Japanese raccoon dog




The Japanese raccoon dog, also called the tanuki, is a species of canid that is endemic to Japan. It is one of two species in the genus Nyctereutes, alongside the common raccoon dog, of which it is considered to be a subspecies by some taxonomic authorities.
In Japan, raccoon dogs have had a significant role in Japanese folklore since ancient times. They are reputedly mischievous and jolly, masters of disguise and shapeshifting, but somewhat gullible and absent-minded. The animals are common in Japanese art, particularly as statues.

Etymology

The species was first described in Western literature by the naturalist Coenraad Jacob Temminck, based on specimens sent from Japan by Philipp Franz von Siebold during his travels in the 1820s. It was regarded as a distinct species on the basis of its fur colour. The term viverrinus refers to animals of the genus Viverra from India, to which the species bears some resemblance. A translation of this scientific name has previously appeared in English as "Viverra dog". It was later adopted in certain Western languages, such as the Italian "Cane viverrino", but most notably in the French term "Chien viverrin".
The Japanese name tanuki, sometimes written "tanooki" or "tanouki", of uncertain etymology, may derive from the words taneko, tanoke, tanuki, dashinuki or tamashinuki, the latter two referring to the animal's use of thanatosis as a defense mechanism.

Description

The Japanese raccoon dog has a smaller stomach and shorter fur of lesser insulation value than mainland raccoon dogs. A white color type is rare. In mainland Japan, oculocutaneous albinism is caused by a mutation in the third and fifth exon of the TYR nucleotide sequence, which is responsible for melanin pigmentation.

Behavior

The Japanese raccoon dog is mainly nocturnal. It vocalizes by growling or with groans that have pitches resembling those of the domesticated cat. Like the cat, its back arches to intimidate other animals. It assumes a defensive posture similar to that of other canids, showing submission by lowering its body and showing its belly.
Usually, social groups are limited to a breeding pair, but the individual Japanese raccoon dog may stay in a group of non-paired individuals until finding a mate.
The species is predominantly monogamous. The breeding period for the species is synchronized between females and males and lasts between February and April. A litter is born after a gestation period of 9 weeks. The parents look after their pups at a den for around one month, and then for another month after the pups leave the den.
Japanese raccoon dogs live for 7–8 years in the wild and have reached the age of 13 in captivity.
It has been observed climbing trees to forage for fruits and berries, using their curved claws to climb.

Taxonomy

The Japanese raccoon dog is classified as its own distinct species due to unique chromosomal, behavioral, and morphological characteristics absent in mainland raccoon dogs. Genetic analysis has confirmed unique sequences of mtDNA, classifying it as a distinct isolation species, based on evidence of eight Robertsonian translocations. Following morphological and genetic analysis across multiple studies, all of which indicated that N. viverrinus was a distinct species, it was later classified as such by the American Society of Mammalogists. However, the International Union for Conservation of Nature Canid Group's Canid Biology and Conservation Conference in September 2001 rejected the classification of the Japanese raccoon dog as a separate species, but its status is still disputed, based on its elastic genome. Aggregators on mammal taxonomy are inconsistent on the issue. Both the IUCN and Mammal Species of the World consider the Japanese raccoon dog to be a subspecies of the common raccoon dog, whereas the American Society of Mammalogists includes N. viverrinus as a valid species in its Mammal Diversity Database.
The karyotype of Japanese raccoon dogs is different from that of the mainland raccoon dogs. Though it is unknown whether mainland raccoon dogs and Japanese raccoon dogs can produce fertile offspring, it is assumed that the chromosomal differences between them would have deleterious effects on the fertility of the potential offspring and this would be indicative of speciation.
Researchers suggest that raccoon dogs of Japan could be further divisible into separate subspecies as N. p. procyonoides and N. p. albus, but both views are controversial. The raccoon dogs from Hokkaido are sometimes recognized as the subspecies Nyctereutes viverrinus albus, a taxon that is synonymized with N. p. viverrinus in Mammal Species of the World, but comparative morphometric analysis supports recognizing the Hokkaido population as a distinct subspecific unit.

Conservation

The IUCN places the raccoon dog at "least concern" status due to the animal's wide distribution in Japan and abundant population, including as an introduced species throughout northeastern Europe. In many European countries, it is legal to hunt raccoon dogs, as they are considered a harmful and invasive species. In Japan, the species is hunted mainly to prevent crop damage; however, its fur is desired for use in calligraphy brushes and was exported chiefly to the United States before the outbreak of World War II. The animal suffers a conservative estimate of up to 370,000 deaths by vehicles each year in Japan.

In folklore and tradition

Raccoon dogs, known in Japanese as tanuki, have a long history in Japanese legend and folklore. Bake-danuki is a kind of supernatural being in the classics, folklore, and legends of various places in Japan.
Although the raccoon dog is a real animal, the bake-danuki that appears in literature has always been depicted as a strange or supernatural creature. Its earliest appearance in literature is in the chapter about Empress Suiko in the Nihon Shoki written during the Nara period, with such passages as "in two months of spring, there are tanuki in the country of Mutsu, they turn into humans and sing songs". Bake-danuki subsequently appear in such classics as the Nihon Ryōiki and the Uji Shūi Monogatari. In some regions of Japan, bake-danuki reputedly have abilities similar to those attributed to foxes, in that they can shapeshift into other things or people, and can possess human beings.
Many legends of raccoon dogs are from the Sado Islands of Niigata Prefecture and in Shikoku. They include the Danzaburou-danuki of Sado, the Kinchō-tanuki and Rokuemon-tanuki of Awa Province, and the Yashima no Hage-tanuki of Kagawa Prefecture. The tanuki with special abilities were given names, and became the subject of rituals.

In popular culture

The Japanese raccoon dog is a recurring theme in Japanese popular culture. The first exposure of non-Japanese to tanuki usually comes through exported Japanese media. In translation, they are often described or assumed as the raccoon.