Wolverines and Badgers belong to the 'weasel family', Mustelidae, but not the Genus Mustela, the 'true weasels'.
Beavers are rodents, and don't even belong to the same Order as weasels. (Rodentia, as opposed to Carnivora).
black bearsmoosesquirrelrabets are all omnivorsTwo of the main omnivores of the taiga biome are the American Black Bear and The wolverine.
Badgers are similar to mammals such as weasels and skunks. They are all burrowing mammals that have flat, elongated bodies.
The following animals are all members of the Mustelidae family and are closely related to each other: Ferrets, Otters, Martens, Badgers, Weasels, Wolverines, Stoats and Polecats
Not all weasels
A ferret is a weasel like mammal (Mustela putorius furo) related to the European polecat ferret and often trained to hunt rats or rabbits. Ferrets are related to weasels in the family Mustelidae of the orderCarnivora.The weasel family includes - Ferret, stoat, polecat, mink, ermine, black-footed ferret, long tailed weasel, least weasel. Other relatives of the weasels are martens, otters, badgers, and wolverines. The terms stoat and ermine are terms for the long tailed and short tailed weasels in their winter coats.. Ferrets are not related to skunks or rodentsPolecats, weasels, stoats, pine martens, badgers, skunks, wolverines, otters, grisons and tayras - the Mustelidae.Yes, they are all in the Mustelidae family and very similar in body shape and size
Weasels are in the family Mustelidaeof the order Carnivora. The weasel family includes ferrets, stoats, European polecats, minks, ermine, black-footed ferrets, long tailed weasels, least weasels. Other relatives of the weasels are martens, otters, badgers, and wolverines. The terms stoat and ermine are terms for the long tailed and short tailed weasels in their winter coats.Genus: Mustela - Ermines, ferrets, minks, stoats, European polecat ferrets
most animals don't mess with weasels. Because sometimes with weasels the hunters become the hunted. But mainly badgers, coyotes, foxes, owls, eagles, hawks, ospreys, mountain lions, wolverienes, bobcats, lynx, wolves, and bears. But of all of these animals none actually hunt them for food.
All badgers are known to swim, therefore, your answer is yes.
Bears, hyenas, weasels, badgers, seals, walruses, sea lions, wolves, foxes, dogs, coyotes, raccoons, mongooses, fossas, and all sorts of small and big cats.
bats, skunks, opossum, badgers, bobcats, fox, coyote, rats, mice, rabbits, lynx, porcupine and wolverine. that's all i have for you, and it consists mostly of north America and Canada.
A kit is not a group of animals of any sort. A 'fox kit' is a young fox, A 'kit fox' is a species of small fox.
Another porcupine, facing the other way. The unporcupine is extinct. Oh wait, what about a HEDGEHOG?