8 Cool US Mammals You Haven’t Seen

UngulateNerd92

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Yesterday, my son looked up from breakfast and announced, “That’s not a regular cat.”

He was correct. The creature walking across our backyard was twice as large as a “regular cat,” and also possessed much longer legs and a shorter tail. A bobcat, strolling casually across our backyard. It did a loop, pausing to check out our chicken coop (luckily, our birds were safely locked inside).

And then, a smaller bobcat – likely the kitten – appeared. What a spectacular backyard sighting.

For nature lovers, seeing charismatic mammals is always thrilling. We plan trips around seeing bears and moose and whales. It’s why wild mammals are the most frequent subject of nature documentaries, and also frequently appear on the covers of conservation magazines.

But even with mammals, most species are ignored. Many haven’t even seen the mammals in their own neighborhoods. This is because many wild mammals are cryptic. They are nocturnal, and often elusive.

Some of these elusive, wilderness-dwelling mammals roam through wildlife watchers’ dreams. Think wolverine or mountain lion. But others are almost unknown. Those are the species I focus on here. Some are incredibly difficult to spot due to restricted range or inaccessible habitat. Some may be in your local woods or fields, but you just haven’t noticed them.

8 Cool US Mammals You Haven’t Seen - Cool Green Science
 
I saw this earlier. I have 3/8 in the wild - Least Weasel, Southern Flying Squirrel, and Botta's Pocket Gopher.

Very nice. From your list, I have only seen Botta's pocket gopher in the wild. They are quite prevalent in my uncle's backyard in Riverside, Riverside County, California. He has a sloped hillside with multiple fruit trees and they definitely like that environment. I picked one up with thick leather gloves and got a good bite from one. Luckily I was wearing thick leather gloves. Which localities did you see the Botta's pocket gopher and the Southern flying squirrels and Least weasels for that matter?
 
I saw the pocket gopher at the Grand Canyon South Rim. Southern Flying Squirrels are extremely common in my area, I've seen them many times in many different places. The weasel I don't remember exactly where I was when I saw it, I was camping at the time. I know it was somewhere in northern Wisconsin.
 
I saw the pocket gopher at the Grand Canyon South Rim. Southern Flying Squirrels are extremely common in my area, I've seen them many times in many different places. The weasel I don't remember exactly where I was when I saw it, I was camping at the time. I know it was somewhere in northern Wisconsin.

Ah thank you. Did you manage to get any photographs?
 
I got some great photos of the pocket gopher, no photos of the other two. The flying squirrels may be common but you usually only see them at night, so photos aren't easy.

Ah yes that makes sense. If it is not too much to ask, can you upload the Botta's pocket gopher photos if you haven't already? I would be interested in seeing them.
 
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