List of mephitids
Mephitidae is a family of mammals in the order Carnivora, which comprises the skunks and stink badgers. A member of this family is called a mephitid. The skunks of the family are widespread across the Americas, while the stink badgers are in the Greater Sunda Islands of southeast Asia. Species inhabit a variety of habitats, though typically grassland, forest, and shrubland. Most mephitids are 20–50 cm (8–20 in) long, plus a 10–40 cm (4–16 in) tail, though the pygmy spotted skunk can be as small as 11 cm (4 in) plus a 7 cm (3 in) tail, and some striped skunks can be up to 82 cm (32 in) plus a 40 cm (16 in) tail. No estimates have been made for overall population sizes of any of the species, but two species are classified as vulnerable. Mephetids in general are not domesticated, though skunk
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List of mephitids
Mephitidae is a family of mammals in the order Carnivora, which comprises the skunks and stink badgers. A member of this family is called a mephitid. The skunks of the family are widespread across the Americas, while the stink badgers are in the Greater Sunda Islands of southeast Asia. Species inhabit a variety of habitats, though typically grassland, forest, and shrubland. Most mephitids are 20–50 cm (8–20 in) long, plus a 10–40 cm (4–16 in) tail, though the pygmy spotted skunk can be as small as 11 cm (4 in) plus a 7 cm (3 in) tail, and some striped skunks can be up to 82 cm (32 in) plus a 40 cm (16 in) tail. No estimates have been made for overall population sizes of any of the species, but two species are classified as vulnerable. Mephetids in general are not domesticated, though skunk
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Mephitidae is a family of mamm ...... d categorization is not fixed.
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Wikipage page ID
63.493.111
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1.017.665.701
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authority-name
authority-year
binomial
C. chinga
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C. humboldtii
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C. leuconotus
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C. semistriatus
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M. javanensis
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M. macroura
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M. marchei
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M. mephitis
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S. angustifrons
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S. gracilis
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direction
Habitat
Desert, shrubland, rocky areas, grassland, and forest
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Forest and rocky areas
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Forest, rocky areas, shrubland, and grassland
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Forest, shrubland, and introduced vegetation
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Grassland, forest, and shrubland
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Grassland, shrubland, and forest
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Grassland, shrubland, and savanna
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Inland wetlands, grassland, shrubland, rocky areas, savanna, and forest
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Rocky areas, forest, grassland, and desert
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Shrubland, grassland, savanna, and rocky areas
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hunting
Omnivorous; primarily eats insects, as well as small mammals and birds
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Omnivorous; primarily eats insects, small mammals, fruit, grain, birds, and bird eggs
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Omnivorous; primarily eats invertebrates, rodents, small reptiles, and eggs
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Primarily eats birds' eggs, carrion, insects, worms, and plants
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Primarily eats insects, as well as fruit and small vertebrates
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Primarily eats insects, as well as small mammals, birds, and vegetation
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Primarily eats insects, as well as small mammals, shrubs, and fruit
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Primarily eats insects, fruit, small vertebrates, and bird eggs
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Primarily eats insects, lizards, and birds
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Primarily eats insects, small mammals, carrion, berries, and fruit
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image alt
Black and white skunk with pink nose in grass
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Black and white striped skunk in snow
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Black skunk with long white stripes in grass
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Black skunk with white back and tail in dirt
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Black skunk with white spots on log
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Black skunk with white spots on rocks
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Blakc skunk with white spots and tail in grass
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Drawing of black and white stink badger on rocks
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Drawing of black skunk with white back and tail on sand
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Drawing of black/brown stink badger
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image size
iucn-status
LC
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VU
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name
no-note
y
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population
Unknown
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range
Eastern United States
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Indonesia and Malaysia
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Mexico and Central America
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North America
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Northern and eastern South America and Central America
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Southern North America and northern Central America
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Southern South America
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Southern tip of South America
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West coast of Mexico
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Western North America
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range image
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range-image-size
size
long, plus tail
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species-count
four
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two
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subspecies
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C. c. budini
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C. c. chinga
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C. c. gibsoni
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C. c. inca
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C. c. mendosus
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C. c. rex
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C. c. suffocans
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C. h. castaneus
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C. h. humboldtii
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suppress-others
y
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wikiPageUsesTemplate
comment
Mephitidae is a family of mamm ...... not domesticated, though skunk
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label
List of mephitids
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