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25 August 2020 Features of Claw Marks of Masked Palm Civets: Effects of Using Claw Marks to Survey Raccoons
Chihiro Kase, Yusuke Eguchi
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Abstract

We examined whether masked palm civets (Paguma larvata) would leave claw marks on wooden poles by having them climb poles experimentally. We also examined the features of civet's claw marks that are generally mistaken for claw marks of racoons (Procyon lotor). The test sessions included two conditions: square and round poles of different sizes (10, 15, and 20 cm). Civets climbed wooden poles regardless of the shape and usually left short claw marks on the pole surface. The claw marks that are generally mistaken for those of a raccoon (five fingers, claw marks over 4 cm in width and over 1 cm in length) occurred in 7.6% of tracks with the 10-cm square pole, 4.1% of tracks with the 15-cm square pole, and 0.6% of tracks with the 20-cm square pole. In the round pole experiments, claw marks generally mistaken for those of a raccoon occurred in 0.0% of tracks with the 10-cm diameter pole, 0.4% of tracks with the 15-cm diameter pole, and 2.1% with 20-cm diameter pole. These results suggest that the presence of masked palm civets would have little impact on the use of claw marks to assess raccoon distribution.

© The Mammal Society of Japan
Chihiro Kase and Yusuke Eguchi "Features of Claw Marks of Masked Palm Civets: Effects of Using Claw Marks to Survey Raccoons," Mammal Study 45(4), 281-288, (25 August 2020). https://doi.org/10.3106/ms2019-0069
Received: 28 October 2019; Accepted: 31 May 2020; Published: 25 August 2020
KEYWORDS
arboreal
claw marks survey
climbing behavior
wooden pole
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