that, in most parts of the world, they are a pest.

The rabbit is widespread because we humans have spread it, following the initial domestication event in France, no later than 800 AD. This was originally for meat and fur, with pet breeds appearing only from the late 18th century. Rabbits are now found, for example, on Middleton Island, a chilly speck of land 130 km (80 miles) off the south coast of Alaska, and on the Kerguelen archipelago in the Indian Ocean, which is about as remote a place as it's possible to get.

Sunday, 25 January 2026

Running Hyenas of Greece

Chasmaporthetes
Mentioning a "hyena" today likely brings to mind the image of a muscular, aggressive, scavenging creature, probably with a spotted coat. This, the spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta), is, however, only one of three species alive today, with the two lesser-known ones being smaller and less aggressive. In fact, the hyena family includes a fourth living species as well, although this isn't always referred to as a "hyena" because it's really only dangerous to termites and can't crack bone like "true" hyenas can.

Four living species isn't very many for a family of mammals but, like many other such small groups, there is a long fossil history that includes a great many extinct forms. These varied in form even more than the living species do. At one extreme are animals larger and stronger even than the living spotted hyena, while at the other (all living very early on) are small tree-climbing animals that looked more like civets. 

Somewhere in between are the "running hyenas".