The lesser grison ( Galictis cuja) is a species of Mustelidae from South America.
The top of the head, the back and flanks, and the tail have coarse black guard hairs with buff-coloured tips over a softer undercoat, giving them a grizzled greyish colour. The remainder of the body is black or nearly so, apart from a pale buff-coloured stripe running from the forehead to the shoulders along the lower margin of the grey furred area. The feet are webbed, with five toes ending in sharp, curved claws.
Four subspecies are recognised:
They are semi-plantigrade, walking partly on the soles of their feet, and, despite the webbing, their feet are adapted more for running and climbing than for swimming. They possess anal that spray a noxious chemical similar to, but probably weaker than, that of . They are monogamous, hunting together when raising their litters of two to five young.
Lesser grisons hunt primarily during the day, locating their prey at least partly by scent. They are either solitary, or live in small family groups of parents and offspring, which travel together in single file. They are said to be particularly fierce, and to play with their food for up to 45 minutes before eating it. During the night, they sleep in hollow trees or natural crevices, or else in excavated burrows. Burrows may be as deep as , and have entrances obscured by leaves.
The lesser grison was found to be a host of an intestinal parasitic worm, Pachysentis gethi.
Lesser grisons can act as a reservoir for Chagas disease.
The bodies of lesser grisons have also been used as magical amulet in Bolivia, where their pelts are stuffed with wool and decorated with ribbons and paper to be used in ritual offerings to Pachamama. One apparent sacrificial burial from Argentina has been dated to 1,420 Before Present. It was interred together with human remains, wearing a decorated collar, placed on an animal pelt and associated with numerous other funerary goods and bodies of mice.
Distribution and habitat
Biology and behaviour
Relations with humans
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