Photo 162318, (c) daleversteegen, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by daleversteegen

Attribution © daleversteegen
some rights reserved
Uploaded by daleversteegen daleversteegen
Source iNaturalist
Associated observations

Photos / Sounds

What

Pacific Marten (Martes caurina ssp. caurina)

Observer

daleversteegen

Date

August 15, 2012 02:37 PM MDT

Description

Information Provided by

http://wildlife.state.co.us

Description: The marten (often called the pine marten or American marten) is a weasel that lives in trees. Males are about two feet long, with an eight inch tail, and they weigh about 1 1/2 pounds. Females are 10 to 20 percent smaller than the males and weigh only half as much as males. Martens are brown, right to the tip of the tail, and a pale yellowish brown beneath. Martens are mostly nocturnal, but when they are hungry they are active day or night. As other weasels, martens are active year round. In the coldest weather they may den in a tree hole or chickaree nest.
Martens are tolerant of humans and easily accommodate to feeding areas. In the old days, a marten was the resident mouser in many a miner's cabin.

Range: Martens are mammals of coniferous forests in northern and western North America.

Habitat: In Colorado, favored habitats are old-growth subalpine forests of spruce, fir or lodgepole pine.

Diet: In these forests is where they pursue their preferred food, the chickaree or pine squirrel; as well as nesting birds. On the ground they also capture red-backed voles.

Reproduction: Mating occurs in the summer, but embryos don't implant until early spring. One to five young are born in April after about a month of gestation. Typical of weasels, the young are blind and nearly naked, but develop rapidly and are weaned at about two months of age. No species habitually preys on martens; trapping and habitat destruction from clear-cutting trees probably are the most important sources of mortality.

Associated taxa
Sizes