Alaska Storyteller Photography

© Robert M. Braley Jr., Photographer

Home

Contact

About

Policy/Copyright

Photo Sizes

links

Animals

Animals 2

Albatrosses

Bats

Bears

Black Bear

Birds

BitternsHeronsEgr

Deer

Polar Bear

Beaver

bison

Caribou

CaracarasFalcons

Carnivorans

Cetaceans

Comorants

Dall Sheep

DucksGeeseSwans

Fish

Frigatebirds

Canada Goose

Grebes

HawksKitesEagles

Orca

PartridgesGrouse

Pelicans

Pikas Hares Rabbits

Raccoons

redwingedblackbird1

Loons

Mammals

Moose

Mountain Goat

Osprey

Primates

Rodents

Seals Sea Lions Walrus

ShearwatersPetrels

Shrews

StormPetrels

Ungulates

Vultures

Weasels

Wildlife

Architecture

Military War

Alaska National Guard

Alaskanized

C-17

T-6G

T-33

P-51 Mustang

KC-135

HH-60

F-86

F-80

C-47

HC-130N

C-130H

C-130E

C-123J

Pearl Harbor

Klamath WWII Radar

Elmendorf AFB

Klamath AFS

George AFB

Ladd AFB

Camp Murray

U-Tapao

US Veteran

AKNG Museum

AKANG Scrapbook

Soldiers of the Mists

Soldiers of the Mists pdf

Floral Still Life

Landscapes

Lifestyle

Skylines

Transportation

MG Midget

Travel

United States

Canada

Equator

Israel

Crete

Alaska

Alaska Highway

Historic Mile 0

Historic Mile 2

Historic Mile 21

Historic Mile 35

Historic Mile 47

Historic Mile 49

Historic Mile 52

Historic Mile 73

Historic Mile 90

Historic Mile 101

Historic Mile 143

Historic Mile 148

Historic Mile 175

Historic Mile 191

Historic Mile 234

Historic Mile 300

Historic Mile 375

Historic Mile 392

Historic Mile 422

Historic Mile 456

Historic Mile 496

Historic Mile 514

Historic Mile 588

Historic Mile 627

Historic Mile 635

Historic Mile 649

Historic Mile 650

Historic Mile 710

Historic Mile 721

Historic Mile 733

Historic Mile 797

Historic Mile 804

Historic Mile 836

Historic Mile 905

Historic Mile 906

Historic Mile 890

Historic Mile 915

Historic Mile 941

Historic Mile 1010

Historic Mile 1016

Historic Mile 1067

Historic Mile 1072

Historic Mile 1083

Historic Mile 1093

Historic Mile 1152

Historic Mile 1164

Historic Mile 1188

Historic Mile 1202

Historic Mile 1221

Historic Mile 1229

Historic Mile 1225

Historic Mile 1249

Historic Mile 1254

Historic Mile 1257

Historic Mile 1264

Historic Mile 1306

Historic Mile 1309

Historic Mile 1314

Historic Mile 1332

Historic Mile 1422

Events

Stock Photography

Royalty-Free RF 0-100

Royalty-Free RF 101-200

Editorial RM 0-100

Business RF

Abstract RF

Architecture RF

Animals RF

Agriculture RF

Editorial RF

Weasels and related animals (Mustelidae)

Wolverine
Gulo gulo
Wolverine (Gulo gulo gulo)

Wolverines are found primarily in the more remote areas of mainland Alaska and on some islands in Southeast Alaska. Because wolverines require large amounts of wilderness (the home range of a male may be up to 240 sq. mi.), they are sparsely distributed throughout their range. Wolverines are solitary, except during the May–August breeding season. Wolverines are better adapted for scavenging than for hunting and are opportunistic eaters. During winter, they primarily eat the carcasses of animals that have died of natural causes and the carcasses of moose and caribou left by wolves and hunters. The rest of the year their diet consists of smaller animals, such as voles, squirrels, snowshoe hares, and birds. On rare occasions, wolverines may kill moose or caribou.

Fisher
Martes pennanti
Fisher Portrait in snow

 
Marten
Martes americana
Marten

Marten are found from Southeast Alaska to the start of treeless tundra in Alaska's north and west. Marten are abundant in Alaska, being most common in the bogs and black spruce forests of Interior Alaska. In much of their range, especially in less optimal habitat, meadow voles and red-backed voles are marten's primary food source. Other important food sources include berries, small birds, eggs, plants, and carrion. Red squirrels, which are a major food source for martens in other areas, are not generally eaten by martens in Alaska. Marten are Alaska's most trapped animal, and as of 1994 generated $1–2 million in income in the state. In most areas, overtrapping is not a management problem.

Short-tailed weasel
Mustela erminea
Ermine standing on hind legs

 
Least weasel
Mustela nivalis
Least weasel (Mustela nivalis)

 
Mink
Mustela vison
Wild mink (mustela vison).

Mink are found in every region of Alaska except Kodiak Island, the Aleutian Islands, Bering Sea offshore islands, and most of the North Slope. Mink are opportunistic hunters, eating almost anything that they can kill; important food sources include fish, birds, bird eggs, insects, crabs, clams, and small mammals. Wolves, foxes, hawks, owls, lynx, and river otters occasionally prey on mink, but the effects of predation on mink population have been studied relatively little. In Alaska, Mink are sometimes trapped for their fur.

North American river otter
Lontra canadensis
River otter in winter

River otters are found throughout Alaska except the Aleutian Islands, Bering Sea offshore islands, and the Arctic coast east of Point Lay.

Sea otter
Enhydra lutris
Sea Otter (Enhydra lutris)

Early Russian settlement of Alaska can largely be credited to the sea otter industry; sea otter fur is perhaps the finest in the world. Sea otters were hunted nearly to extinction in the late 19th century. In 1911, when sea otters were so scarce that hunting was no longer profitable, they were protected under the international Fur Seal Treaty, and after further conservation measures the sea otter population increased from 2,000 to between 110,000 and 160,000 from 1911 to the mid-1970s. Today, most of the species' original habitat in Alaska has been repopulated, except for some areas of the Southeast. In Southeast Alaska, where sea otters were reintroduced in the 1960s,[24] sea otters continue to expand.

NOTE: This website contains affiliate ad links and I will be compensated if you make a purchase after clicking on the links.

Website powered by Network Solutions®