jusko88

Carnegie Museum of Natural History- Mammals Native to Pennsylvania

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How pitiful to think that this is the entire mammal diversity of the eastern United States.
 
Fair enough, but the sentiment is still valid.

In terms of overall number of mammal species there perhaps aren't that many fewer than were present in the Pleistocene.

As a megafauna enthusiast though, I agree that most of the coolest mammal species were taken out by European settlers 300 years ago (brown bears, mountain lions, wolves) and by the first American settlers 10,000 years before that (mammoths, smilodons, camels, etc.).
 
As a matter of interest, are there Sea Mink specimens to be seen anywhere?

Ian, check out this website for all of your Sea Mink information needs:
The Extinction Website - Species Info - Sea Mink

It says this about museum specimens: "Skeletal and skin specimens were not collected by zoologists (Sealfon 2007). Sea Mink remains, primarily cranial, have been excavated from Native American shell middens, although no collector is known to have preserved a complete specimen (Dunstone 1993). Specimens can be found in the collections of the American Museum of Natural History, New York (AMNH); the Frick Collection of the American Museum of Natural History, New York (F:AM); and the Maine State Museum, Augusta (MSM). (Sealfon 2007)"
 
This also is missing Red Wolf and coyotes (which are almost every where). Also there are some black bears along the eastern united states.
 
Coyotes aren't native to the Eastern US, but are either introduced or migrated when the larger Red and Gray Wolves disappeared.

That said, I just read the statistic that 73% of all mammal genera have disappeared since humans arrived in North America.
 
Coyotes aren't native to the Eastern US, but are either introduced or migrated when the larger Red and Gray Wolves disappeared.

That said, I just read the statistic that 73% of all mammal genera have disappeared since humans arrived in North America.

Is that 73% statistic referring to all mammals, or mammals over a certain body size? Have any bats and rodents gone extinct in the US? I would think that they would account for the bulk of North American mammal diversity, but that may be at the species rather than genera level.
 

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