Order Carnivora
Author
W. Christopher Wozencraft
text
1993
Smithsonian Institution Press
Washington and London
Editor
Don E. Wilson
Editor
DeeAnn M. Reeder
Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition)
279
348
book chapter
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7359191
1-56098-217-9
7359191
Mustela vison
Schreber, 1777
.
Die Säugethiere, 3(19):pl. 127
,B[1777); text, 3(26):463[1777].
TYPE LOCALITY:
"Man findet das Vison in
Canada
un Pensilvanien"
.
DISTRIBUTION: North America from Alaska and
Canada
through all of
USA
except SW deserts. Introduced to
Iceland
, NC Europe, British Isis,
Norway
, Belarussia, Baltic States,
Spain
, and Siberia.
SYNONYMS:
antiquus
Loomis, 1911;
borealis
Brass, 1911
;
energumenos
Bangs, 1896;
evagor
Hall, 1932
;
evergladensis
Hamilton, 1948;
ingens
Osgood, 1900
;
lacustris
Preble, 1902
;
letifera
Hollister, 1915;
lowii
Anderson, 1945;
lutensis
Bangs, 1898
;
lutreocephala
Harlan, 1825
;
macrodon
Prentiss, 1903
;
melampeplus
Elliot, 1903;
mink
Peale and Palisot de Beauvois, 1796
;
minx
Turton, 1800;
nesolestes
Heller, 1909
;
nigrescens
Audubon and Bachman, 1854
;
rufa
Smith, 1858
;
vulgivagus
Bangs, 1895
;
winingus
Baird, 1857
.
COMMENTS:
Manville (1966)
demonstrated that
macrodon
is conspecific, although
Kurtén and Anderson (1980)
recognized it as a distinct species. Hall (1951), Heptner and Yurgenson (1967), and
Hollister (1913a)
considered
vison
closely related to
lutreola
,
however analyses by Graphodatskii et al. (1976) and
Youngman (1982)
supported
vison
to be one of the earliest offshoots of the
Mustela
lineage.
Youngman (1982)
placed
vison
in the subgenus Vison.