Badger morphological characteristics
The badger is an animal of the mustelidae family and the genus Badger. Badgers are larger and fatter in the Mustelidae family, with a thick and short neck, short and strong limbs, and a short tail. The back of the body is brown and white or creamy yellow, and the inner sides of the limbs are dark brown or light brown.
Badgers are generally active in spring and autumn. They have a ferocious temperament, hibernate, and live in burrows. They are omnivorous and reproduce once a year, with 2 to 5 litters per litter. They live in a wide range of environments, such as forests, shrubs, fields, lakes, etc. Various habitats, distributed in most areas of Eurasia.
The badger is a larger species in the Mustelidae family, weighing about 5 to 10kg, and the larger one reaches 15kg. Its body length is between 500 and 700mm. It has a fat body, a long snout, a thick and blunt nose, and a Cartilaginous nose pads, hair between the nose pads and the upper lip, short round ear shells, and small eyes.
The neck is thick and short, the limbs are short and strong, the toes of the front and rear feet have thick and long black-brown claws, the claws of the front feet are longer than the claws of the hind feet, and the tail is short. There is a gland sac near the anus that can secrete smelly fluid.