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The Importance of Colour
The ferret1 is unique amongst all polecat species - it is
the only one who lives amongst humans. Its habitat is
not the forest or field, nor the river’s edge or semi-desert. The ferret’s habitat is a cage or living room, a
showground or rabbit infested paddock. And more - the
ferret is the only polecat species that sports a wide range
of coat colours.
Polecats who live in deep forests are very dark in colour.
Mum and Dad are nearly black and so are their kits.
Those who live in more open country and near human
settlements tend to be lighter in colour. But not as light
as the steppe polecat who prefers to live in open
grasslands and semi-deserts. The sandy colour of the
steppe polecat blends well into the loess and sandy soils
of its habitats. The colour of a polecat’s coat depends
very much upon where it lives. Photo 1.1 shows a
European polecat male of very dark colour.
Ferrets come in many different colours. Living amongst
humans has allowed the ferret to express a wide range of
coat colours that its wild relatives, the polecats, could
not. Natural selection weeds out any colours in a wild
species if it fails to offer a survival advantage. But
selective breeding can encourage the widest range of
coat colours possible, allowing colours to pass down
from one generation to the next.
In the Wild Colour means Camouflage
In the deep dark forest a dark coloured polecat has a
better chance of not being seen by either its prey or its
predator and thus has a better chance to survive and
produce offspring of the same colour, whereas a black
polecat in open grassland would quickly fall prey to a
hunting raptor. Conversely a sandy coloured polecat in
the dark deep forest would be highly visible to its prey
and predator alike finding it hard to catch a meal, but be
an easy meal itself.
Colour means Recognition
Polecats and other wild animals are very choosy about
who to mate with, as every zoo breeder of endangered
wild animals knows. It may smell right but if it doesn’t
look ‘right’ they may give it a miss. For example, it
could very well be that a black polecat who grew up
amongst black polecats - every polecat it has ever seen
was black - may not recognise an albino or sandy polecat
as a potential mate. Or worse, a sibling of a different
colour than the rest of the litter might be bullied by its
littermates or even rejected by its mother. Being the odd
one out is not a survival feature in the wild.
In Captivity, Colour also means Pleasing Humans
Breeders may outdo each other by producing animals of
unusual coat colours or breed for certain colours people
want. Once the albino, the white ferret with pink eyes,
was the preferred hunting companion. Recently, with the
rise of the show and companion ferret any colour could
become fashionable - for better or for worse.
Ferrets are not fussy about the colour of their mates
Their kind comes in many shades and patterns. They are
used to that. Mum and Dad of the same colour can have
kits of a range of colours. Life amongst humans not
only eased the pressure of natural selection but also, by
the practice of selective breeding, encouraged the
proliferation of any coat colour or pattern that is
genetically possible.
1
Footnote 1: By way of explanation, the ferret is usually
accepted to be a domesticated european polecat. It has been
domesticated over a period of several thousands of years or
perhaps even longer. The “wild” colour is these days generally
referred to as “sable”, although they were often previously
called “polecats” in Australia and the UK until quite recently.
The move towards the term sable and away from polecat was
requested by our friends in the USA as part of their struggle to
have ferrets recognised as domestic. In the USA, “polecat”
often describes the skunk, which is a wild species and is
notorious for carrying rabies. Some states in the USA continue
to prohibit ownership of ferrets as do Queensland and the
Northern Territory here in Australia.
Lack of Colour may mean Health Problems
We are only too familiar with the effect of albinism on
the visual system in any species. In many animals white�spotting especially about the head is related to deafness.
Dalmatians with the most extensive white areas are often
deaf.
Nervous excitable pigs are usually very pale or white.
The pale australian shepherds have a high incidence of
brain, ear and eye problems.
Aleutian coloured mink have the dubious honour of
having a virus named after them, because mink of this
particular grey colour are exceptionally susceptible to
the aleutian disease virus, ADV, a parvovirus that infects
mink and ferrets.
What can I say, other than, when you choose the colour
of your coat, choose wisely!
Sources:
Wallin, M., ‘Nature’s palette’, Department of Zoology,
Goeteborg University, Sweden, 2002
Genetics and the Behaviour of Domestic Animals, T.
Grandin (Editor), Academic Press, San Diego, Califor�nia, pp 319-341(1998)