Written by Bret Weinstein and Liz
Ballenger, Biology 800 students and Matthew Sygo, Biology 108 student
(1995)
Geographic Range
Palearctic, Nearctic: The
Wolverine ranges from northern Europe and Siberia through northern North
America. Their distribution once extended as far south as Colorado,
Indiana, Pennsylvannia, and perhaps Michigan.
Physical Characteristics
Mass: 7 to 32 kg.
One of the largest extant mustelids, Gulo
gulo 's head and body length is 65-105 cm and tail length is 17-26
cm. Females are at least ten percent smaller than males in linear
measurements and 30 percent less in weight. Gulo gulo is
reminiscent of a large marten with a heavy build, large head, relatively
small and rounded ears, a short tail, and massive limbs. Wolverines have
long, dense fur which is generally blackish brown with a light brown band
extending along each side of the body from shoulder to rump and joining
over the base of the tail. Gulo gulo has keen senses of smell and
hearing but fairly poor eyesight. Wolverines are extremely strong and
aggressive for their size, and they have been reported to drive bears,
cougars, and even packs of wolves from their kills.
Natural History
Food Habits
The Wolverine has a diet that can include
anything from small eggs to full-sized deer. The wolverine is capable of
bringing down prey that is five times bigger than itself. It is equipped
with large claws and with pads on its feet that allow it to chase down
prey in deep snow. Some prey species include reindeer, roe deer, wild
sheep, and elk. The wolverine can be very swift when it is on the
attack, reaching speeds of over thirty miles an hour.
Reproduction
Wolverines are monestrous and give birth
only once every two years. Between May and August, animals come together
in pairs to breed. Pairs last only for a few days and both males and
females may remate several times with other individuals. Ovulation is
believed to be induced by copulation. The embryo is not implanted
immediately, but rather waits in diapause for six months. After
implantation, gestation takes only another 30-50 days. Dams build
snow-dens in which they give birth and nurse. Births occur from January
through April. Litters are from one to six and individuals in a litter
may have different fathers. These young typically nurse for 8-10 weeks,
are separated from the mother in the autumn, and attain adult size after
1 year. Wolverines are sexually mature at 2-3 years of life. Females up
to 10 years old have bred in captivity. Wolverines may live up to 17
years in captivity, but they generally succumb after 8-10 years in the
wild.
Behavior
Wolverines are mainly terrestrial and
move with a loping gallop. They can climb trees with great speed and are
excellent swimmers. Wolverines gallop with great endurance, sometimes
moving 10-15 km without rest, although their speed probably does not
exceed 15 km per hour. They may cover up to 45 km in one day in their
activities. Home ranges can cover as much as 2,000 sq km in winter.
Wolverines are largely nocturnal, but they are often active in daylight.
In areas where there are extended times of light or darkness, wolverines
may alternate three- to four-hour periods of activity and sleep.
Wolverines do not appear to be bothered by snow and are active
year-round, even in the most severe weather.
After the females give birth they hide
with their young. The mother defends her territory and intruders are not
tolerated. This territorial behavior continues until the young are ready
to hunt on their own. In general, wolverines are solitary (except during
the breeding season) and territorial and do not tolerate individuals of
the same sex in their territories. Territories are marked with
secretions from anal scent glands and urine. Wolverines also spray their
food caches with scent gland secretions to discourage other animals from
raiding them. Wolverines are rarely vocal, except for occasional grunts
and growls when irritated.
Wolverines have large home ranges and may
defend smaller territories. Play has been observed between mates and
between siblings as well as between kits and their mothers. Wolverines
are also known to play with objects.
Habitat
Wolverines inhabit boreal forests,
mountains or open plains and brushlands. They construct rough beds of
grass or leaves in caves or rock crevices, in burrows made by other
animals, or under a fallen tree. They occasionally construct their nests
under the snow.
Biomes: tundra, taiga,
temperate forest & rainforest, temperate grassland, mountains, ice
cap
Economic Importance for Humans
Positive
The Wolverine has been an important
source of pelts for the fur industry, but their skins are no longer used
widely in commerce. The fur is especially valued as lining for the hoods
of parkas by persons living in the Arctic, because of its frost
resistant properties.
Negative
Wolverines are often suspected of killing
livestock. Many Wolverines are shot due to their habit of preying upon
animals that are trapped for fur. Gulo gulo has been
extensively hunted in Scandinavia because of its alleged predation on
domestic reindeer. It has been considered a nuisance throughout its
range because it will eat animals already caught in fur traps and will
break into cabins and food caches, eating and spraying the contents with
its strong scent. Wolverines can even break into canned goods with their
sharp canines. Wolverines are supposedly very difficult to trap; when a
wolverine finds a trap, it may spring it by turning it upside down or by
dropping a stick into it. Wolverines have also been known to carry traps
away and bury them deep in the snow.
Conservation
Status: threatened
Wolverines generally occur at relatively
low population densities and have vanished from most of their former range
in the United States. In Scandinavia, the estimates vary from one
individual per 200-500 sq km. Numbers have declined due to both fur
trapping and hunting by those believing the wolverine to be a nuisance
(see negative importance below). Wolverines have been nearly eliminated in
the United States and have disappeared over most of southeastern and
south-central Canada. In Europe, they can only be found now in parts of
Scandinavia and the northern Soviet Union.
Other Comments
This is truly a beautiful animal, quick,
silent, deadly, and determined to win. Although Gulo luscus is a name
often used for North American wolverines, there is considerable evidence
that they are simply a subspecies of Gulo gulo . |