We humans have a poorly developed sense of smell so it is difficult for us to appreciate how important it is for most other mammals. Mustelids, in particular, use scent to communicate with others of their kind, marking their territories and advertising their presence and breeding condition. With the exception of badgers, female and male mustelids lead separate lives, usually meeting only for courtship and mating. As they have large territories, are thinly spread across the landscape and are mainly active at night, scent-marking is a vital way for them to tell who is about and who is available.
Otters use spraint (otter poo), urine or anal jelly to leave scent marks, choosing prominent features such as rocks and grass tussocks. This is a new spot I have only just discovered. The very first night after I set up a camera an otter turned up.
The next video shows a popular sprainting spot which is very regularly visited by the dog otter and (separately) by the mother and cubs - there is fresh spraint almost every time I look. It was interesting to see it marked by a badger as well on this occasion - a behaviour known as "musking".
Badgers' family dynamics are rather different from otters' but they use latrines to mark their territories and they scent-mark each other to reinforce the clan smell and maintain family bonds. Here's an example with a mother repeatedly making sure her cub smells like the rest of the family, using sub caudal glands under her tail - a process called "allomarking".
Polecats are notoriously smelly to our sensibilities (another name is foulmart) but it obviously works for them. The next video shows a polecat using urine, scat and body rubbing to advertise its presence and sniffing to see who else has been around.
The smaller mustelids are the more elusive they become. Tracking weasels and stoats is very difficult so less is known about their territorial behaviour. Field signs are usually very few but this weasel left a message inside my camera box. It was also scent marking by rubbing its body along the entrance pipe as it went in and out, something that happens nearly every time.





























