What’s a shrew? A shrew is a small mouse-like mammal with a long, pointed snout and tiny eyes. The Everglades happens to be home to a few different families of shrews. For this article, we wanted to focus on sharing some facts about the North American Least Shrew.
- This shrew is one of the smallest mammals, growing up to only 3 inches in length.
- It has dense, grayish-brown (or reddish-brown) fur with a white stomach.
- Its fur is lighter in the summer and darker in the winter.
- It is a member of the Soricomorpha family.
- Its ears are completely hidden by its fur.
- This shrew has very small eyes.
- Although mostly active at night, this shrew is active all day long, as well.
- This shrew digs through loose soil and leaf litter to find food.
- It hunts its prey by smell and touch.
- This shrew feeds on caterpillars, beetle larvae, earthworms, centipedes, slugs, and sow bugs.
- It will sometimes eat fruit or seeds.
- They often share their food with other shrews, and can eat more than its body weight each day.
- You can find this shrew in burrows or shallow runways under flat stones or logs.
- The least shrew is a social creature.
- This shrew’s breeding season is from March to November.
- A shrew usually only lives for about a year.
- Along with the Everglades, you can find the least shrew in Canada and Mexico and throughout much of the eastern United States.
- Owls, foxes, raccoons, hawks, skunks, and snakes eat shrews.
- To defend itself, the least shrew has a venomous saliva. It will aim for its enemy’s legs and try to cripple it.
- This shrew is only considered dangerous in the state of Connecticut, due to coastal habitat development.
The Everglades is full of mammals for you to catch a glimpse! Come explore the Everglades on an airboat ride with Captain Mitch. Captain Mitch’s Airboat Tours bring you around the Everglades in a way you can’t experience by foot. To book an airboat ride, click here or call 800-368-0065.