North America’s only native marsupial gets little
respect and often scares homeowners who stumble upon this nocturnal
visitor snacking below the birdfeeder, rummaging through unsealed
garbage cans, or pacing in the window well waiting to be set free.
But opossums are really misunderstood nature warriors. And tell me,
what other animal has a footprint that is a star?
With that long furless pointy tail, opossums are often mistaken as
members of the rodent family. But Virginia Opossums (Didelphus
virginiana) are members of the marsupial family Didelphidae. Adults
weigh between six and 15 pounds and are 24 to 33 inches in length
including the tail. Males are larger than females and their size is
often compared to an average house cat.
Opossums are covered in white rough fur with grey to black tips.
They have a thick undercoat and white guard hair. Guard hair
function is fourfold: thermoregulation, waterproofing, camouflage,
and sensory perception. The ears and tails of opossums are hairless
and often subject to frostbites since opossums do not hibernate and
are active in winter. Opossums don’t build their own dens but find
convenient homes in piles of woody vegetation, old abandoned animal
holes, and tree cavities, or near human activity — under decks,
sheds and slabs.
Females become reproductive in their first year and generally have
two litters, one in winter and one in spring with an occasional
third litter. Litters average from eight to 10 young but can be as
large as 20. Gestation is an amazingly short 13 days. Young are born
not fully developed, no larger than a dime, and are called joeys
like their distant more well-known relative, the kangaroo.
It’s all in the bag…what is that pouch all about?
From the birth canal, the hairless newborns which are barely beyond
fetuses, ‘swim’ through their mother’s thick fur to the pouch
following a wet path created by the mom licking her fur. The pouch
has 12 teats; 11 arranged in a circle with one in the middle, not
all of which are functional especially in young females, so
mortality can occur with large litters. Once in the pouch, the
newborns latch on to a teat which swells in their mouth to keep them
attached for eight to 10 weeks.
As the young opossums outgrow the pouch, they climb onto their
mother’s backs grasping her fur for a ride along. As she brings the
family with her to find food, the young begin to learn survival
skills. Opossums are solitary animals, except when females are
raising their young, and by three to four months old disperse on
their own. Opossum life span is two years; they are preyed on by
foxes, dogs, snakes, coyotes, raccoons, and bobcats — and of course,
vehicles.
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Playing Possum
When encountering a threat, the normally introverted opossum will hiss and bare
all of those 50 teeth, the most of any of our mammals. If that strategy isn’t
successful, dying does — or at least appearing dead. The fascinating exhibition
of playing possum — appearing to faint, have a glazed stare, offering an eerie
grimace with wet drool. In the ultimate death display, a foul "smell of death"
is excreted from the anal glands, with hopes of driving away whatever animal was
expecting a good meal.
Humans are often tricked as well and will put the poor “dead”
opossum in the nearest garbage can only to be surprised by a resurrected opossum
staring at them waiting to get out now that the danger has passed.
Possum Tales about their Tails
Although in storybooks, opossums are often depicted sleeping, hanging upside
down hanging on a tree by their tails, in reality, they can only hang by their
tails for a short time. Nor is it true that opossum’s young, hang off their
tails. They do use the prehensile tail to help them climb trees and carry
nesting materials.
Opossums are mesopredators. They are the omnivore poster child. They eat nuts,
berries, insects, small mammals, birds, and carrion in the natural setting, and
they aid in seed dispersal. In the urban setting, opossums are true garbage
eaters feasting especially on pet and bird foods outside.
Tick Vacuums
The next time you run across someone that thinks opossums are of no value, you
might want to share this amazing fact. According to the Wildlife Medical Clinic
of Illinois at the University of Illinois, the Virginia opossum kills nearly 95%
of ticks that they encounter. It is estimated that a single opossum can eat
5,000 ticks each season (2019). And given the increasing incidence of tick-borne
diseases, I see the Virginia Opossum as a nature superhero!
As if that weren’t enough to be positive about our possums, opossums do not
contract rabies because their extremely low body temperature, 94°F to 97°F, is
not high enough to support the virus.
So, the next time you are out on a muddy or snowy day, look down to see the
“stars”, opossum tracks, the footprint of a real nature superstar.
[SOURCE/WRITER: Nancy Kuhajada,
Extension Horticulture Program Coordinator]
[Text from file received]
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