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2006-10-03 14:38:10 · 6 answers · asked by destaniet12 1 in Pets Other - Pets

6 answers

Mongoose
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For other uses, see Mongoose (disambiguation).
?Mongoose


Dwarf Mongoose
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Chordata

Class: Mammalia

Order: Carnivora

Family: Herpestidae
Bonaparte, 1845

Subfamiles
Herpestinae

A mongoose is any member of the Herpestidae family of small, vaguely cat-like carnivores. Mongooses are found in Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, and southern Europe. There are more than thirty species, ranging between one and four feet in length. Mongooses are mostly carnivores, feeding on insects, crabs, earthworms, lizards, snakes, rodents, and other small creatures. They will also consume eggs, carrion, and sometimes fruit. Some species, such as H. edwardsii, the Indian mongoose, are popularly known for their ability to fight and kill venomous snakes such as cobras. They are able to do this because of their speed, agility and cunning, but typically avoid the cobra and have no particular affinity for consuming their meat. When placed in combat with vipers and snakes that are more rapid than cobras, as is often done for gambling, the mongoose typically loses.

Some species of mongoose can be easily domesticated and trained. They are fairly intelligent and can be taught simple tricks, so they are often kept as pets to protect the home from vermin. However, they can be more destructive than desired; when imported into the West Indies for the purpose of killing rats, they destroyed most of the small, ground-based fauna. For this reason, it is illegal to import most species of mongooses into the United States,[1] Australia and other countries. Mongooses were introduced to Hawaii in 1883, and have had a significant impact on native species.[2] Mongooses are sometimes referred to as "the most dangerous animals on the planet" for this reason.

In Okinawa, Japan, there is a tourist attraction where a mongoose and a type of local venomous snake, the habu (one of various Trimeresurus species) are placed in a closed perimeter and made to fight, while spectators watch. However, due to pressure from animal rights activists, the spectacle is less common today.

The plural form of mongoose is properly mongooses. The common form mongeese is technically incorrect since the words goose and mongoose are linguistically unrelated.[3] The word mongoose is derived from the Marathi word mangus.
Herpestinae

Dwarf Mongoose (Helogale parvula) in the Serengeti National ParkHerpestinae is a subfamily of Mongoose. The mongooses belong to one of four families of terrestrial cat-like mammals descended from the Viverraines, which were civet/genet-like mammals. The mongoose family is a close evolutionary relation of the family Viverridae and mongooses are sometimes classified as members of this family; however, mongooses have characteristic and distinguishing morphological and behavioural features though they do have the same basic dental formula as the viverrids. In contrast to the arboreal, nocturnal viverrids, mongooses are more commonly terrestrial and many are active during the day. Most are solitary like the Egyptian mongoose but a few, for example meerkats, have well-developed social systems.

Mongooses have long faces and bodies, small rounded ears, short legs and long tapering tails. Most are brindled or grizzled; few have strongly marked coats. They have non-retractile claws that are used primarily for digging.

Less diverse than the viverrids, the 30 species and 11 genera of mongooses are assigned to only two subfamilies. The subfamily Herpestinae comprises 30 species of African and Asian mongooses, including the Cape gray mongoose, the Egyptian mongoose and the meerkat or suricate.

Mongooses are distributed throughout North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and Asia living in a variety of habitats from forests to open woodland, savanna, semi-desert and desert. Chiefly terrestrial, some are aquatic or semi-arboreal.

The Egyptian mongoose (Herpestes ichneumon) is sometimes held as an example of a solitary mongoose, though they have been observed to work in groups also.[4]

The meerkat or suricate (Suricata suricatta) lives in troops of 2-3 families each comprising a male, a female and 2-5 offspring in open country in Southern Africa (Angola, Namibia, Botswana, South Africa). Meerkats are small, diurnal mammals foraging for invertebrates in open country. Their behaviour and small size (they weigh less than a kg) makes them very vulnerable to larger carnivores and birds of prey. However, the meerkat has been known to eat small birds that migrate through Southern Africa. To protect the foraging troops from predators, one meerkat serves as a sentinel - climbing to an exposed vantage point and scanning the surroundings for danger. If the sentinel detects a predator it gives a loud alarm call to warn the troop and indicate if the threat comes from the air or the ground. If from the air, the meerkats rush as fast as they can to the nearest hole. If from the ground, the troop flees but not quite so fast as meerkats are more able to evade terrestrial predators than airborne raptors.

