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American Marten Habitat and Den Sites — 12 Comments

    • Yeah I don’t think they ever ranged that far south. Thanks for your comment – I forgot to mention that they are creatures of northern and high elevation forests, which I just edited in. I’m glad you enjoyed the article!

    • Hi Jim, I camera trapped in northern Maine several years ago as part of my field work for the eastern US. I focused more on lynx there. One of my tracker and photography friends had told me that martens were very common in the ADK High Peaks, so I decided to focus on them there. And now, I am doing the field work for the western US, which is what brought me to MN and WY.

  1. Do Martins and Fishers share habitat?

    I have read (can’t offer a reference) that snow depth is a factor on which of these species is present. My recollection is that the Martin can do well in deep snow where the Fisher founders.

    You do address that somewhat in your book, mentioning that the Martin jumps often rather than walking; and seems to glide over the snow.Have you learned anything since publication that can amplify what you wrote?

    • Yes, they do share habitat. In my last post, Marten Tracks and Sign (https://winterberrywildlife.ouroneacrefarm.com/2020/04/01/american-marten-tracks-and-sign/), there is a photo showing fisher and marten tracks together. Both species are well adapted to deep snow, with low foot loading, but the marten’s is lower, less than half that of the fisher. My impression, and it’s just an impression based on my time spent tracking them, is that the marten does better at higher elevations where snow is deeper, and the fisher dominates at lower elevations. Both are present in the High Peaks region of the ADKs but the marten is far more common. Elsewhere in NY, the fisher is far more common.

  2. My Siberian husky and myself walked down a significant Hill in northern Wisconsin snowy deep woodlands. Before a few seconds notice, there slid across (almost) a slow to the ground crossing marten.

    I comment because it traversed from one hole under the high snows to the other at this sighting. The marten traveled by snow tunnel.

    Step with the DNR visitor center told me about their viciousness. She reported the had a captured one in a cage outside on a summer’s night. When they arrived in the morning, the marten was gone. And, the bars of the cage were all blood covered and bent, so she said as and expert that she had never seen any like it. This was approximately 1997.

  3. Martins have killed 15 or more feral cats this spring and I despise their presence on my property. We have more this year than ever. I hear my cats screaming and I am sorrowful of what is happening. I know predication is a normal way of life in the wild and I don’t deny it. This year is atrocious maybe because of the fires the last two years. This year My cats are paying for it.

    • I’m so sorry for your loss. Martens are indeed effective predators, and I’m glad you accept that.

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