1833Distribution of Cryptoprocta ferox. typicus, 1834The fossa ( or; Malagasy pronunciation:; Cryptoprocta ferox) is a -like, carnivorous to.
It is a member of the, a of closely related to the family (Herpestidae). Its has been controversial because its physical traits resemble those of, yet other traits suggest a close relationship with (most and their relatives).
Its classification, along with that of the other Malagasy carnivores, influenced hypotheses about how many times mammalian carnivores have colonized Madagascar. With genetic studies demonstrating that the fossa and all other Malagasy carnivores are most closely related to each other (forming a, recognized as the family Eupleridae), carnivorans are now thought to have colonized the island once, around 18 to 20 million years ago.The fossa is the largest mammalian on the island of Madagascar and has been compared to a small. Adults have a head-body length of 70–80 cm (28–31 in) and weigh between 5.5 and 8.6 kg (12 and 19 lb), with the males larger than the females. It has semi-retractable claws (meaning it can extend but not retract its claws fully) and flexible ankles that allow it to climb up and down trees head-first, and also support jumping from tree to tree. The fossa is unique within its family for, which share traits with and.The species is widespread, although are usually low.
It is found solely in forested habitat, and actively hunts both by day and night. Over 50% of its diet consists of, the endemic found on the island;, lizards, birds, and other animals are also documented as prey. Mating usually occurs in trees on horizontal limbs and can last for several hours.
Litters range from one to six pups, which are born blind and toothless. Infants wean after 4.5 months and are independent after a year. Occurs around three to four years of age, and life expectancy in captivity is 20 years. The fossa is listed as a by the.
It is generally feared by the Malagasy people and is often protected by their (taboo). The greatest threat to the species is. Contents.Etymology The Cryptoprocta refers to how the animal's is hidden by its anal pouch, from the words crypto- 'hidden', and procta 'anus'.
The ferox is the adjective 'fierce' or 'wild'. Its common name is spelled fossa in English or fosa in, the from which it was taken, but some authors have adopted the Malagasy spelling in English. The word is similar to posa (meaning 'cat') in the (another Austronesian language) from, and both terms may derive from from the 1600s. However, an alternative suggests a link to another word that comes from: pusa refers to the ( Mustela nudipes). The Malay word pusa could have become posa for cats in Borneo, while in Madagascar the word could have become fosa to refer to the fossa. Taxonomy The fossa was formally described by on the basis of a specimen from Madagascar sent by in 1833.
The common name is the same as the generic name of the ( Fossa fossana), but they are different species. Because of shared physical traits with, and cats , its has been controversial.
Bennett originally placed the fossa as a type of civet in the family, a classification that long remained popular among taxonomists. Its compact, large, retractable claws, and specialized carnivorous have also led some taxonomists to associate it with the felids. In 1939, and Milo Hellman placed the fossa in its own subfamily within Felidae, the Cryptoproctinae. Placed it back in Viverridae in 1945, still within its own subfamily, yet conceded it had many cat-like characteristics. Cranium (dorsal, ventral, and lateral views) and mandible (lateral and dorsal views)Both males and females have short, straight fur that is relatively dense and without spots or patterns. Both sexes are generally a reddish-brown dorsally and colored a dirty cream ventrally. When in, they may have an orange coloration to their from a reddish substance secreted by a chest, but this has not been consistently observed by all researchers.
The tail tends to be lighter in coloration than the sides. Juveniles are either gray or nearly white.Several of the animal's physical features are adaptions to climbing through trees. It uses its tail to assist balance and has semi-retractable claws that it uses to climb trees in its search for prey. It has feet, switching between a plantigrade-like gait (when ) and a -like one (when ). The soles of its paws are nearly bare and covered with strong pads. The fossa has very flexible ankles that allow it to readily grasp tree trunks so as to climb up or down trees head first or to leap to another tree.
