| Malayan weasel | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Mammalia |
| Order: | Carnivora |
| Family: | Mustelidae |
| Genus: | Mustela |
| Species: | M. nudipes |
| Binomial name | |
| Mustela nudipes Desmarest, 1822 | |
| Distribution of the Malayan weasel | |
TheMalayan weasel (Mustela nudipes) orMalay weasel is aweaselspecies native to theMalay Peninsula and the islands ofSumatra andBorneo. It is listed asLeast Concern on theIUCN Red List.[1]
The Malayan weasel is reddish-brown to grayish-white. Its head is lighter in colour than the rest of the body. The distal half of thetail is pale orange to white. The soles of the feet are naked.It has a body length of 30–36 cm (12–14 in) with a 24–26 cm (9.4–10.2 in) long tail.
The Malayan weasel is native to the Malay Peninsula from southern Thailand to peninsula Malaysia, andSumatra andBorneo. It is generally associated with tropical lowland forest, but has been recorded in habitats ranging fromswamp andmontane forests to plantations and high elevation montane scrub up to 1,700 m (5,600 ft).[1] A better understanding of habitat preferences would require surveys specifically aimed at the Malayan weasel because it is rarely detected by general camera trap, road mortality, and visual surveys.[2]
In Borneo, it was photographed inprimarydipterocarp and logged forest at elevations of 177–1,032 m (581–3,386 ft).[3]
The Malayan weasel is very poorly known, but assumed to occur at low densities and behave elusively based on low detection rates. It is a ground-living species and its morphology not suited to climbing. Their diet is unknown but assumed to be similar to other small weasels: mostly carnivorous, including small rodents, birds, eggs, and small reptiles. Most records of the species occurred during the day, but more research is needed to determine whether Malayan weasels are also active nocturnally. The majority of sightings have been of single animals, suggesting a solitary nature as seen in mostweasel species of genusMustela. Not much is known about its breeding habits, but a litter of four has been recorded.[2]
There are twosubspecies of the Malayan weasel:
Records of Malayan weasels in highly degraded forests, plantations, and even suburban areas suggest that the species is tolerant of humans. Malayan weasels are sometimes killed by villagers for medicinal use, food, trophy, fur, for killing chickens, and incidental by-catch in snares. Regardless, in some areas they are seen positively and allowed in villages as a predator of crop-raiding rats. The wide range of the species across various habitats and tolerance of humans suggests resilience to local habitat conversion. Though overall numbers are stable, Malayan weasels are protected in peninsular Malaysia and Thailand due to local declines.[2]