A place where I'll rant and rave or humor and enlighten the people around me. (Well Hopefully)

Published on March 9, 2008 By Zoologist03 In Wildlife

I've been toggling this around in my head for a bit...and you know, I should really focus on animals once in awhile and be true to my screen name, eh?  So I think I'll try starting a series or something...hence the number 1 in the title.  I'm going to give this a shot and see how it turns out, maybe make some adjustments later down the road.  Well, let's give it a shot.

 

Today's animal is the Common Palm Civet (AKA Musang, Toddy cat, Luwak) Paradoxurus hermaphroditus

It is from the family Viverridae which includes genets, linsangs, and binturongs(AKA bearcats)

 

 

Adorable?  Nay, for this is a fearsome beast.  They can be quite temperamental, easily comparable to our North American raccoon friend.

Physical characteristics:

They are around 9lbs (~4kg) and are about 4ft (~1.2m) long including the tail which makes up half their length.  The tail is also semi prehensile which allows the civet to use it for balance.  The coat is coarse, shaggy, and normally brown or gray. Depending on the civet species can have spots or stripes.  Both males and females have a large anal scent gland which resembles testicles somewhat, and explains the hermaphroditus portion of their scientific name.

 

Habitat:

It lives in Southeast Asian forests and woodlands.  It can also coexist with humans quite readily, living in plantations and in urban centers taking advantage of human presence.  Again, much like a raccoon.

 

Diet:

Omnivorous.  It is classified as a carnivore but most of it's diet is made up of fruits and plants.  Insects, rodents, and other small vertebrates make up it's carnivorous diet.  Fruits include chiku, mango, banana, and rambutan, coffee fruit, as well as the horrible smelling durian.  It also has a fondness for palm sap, which when fermented becomes toddy, a sweet liquor, hence the common name, "toddy cat."

 

Behavior:

Nocturnal and arboreal. Quite opportunistic.  It will hunt in areas of human habitation eating pest species and will also take advantage of human leftovers.  It primarily stays in trees to feed, live, sleep, and reproduce.  It can be very aggressive when threatened exhibiting hissing and spitting behavior like a cat. Normally solitary, except during mating and the subsequent raising of young by the mother.  Not much is known about their reproductive habits, but it is thought that a female can give birth to 3-4 young per litter.  Young reach maturity in about a year.  The oldest civet recorded lived to be 22 years old.

Interesting facts:

They were captured to harvest musk from that scent gland they have for perfumes and such.  However, that has dropped off due to synthetic scents and enforced humane practices.

The Palm Civet was suspected of causing the SARS outbreak.  Bats carrying the SARS disease are often stored in markets over civets.  The guano the was thought to infect them, and the problem is that people eat civets.  It is thought that when butchering one someone was infected via the blood of a civet and started that whole fiasco.

A less depressing, but probably more disgusting(depending on your tastes) fact is Kopi Luwak coffee.  Kopi Luwak is the most expensive coffee in the world selling between $120-$600 USD per pound.  What does a civet have to do with expensive coffee?  Everything.

The coffee is raised on plantations in Southeast Asia.  Coffee produces fruit, civets eat fruit but they don't digest coffee beans, and they literally shit money.  Farmers in the area collect civet droppings, hopefully wash the coffee beans off and sell it.  Neat, huh?

It's good to the last dropping.

 

Also, I got to pet a palm civet when the zoo visited my school last Tuesday. 

 

~Zoo


Comments (Page 1)
on Mar 09, 2008
It's good to the last dropping.

ha!

I like the new idea, Zoo. I'm not much for yer common everyday raccoons (as they always try to get into the garbage at night in the summer) but I can certainly dig another species' fondness for fermented beverages.
on Mar 09, 2008

It's good to the last dropping.

I think that was a slogan for one of the other companies...either that or a joke, I just borrowed it.

I like the new idea, Zoo. I'm not much for yer common everyday raccoons (as they always try to get into the garbage at night in the summer) but I can certainly dig another species' fondness for fermented beverages.

Heh, thanks.  Hopefully I can refine the style...but I think this setup works for now.  We'll see if anyone has any questions and I can shape future installments from those.

Glad you like it.  By the way, this thing got 10 views in like 5 seconds.  People love animals.

~Zoo

on Mar 09, 2008

Hey, this is cool.  I am a big binturong fan.  Taronga Zoo has a good compound for them and when we go (which is regularly), I really like to spend time watching them.  Amazing animals. 

Civets, though, being nocturnal and relatively quiet, are a lot harder to watch.

Thanks for this, mate.  Interesting facts and some cool pics.  What more could anyone ask?

on Mar 09, 2008

 

Amazing animals.

