Online Encyclopedia

FERRET

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 287 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FERRET  , a domesticated, and frequently

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albino breed of quadruped, derived from the wild
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polecat (Putorius foetidus, or P. putorius), which it closely resembles in
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size, form, and habits, and with which it interbreeds . It differs in the colour of its fur, which is usually yellowish-white, and of its eyes, which are pinky-red . The " polecat-ferret " is a brown breed, apparently the product of the above-mentioned
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cross . The ferret attains a length of about 14 in., exclusive of the tail, which
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measures 5 in . Although exhibiting considerable tameness, it seems incapable of
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attachment, and when not properly fed, or when irritated, is
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apt to give painful evidence of its ferocity . It is chiefly employed in destroying rats and other vermin, and in driving rabbits from their burrows . The ferret is remarkably prolific, the
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female bringing forth two broods annually, each numbering from six to nine young . It is said to occasionally devour its young immediately after birth, and in this case produces another brood soon after . The ferret was well known to the Romans, Strabo stating that it was brought from Africa into Spain, and Pliny that it was employed in his time in
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rabbit-hunting, under the name Viverra; the
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English name is not derived from this, but from Fr. furet,
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Late
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Lat. furo, robber . The date of its introduction into
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Great Britain is uncertain, but it has been known in England for at least 600 years . The ferret should be kept in dry, clean, well-ventilated hutches, and fed twice daily on
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bread, milk, and
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meat, such as rabbits' and fowls' livers . When used to hunt rabbits it is provided with a muzzle, or, better and more usual, a cope, made by looping and knotting twine about the head and snout, in order to prevent it killing its
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quarry, in which case it would
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gorge itself and go to sleep in the hole .

As the ferret enters the hole the rabbits flee before it, and are shot or caught by

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dogs as they break ground . A ferret's hold on its quarry is as obstinate as that of a bulldog, but can easily be broken by a strong pressure ofthe thumb just above the eyes . Only full-grown ferrets are " worked to " rats . Several are generally used at a time and without copes, as rats are fierce fighters . See Ferrets, by Nicholas Everitt (
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London, 1897) .

End of Article: FERRET
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4TH EARL LAURENCE SHIRLEY FERRERS (1720-1760)
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CIRO FERRI (1634-1689)

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