Sunda stink badger

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The Sunda stink badger (Mydaus javanensis), also called the Javan stink badger, teledu, Malay stink badger, Malay badger, Indonesian stink badger and Sunda skunk, is a mammal native to Indonesia and Malaysia. Despite the common name, stink badgers are not closely related to true badgers, and are, instead, Old World relatives of the skunks.[1] Coincidentally, its local name sigung in Sundanese[2] is a false cognate to skunk which is of Algonquian origin.

Description

File:Mydaus javanensis.jpg
Mydaus javanensis

Sunda stink badgers have a similar body shape to badgers, but are significantly smaller, being Template:Convert in total length, and weighing from Template:Convert. Their fur is coarse, and black or very dark brown over most of the body, with a white stripe running from the top of the head to the tail. The tail is short, measuring about Template:Convert, and is covered in pure white fur. The width of the stripe varies considerably between individuals, but is usually narrow, and may be discontinuous. As the name indicates, stink badgers have an anal scent gland that secretes a foul-smelling substance, which the animal can spray up to Template:Convert. Females have six teats.[3]

Distribution and habitat

Named for the Sunda Islands, Sunda stink badgers are found in Java, Sumatra, Borneo, and the northern Natuna Islands. Sunda stink badgers can be found across a wide variety of habitats, including forest edges or areas of secondary forest. Historically, they were thought to be restricted to high elevations of over Template:Convert, and only rarely on lowland plains. This is now known not to be true, and more recent surveys have shown Sunda stink-badgers are often found in elevations well below 2000m.[4] Sunda stink badgers have been reported as low as Template:Convert above sea level on Java, at relatively low elevations in Sarawak.,[3] and have even been recorded at elevations as low as 10m in the Lower Kinabatangan floodplains, Sabah, Borneo at seemingly high densities.[5]

Three subspecies are recognized:[3]

  • M. j. javanensis (Sunda stink badger) - Java and Sumatra
  • M. j. lucifer (Bornean stink badger) - Borneo
  • M. j. ollula (Natuna Islands stink badger) - northern Natuna Islands

Behaviour and ecology

The Sunda stink badger is omnivorous and highly nocturnal.[6] The animal portion of its diet consists of invertebrates, eggs, and carrion. At night, it roots through soft soil using its snout and claws searching for worms and ground-dwelling insects. During the day, it sleeps in short burrows, less than Template:Cvt in length, which it either digs or takes over from other animals, such as porcupines. Females have been reported to give birth to litters of two or three young.[3]

References

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  4. Samejima H, Meijaard E, Duckworth JW, Yasuma S, Hearn AJ, Ross J, Mohamed A, Alfred R, Bernard H, Boonratana R, Pilgrim JD, Eaton J, Belant JL, Kramer-Schadt S, Semiadi G, and Wilting A. (2016). Predicted distribution of the Sunda stink-badger Mydaus javanensis (Mammalia: Carnivora: Mephitidae) on Borneo https://lkcnhm.nus.edu.sg/nus/images/data/raffles_bulletin_of_zoology/supplement33/S33rbz061-070.pdf. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 33: 61-70
  5. Evans MN., Vickers SH., Abu-Bakar MS and Goossens B. (2016). Carnivores of the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, Sabah, Borneo, including a new locality for the Otter Civet Cynogale bennettii. Small Carnivore Conservation 54: 26–38
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