Who smell delicious.   Like popcorn.

Civets, though, being nocturnal and relatively quiet, are a lot harder to watch.

Very true...and unfortunately not many studies have been done on them.  Not much information out there besides the basics...and a lot of coffee stuff.

Thanks for this, mate. Interesting facts and some cool pics. What more could anyone ask?

Thank you for reading.  

Herein lies my passion, so I'll try to do a decent job in this series provided that I get a decent response...which so far isn't a problem considering I've had this posted for around a half hour.

~Zoo

on Mar 09, 2008

Always fun to learn about the amazing diversity of life nice read.

Another initaitive similiar to this but much broader in scope is being done at www.eol.org. There the organization is trying to provide articles simliar to the one that you have just done except for every single animal, plant, fungus, bacteria, and virus  on planet earth. All I got to say is good luck becuase isn't there something like 1.2 million species of living things that we know of living on earth?

on Mar 09, 2008

Interesting!

Suggestion:  I would've like to have read more about your own personal experience with the animal. 

x

on Mar 09, 2008

Suggestion: I would've like to have read more about your own personal experience with the animal

I think that is a great idea.

I love this  Zoo. This is something I can share with my son and you can keep studying!

on Mar 09, 2008

 

Always fun to learn about the amazing diversity of life nice read.

Thanks.

All I got to say is good luck becuase isn't there something like 1.2 million species of living things that we know of living on earth?

Not sure, it might very well exceed that.  If they can get 1.2 million people involved then it's be pretty easy.   Unfortunately there aren't that many bio-literate people out there.

Interesting! Suggestion: I would've like to have read more about your own personal experience with the animal.

Thank ya.

Not much to tell really.  It was more of a presentation and they let us pet it afterwards.  The coat feels very much like a dog's fur...I'd liken it to a labrador retriever.  The tail is pretty much like a cat's in it's ability to move, though a little better because it can curl around your hand.  Though it doesn't have the strength or flexibility to hold itself up with it.  Pretty big teeth, fortunately this one was really, really tame.  The handler said it had two siblings which you couldn't even get close to...very, very aggressive.  This one, much like a housecat...and as fat as one to boot.  They fed the little guy a banana.  Yeah, that's about all.

~Zoo

on Mar 09, 2008

Herein lies my passion, so I'll try to do a decent job in this series provided that I get a decent response...which so far isn't a problem considering I've had this posted for around a half hour.

Its lucky you get to be studying your passion to work in it in the future.  If I had my youth back, I would be doing exactly what you're doing mate.  You're a good man...

on Mar 09, 2008
I love this Zoo. This is something I can share with my son and you can keep studying!


Heh, share away. Might as well be useful while I do this.

Not really studying, per se...just increasing knowledge. Unfortunately the only class I have related to living things is cell biology right now....which is a real pain in the ass to learn...well, with this professor anyway. Memorize everything is my mantra right now.

Actually I have an exam in that tomorrow evening as well as one for o-chem lab. I gotta cram tomorrow afternoon.

I did go over some stuff for a few hours today...could've done more, but damned if I don't like procrastinating. I think I'm an adrenaline/stress junkie...

You guys seem to like this, so I'll continue...maybe tomorrow evening after aforementioned exams.



ATTENTION!!!

I will take suggestions of any animals you'd like to know more about! If I've never heard of them, so much the better because then I can learn along with you.

~Zoo
on Mar 09, 2008
Its lucky you get to be studying your passion to work in it in the future. If I had my youth back, I would be doing exactly what you're doing mate. You're a good man...


Well, I really can't stand working with asshole people all day. Animals are much cooler overall.

Also it's fun to tell people about them. People freakin' adore you when you have an animal at hand, especially one they've never seen up close before.   

Hopefully the future works out in my favor...guess I'll wait and see.

~Zoo
on Mar 09, 2008
I have a suggestion for you, mate. Would you do one on Bilbys? These animals are unique to Australia and becoming very, very scarce indeed. I consider myself very fortunate to have seen one in the wild a few years ago.
on Mar 09, 2008

I have a suggestion for you, mate. Would you do one on Bilbys?

Hmm, never heard of those, actually...never saw one either.  Though a search yielded this:

 

Is that what I'm lookin' for?

It'll be number 2 then, Maso.  I'll try to get it done by at least Tuesday...I should have some down time for most of the week after Monday.

~Zoo

on Mar 09, 2008

HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

I JUST GOT FEATURED!!!!

Thank you to whoever deemed me worthy of a front page spot!

~Zoo

on Mar 10, 2008

Hey, I don't think it hurts to have the word feature in your title! haha

Good Job