Captive juveniles have been known to swing upside down by their hindfeet from knotted ropes.The fossa has several, although the glands are less developed in females. Like herpestids it has a skin gland inside an which surrounds the anus like a pocket. The pocket opens to the exterior with a horizontal slit below the tail. Other glands are located near the penis or vagina, with the emitting a strong odor. Like the herpestids, it has no glands. External genitalia.
Fossa are active both day and night.The fossa is active during both the day and the night and is considered; activity peaks may occur early in the morning, late in the afternoon, and late in the night. The animal generally does not reuse sleeping sites, but females with young do return to the same den.
The home ranges of male fossas in are up to 26 km 2 (10 sq mi) large, compared to 13 km 2 (5.0 sq mi) for females. These ranges overlap—by about 30 percent according to data from the eastern forests—but females usually have separated ranges.
Home ranges grow during the dry season, perhaps because less food and water is available. In general, fossas travel between 2 and 5 kilometres (1.2 and 3.1 mi) per day, although in one reported case a fossa was observed moving a straight-line distance of 7 km (4.3 mi) in 16 hours. The animal's population density appears to be low: in, where it is thought to be common, its density has been estimated at one animal per 4 km 2 (1.5 sq mi) in 1998. Another study in the same forest between 1994 and 1996 using the method indicated a population density of one animal per 3.8 km 2 (1.5 sq mi) and one adult per 5.6 km 2 (2.2 sq mi).Except for mothers with young and occasional observations of pairs of males, animals are usually found alone, so that the species is considered solitary. A 2009 publication, however, reported a detailed observation of cooperative hunting, wherein three male fossas hunted a 3 kg (6.6 lb) sifaka ( ) for 45 minutes, and subsequently shared the prey.
This behavior may be a vestige of cooperative hunting that would have been required to take down larger.Fossas communicate using sounds, scents, and visual signals. Vocalizations include purring, a threatening call, and a call of fear, consisting of 'repeated loud, coarse inhalations and gasps of breath'. A long, high yelp may function to attract other fossas. Females mew during mating and males produce a sigh when they have found a female. Throughout the year, animals produce long-lasting on rocks, trees, and the ground using glands in the anal region and on the chest. They also communicate using face and body expression, but the significance of these signals is uncertain. The animal is aggressive only during mating, and males in particular fight boldly.
After a short fight, the loser flees and is followed by the winner for a short distance. In captivity, fossas are usually not aggressive and sometimes even allow themselves to be stroked by a zookeeper, but adult males in particular may try to bite. Diet The fossa is a that hunts small to medium-sized animals. One of eight carnivorous species endemic to Madagascar, the fossa is the island's largest surviving endemic terrestrial mammal and the only predator capable of preying upon adults of all extant, the largest of which can weigh as much as 90 percent of the weight of the average fossa.
Although it is the predominant predator of lemurs, reports of its dietary habits demonstrate a wide variety of prey selectivity and specialization depending on habitat and season; diet does not vary by sex. While the fossa is thought to be a lemur specialist in, its diet is more variable in other rain forest habitats. The fossa's diet includes small- (, above) to medium-sized (, below) mammals.The diet of the fossa in the wild has been studied by analyzing their distinctive, which resemble gray cylinders with twisted ends and measure 10–14 cm (3.9–5.5 in) long by 1.5–2.5 cm (0.6–1.0 in) thick. Scat collected and analyzed from both Andohahela and Andringitra contained lemur matter and rodents.
