Brian Booth's Tracking Quizzes

Quiz #5 - Answer

  

The answer is OPOSSUM.

Many of you were smarter than I was. For a long time I tracked this area and thought these tracks were from muskrats.  The habitat threw me off - in winter, when their tracks & burrows are most obvious, these opossums concentrate their activity around the pond, which definitely has frequent sign of muskrat - scat, plunge holes in the ice, and shells from feasts on freshwater clams. 

For some reason that remains a mystery to me, the opossums in my area stay in undeveloped areas & very close to water during the winter; I almost never see their tracks in snow in residential areas.  But once spring arrives, they venture out of the developed areas, crossing roads into residential areas and far from water - the most obvious sign of this is road-killed opossums.

The indirect register is common to both opossum & muskrat, and so is the star-shaped front footprint and the tendency to drag the feet in shallow snow.  The behavior of walking on the skinny log, I don't
believe is indicative of either animal, but it wouldn't be inconsistent with either animal. 

The stride of 7-9", however, matches opossum better than muskrat.  And while both animals dig burrows, from what I know muskrat burrows almost always have underwater entrances.

Opossums have thumbs that on their hind feet can point backwards - you can see something akin to this in photo C8, but my experience is that it's pretty rare when the thumb actually points backwards like shown in the field guides.

  

Quiz #5 - Question      ...on to Quiz #6

  

(All photos on this page are Copyright © by Brian Booth unless indicated otherwise)
To send comments, questions or feedback about these quizzes, email Brian Booth

  

Tracking Quizzes

The material on this page is copyright © by the original author/artist/photographer
This website is created, maintained & copyright © by Walter Muma
Please respect this copyright and ask permission before using or saving any of the content
of this page for any purpose

-- These websites may also interest you --

Ontario Wildflowers   Ontario Trees & Shrubs   Ontario Ferns   Ontario Grasses   Ontario Insects
Mumart   World of Mosses   Wild Ontario   Trans-Labrador Hwy   James Bay Road   Rupert River   Moped Trip
Wildwood Survival   Wildwood Tracking   Leatherwood Trail   Tracker Trail   Earth Caretaker   Wildwood Canada

Thank you for visiting!