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Pop Culture
Rikki-Tikki-Tavi, the title character in Rudyard Kipling's story, is a mongoose. In the U.S., Rikki-Tikki-Tavi may be better known from the animated short film based on the story, directed by Chuck Jones.
On the series Camp Lazlo, Patsy Smiles, who has a huge crush on the show's titular character, is a mongoose.
The Pokémon Zangoose closely resembles a mongoose, not only in name but in its strong aversion to snakes. It is known to be the mortal enemy of Seviper, a venomous snake Pokémon. It is incorrectly classified in the Pokédex as a "cat ferret Pokemon," though real mongooses do not belong to the Felidae or Mustelidae families to which cats and ferrets respectively belong.
Also in the Pokémon series (episode #20: The Ghost at Maiden's Peak) a Ghastly creates a mongoose to take out a snake Pokémon, Ekans. This is the only time a real animal is used in the series.
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Classification
FAMILY HERPESTIDAE
Subfamily Herpestinae
Genus Atilax
Marsh Mongoose, Atilax paludinosus
Genus Bdeogale
Bushy-tailed Mongoose, Bdeogale crassicauda
Jackson's Mongoose, Bdeogale jacksoni
Black-footed Mongoose, Bdeogale nigripes
Genus Crossarchus
Alexander's Cusimanse, Crossarchus alexandri
Ansorge's Cusimanse, Crossarchus ansorgei
Long-nosed Cusimanse, Crossarchus obscurus
Flat-headed Cusimanse, Crossarchus platycephalus
Genus Cynictis
Yellow Mongoose, Cynictis penicillata
Genus Dologale
Pousargues' Mongoose, Dologale dybowskii
Genus Galerella
Black Slender Mongoose, Galerella flavescens
Cape Grey Mongoose, Galerella pulverulenta
Slender Mongoose, Galerella sanguinea
Namaqua Slender Mongoose, Galerella swalius
Genus Helogale
Desert Dwarf Mongoose, Helogale hirtula
Dwarf Mongoose, Helogale parvula
Genus Herpestes
Short-tailed Mongoose, Herpestes brachyurus
Indian Gray Mongoose, Herpestes edwardsii
Indian Brown Mongoose, Herpestes fuscus
Egyptian Mongoose, Herpestes ichneumon
Indian Mongoose, Herpestes javanicus or Herpestes auropunctatus
Long-nosed Mongoose, Herpestes naso
Bengal Mongoose, Herpestes palustris
Collared Mongoose, Herpestes semitorquatus
Ruddy Mongoose, Herpestes smithii
Crab-eating Mongoose, Herpestes urva
Striped-necked Mongoose, Herpestes vitticollis
Genus Ichneumia
White-tailed Mongoose, Ichneumia albicauda
Genus Liberiictus
Liberian Mongoose, Liberiictis kuhni
Genus Mungos
Gambian Mongoose, Mungos gambianus
Banded Mongoose, Mungos mungo
Genus Mungotictis
Narrow-striped Mongoose, Mungotictis decemlineata
Genus Paracynictis
Selous' Mongoose, Paracynictis selousi
Genus Rhynchogale
Meller's Mongoose, Rhynchogale melleri
Genus Suricata
Meerkat, Suricata suricatta
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Gallery

Mongoose, or Mangouste as depicted in the 1851 Illustrated London Reading Book
Long-nosed Cusimanse, Crossarchus obscurus
Banded Mongoose, Mungos mungo

2006-10-03 14:54:11 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A mongoose is a small carnivorous mammal, found primarily in Asia and Africa.

They are very similar in appearance to weasels and ferrets, but are of a different taxonomic family (herpestidae rather than mustelidae) -- the mongoose belongs to the same family as the meerkat. But it would be very easy to mistake a mongoose foir a member of the mustelidae family they are so similar looking -- in fact it would not surprise me to learn that they were originally classified as mustelidae, I am almost certain that is what we were taught in school a long time ago.

2006-10-03 14:59:48 · answer #2 · answered by Mustela Frenata 5 · 0 0

Not exactly sure what you are trying to ask, but mongoose are part of the Herpestidae family, which is a family of small cat-like weasly animals.

2006-10-03 14:43:49 · answer #3 · answered by Robin 6 · 0 0

a mongoose is a member of the weasel family and is a mostly nocturnal carnivore.

2006-10-03 16:52:29 · answer #4 · answered by Simply Jen 2 · 0 0

what kind of mammal is an ardwolf?

2015-10-07 04:39:30 · answer #5 · answered by IAN S 1 · 0 0

MONGOOSES R SOOOOOOO FRIGGEN AWESOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! there these little weasley things that live in africa and they eat snakes and THEY R SOOOOOOOOOO CUTE!!!!!

2006-10-03 16:54:59 · answer #6 · answered by mari the AWESOME 3 · 0 0

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