Eastern populations in Andringitra incorporate the widest recorded variety of prey, including both vertebrates. Vertebrates consumed ranged from reptiles to a wide variety of birds, including both and ground birds, and mammals, including, and lemurs. Invertebrates eaten by the fossa in the high mountain zone of Andringitra include insects and crabs. One study found that vertebrates comprised 94% of the diet of fossas, with lemurs comprising over 50%, followed by (9%), lizards (9%), and birds (2%). Seeds, which comprised 5% of the diet, may have been in the stomachs of the lemurs eaten, or may have been consumed with fruit taken for water, as seeds were more common in the stomach in the dry season. The average prey size varies geographically; it is only 40 grams (1.4 oz) in the high mountains of Andringitra, in contrast to 480 grams (17 oz) in humid forests and over 1,000 grams (35 oz) in dry deciduous forests. In a study of fossa diet in the dry deciduous forest of western Madagascar, more than 90% of prey items were vertebrates, and more than 50% were lemurs.
The primary diet consisted of approximately six lemur species and two or three spiny tenrec species, along with snakes and small mammals. Generally, the fossa preys upon larger lemurs and rodents in preference to smaller ones.Prey is obtained by hunting either on the ground or in the trees. During the non-breeding season the fossa hunts individually, but during the breeding season hunting parties may be seen, and these may be pairs or later on mothers and young. One member of the group scales a tree and chases the lemurs from tree to tree, forcing them down to the ground where the other is easily able to capture them.
The fossa is known to eviscerate its larger lemur prey, a trait that, along with its distinct scat, helps identify its kills. Long-term observations of the fossa's predation patterns on rainforest suggest that the fossa hunts in a subsection of their range until prey density is decreased, then moves on. The fossa has been reported to prey on domestic animals, such as goats and small calves, and especially chickens. Food taken in captivity includes amphibians, birds, insects, reptiles, and small- to medium-sized mammals.This wide variety of prey items taken in various rainforest habitats is similar to the varied dietary composition noted occurring in the dry forests of western Madagascar, as well. As the largest endemic predator on Madagascar, this dietary flexibility combined with a flexible activity pattern has allowed it to exploit a wide variety of niches available throughout the island, making it a potential for the Madagascar ecosystems. Breeding.
Fossa illustration circa 1927Fossas have a mating system. Most of the details of reproduction in wild populations are from the western dry deciduous forests; determining whether certain of these details are applicable to eastern populations will require further field research. Mating typically occurs during September and October, although there are reports of its occurring as late as December, and can be highly conspicuous. In captivity in the, fossas instead mate in the northern spring, from March to July. Usually occurs in trees on horizontal limbs about 20 m (66 ft) off the ground.
Frequently the same tree is used year after year, with remarkable precision as to the date the season commences. Trees are often near a water source, and have limbs strong enough and wide enough to support the mating pair, about 20 cm (7.9 in) wide. Some mating has been reported on the ground as well.As many as eight males will be at a mating site, staying in close vicinity to the receptive female. The female seems to choose the male she mates with, and the males compete for the attention of the female with a significant amount of and antagonistic interactions. The female may choose to mate with several of the males, and her choice of mate does not seem to have any correlation to the physical appearance of the males.
To stimulate the male to mount her, she gives a series of mewling vocalizations. The male mounts from behind, resting his body on her slightly off-center, a position requiring delicate balance; if the female were to stand, the male would have significant difficulty continuing.
He places his paws on her shoulders or grasps her around the waist and often licks her neck. Mating may last for nearly three hours. This unusually lengthy mating is due to the physical nature of the male's erect penis, which has backwards-pointing spines along most of its length.
Fossa mating includes a, which may be enforced by the male's spiny penis. The tie is difficult to break if the mating session is interrupted. Copulation with a single male may be repeated several times, with a total mating time of up to fourteen hours, while the male may remain with the female for up to an hour after the mating. A single female may occupy the tree for up to a week, mating with multiple males over that time. Also, other females may take her place, mating with some of the same males as well as others.
This mating strategy, whereby the females monopolize a site and maximize the available number of mates, seems to be unique among carnivores. Recent research suggests that this system helps the fossa overcome factors which would normally impede mate-finding, such as low population density and lack of den use.The birthing of the litter of one to six (typically two to four) takes place in a concealed location, such as an underground den, a termite mound, a rock crevice, or in the hollow of a large tree (particularly those of the genus ). Contrary to older research, litters are of mixed sexes.
