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Outdoors: Kayak Cedar Keys Hosts Youth Groups
July 1st, 2013

News: Meet the Pirates: The PintClub
June 29th, 2013

Conservation: Fish of the Week: Vermillion Snapper
June 29th, 2013

Conservation: Bay Scallop Season Starts July 1
June 28th, 2013

Conservation: Fish of the Week: Cero
June 28th, 2013

Conservation: The Great Suwannee River Cleanup 2013 Cleaning up the Suwannee and its Tributaries!
June 27th, 2013

Arts and Entertainment: 2014 Old Florida Celebration of the Arts
June 27th, 2013

News: Meet the Pirates: Mol de Libros the Pirate Librarian
June 26th, 2013

Law Enforcement News: Levy County Arrest Report 6/24/2013
June 26th, 2013

News: Meet the Pirates
June 25th, 2013

Conservation: FREE youth hayrides, etc at Lower Suwannee
June 25th, 2013

News: Cedar Key and Fernandina Pirates Reconnect on Dock Street
June 24th, 2013

Arts and Entertainment: Summer Art Program at Cedar Key Arts Center
June 24th, 2013

City News: CITY COMMISSION MEETS, ADDRESSES MARINA DOCKS, LEASE RENEWALS
June 23rd, 2013

News: The Best Little Pirate Town in Florida
June 21st, 2013

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FWC Asks Public to Report Mink Sightings

FWC Asks Public to Report Mink Sightings

Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission

Mink are rare in Florida, and wildlife biologists with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) are hoping to learn more about this small mammal. But they need the public`s help to find out where it occurs. People can report evidence such as mink sightings, photos and road-killed specimens online.

Adult mink weigh 2-3 pounds and measure about 2 feet in length. Fur can be dark chocolate or a light rusty brown. Sometimes there is a patch of white along the chin and under the throat.

"We know that mink are more likely to be found in and near salt-marsh habitat on both coasts of Florida but the reports people provide will help us pinpoint where we do research," said Chris Winchester, wildlife biologist with the FWC`s Fish and Wildlife Research Institute.

Winchester said there are three known subspecies of mink in Florida - Atlantic salt marsh mink, Gulf salt marsh mink and Everglades mink. Although there is a scarcity of information about the three subspecies, only the Everglades mink is listed as threatened.

Some people confuse mink with other species such as otters and weasels, but whereas mink are quite small, otters typically weigh 10 to 30 pounds and are 3 feet or more long. Weasels look similar to mink, but are smaller and have brown fur along their backs and pale yellow fur along the entire belly.

Mink are strictly carnivorous, eating fish, frogs, crayfish, crabs and various birds and small mammals.

For more information about this study and to submit sightings to the FWC, visit http://www.MyFWC.com/Research , click on Wildlife, and select "Public Asked to Share Mink Sightings" under "Terrestrial Mammals."

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