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N O T E F R O M T H E E D I T O R - Otter Specialist Group

N O T E F R O M T H E E D I T O R - Otter Specialist Group

N O T E F R O M T H E E D I T O R - Otter Specialist Group

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IUCN <strong>Otter</strong> Spec. <strong>Group</strong> Bull. 25(1) 2008Cantor (1846) indicates that juveniles are easily tamed, and that the species isused by people in Malaya for river fishing. The single captive representative is alsovery tame, and appears to wish for social interaction (Olssen, pers. obs.), which mayindicate a higher degree of sociality than in, for example, L. Lutra, where tamedanimals usually become less tame and more solitary upon maturity.Cantor (1846) says that 'Its voice is a short shrill whistling, not unlike the sound of thecricket, but stronger'. The Sarawak Forestry Department describe the typical ottercontact call of a single syllabic chirp, and says that mothers use a staccato chatter withtheir offspring. Nicole Duplaix recorded vocalisations in captive animals andconsiders them to be similar to Lutra lutra (N. Duplaix, pers. comm.)Little is known about holts and resting behaviour, but Kanchanasaka et al(2003) found an old resting place described as “like a bird’s nest” in the melaleucaforest in tall grass i.e. a mound of grass with a central depression. Nguyen Van Nhuanet al. (2008) found that from interviews with local hunters and people living andworking around their study area in U Minh Ha National Park, Mekong Delta,Vietnam, that their opinion was that both of these species like to rest and sleep onhigh ground with thick reed areas. The same authors say that these animals prefer touse natural canal banks with thick reeds rather than banana plantations. They alsoprefer to live in traditionally planted forest areas more than intensively planted forest,partly because the water in such plantations has lately become brackish, and most ofthe native fish and other aquatic prey animals that the otters eat cannot survive in it. Inaddition, in the dry season, this habitat dries out completely.Nguyen Vu Khoi et al (2007) found that in Viet Nam, in the Mekong Delta,this species is active in the morning between 06:00 and 07:30, and again in the lateafternoon, from 16:30 to 17:30, even when people were present. The most commontime to see the otters is between four and five in the afternoon. In Nguyen Van Nhuanet al. (2008), however, the researchers directly observed two L. sumatrana at 20:30pm in the evening on 28th March 2008 for around 20-30 seconds. The animals did notappear to be disturbed by their presence, and one was apparently curious about theLED torch, approaching within 2 m. The area in which they were encountered has asignificant level of human disturbance during the dry season.Data from camera trapping in Thailand showed that the hairy-nosed otters areactive all day with high frequency in the morning (6.00-10.00) and at night (24.00-3.00) (Kanchanasaka et al., 2003).In Cambodia, camera trap photos are from early morning or late afternoon.Kanchanasaka (2001, 2007) indicated that in Thai flooded forest, this speciesprefers to defaecate on sloping or horizontal tree trunks, branches and aerial roots.Rather than producing a scat heap, the deposit is long and thin, and laid along theroute. In a piece of film footage of this species (Kanchanasaka, 2007), the animalwalked up a sloping branch, then turned and smeared scat down the branch. NguyenXuan Dang (2005) in Viet Nam also found that they do not have regular latrines. Thisis possibly because they mainly live in seasonally flooded forest with differing waterlevels – scat not placed on tree limbs will not persist. In Cambodia, hairy-nosed ottershave also been found to defaecate on logs or branches reaching out of the water(Figure 4). Only a few scats are found at each site. In Cambodia, local people reportthat this species always defaecates on branched or stumps, never on the ground in thedry season when the ground is dry.- 42 -

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