Young are born in December or January, making the 90 days, with the late mating reports indicating a gestational period of about six to seven weeks. The newborns are blind and toothless and weigh no more than 100 g (3.5 oz). The fur is thin and has been described as gray-brown or nearly white.
After about two weeks the cubs' eyes open, they become more active, and their fur darkens to a pearl gray. The cubs do not take solid food until three months old, and do not leave the den until they are 4.5 months old; they are weaned shortly after that. After the first year, the juveniles are independent of their mother.
Permanent teeth appear at 18 to 20 months. Physical maturity is reached by about two years of age, but is not attained for another year or two, and the young may stay with their mother until they are fully mature. Lifespan in captivity is up to or past 20 years of age, possibly due to the slow juvenile development. Human interactions The fossa has been assessed as ' by the since 2008, as its population size has probably declined by at least 30 percent between 1987 and 2008; previous assessments have included ' (2000) and 'Insufficiently Known' (1988, 1990, 1994).
The species is dependent on forest and thus threatened by the widespread destruction of Madagascar's native forest but is also able to persist in disturbed areas. A suite of markers (short segments of DNA that have a repeated ) have been developed to help aid in studies of genetic health and of both captive and wild fossas. Several have been isolated from the fossa, some of which, such as and, are thought to have been transmitted by feral dogs or cats. Was reported in a captive fossa in 2013.Although the species is widely distributed, it is locally rare in all regions, making fossas particularly vulnerable to extinction. The effects of increase the risk.
For its size, the fossa has a lower than predicted population density, which is further threatened by Madagascar's rapidly disappearing forests and dwindling populations of lemurs, which make up a high proportion of its diet. The loss of the fossa, either locally or completely, could significantly impact ecosystem dynamics, possibly leading to over-grazing by some of its prey species. The total population of the fossa living within protected areas is estimated at less than 2,500 adults, but this may be an overestimate. Only two protected areas are thought to contain 500 or more adult fossas: and, although these are also thought to be overestimated. Too little population information has been collected for a formal, but estimates suggest that none of the protected areas support a.
If this is correct, the extinction of the fossa may take as much as 100 years to occur as the species gradually declines. In order for the species to survive, it is estimated that at least 555 km 2 (214 sq mi) is needed to maintain smaller, short-term viable populations, and at least 2,000 km 2 (770 sq mi) for populations of 500 adults., known in Madagascar as fady, offers protection for the fossa and other carnivores. In the Marolambo District (part of the region in ), the fossa has traditionally been hated and feared as a dangerous animal. It has been described as 'greedy and aggressive', known for taking fowl and piglets, and believed to 'take little children who walk alone into the forest'. Some do not eat it for fear that it will transfer its undesirable qualities to anyone who consumes it. However, the animal is also taken for; a study published in 2009 reported that 57 percent of villages (8 of 14 sampled) in the Makira forest consume fossa meat.
The animals were typically hunted using slingshots, with dogs, or most commonly, by placing on animal paths. Near, the fossa, along with several of its smaller cousins and the introduced ( Viverricula indica), are known to 'scavenge on the bodies of ancestors', which are buried in shallow graves in the forest. For this reason, eating these animals is strictly prohibited by fady. However, if they wander into villages in search of domestic fowl, they may be killed or trapped. Small carnivore traps have been observed near chicken runs in the village of Vohiparara.Fossas are occasionally held in captivity in.
They first bred in captivity in 1974 in the zoo of, France. The next year, at a time when there were only eight fossas in the world's zoos, the in Germany acquired one; this zoo later started a successful breeding program, and most zoo fossas now descend from the Duisburg population. Research on the Duisburg fossas has provided much data about their biology.The fossa was depicted as an antagonist in the DreamWorks 2005 animated film, accurately shown as the lemurs' most feared predator. References Citations.