Friday mystery object #503

This week I’m going to put you to the test with this mystery object from the Dead Zoo:

I’m not going to lie, this is probably going to be a challenge, but somehow I suspect that someone will manage to spot what it is.

As always, you can leave your thoughts, questions and suggestions in the comments box below, and I’ll try to offer some useful hints if it’s proving too difficult. Best of luck with it!

26 thoughts on “Friday mystery object #503

  1. hilaryblagbrough's avatar

    I’m thinking some type of large rodent but I can’t convince myself on any particular species. Back to my studies.

    • Adam Yates's avatar

      It kind of looks like it has a low slung body resting on its base which made me first think of some kind of mustelid but the spots threw me, so I decided in might be mounted lying in a resting pose and went down the cervid path, but that appears to be wrong as well!?

  2. Allen Hazen's avatar

    Adam Yates thought of “some kind of mustelid.”

    there are critters that, in general body plan, resemble mustelids but aren’t, and some species have spots: I think light ones on a darker background like this. So… but I can’t think of anything “fishy” about q….s.

  3. Allen Hazen's avatar

    Adam Yates thought of “some kind of mustelid.”

    there are critters that, in general body plan, resemble mustelids but aren’t, and some species have spots: I think light ones on a darker background like this. So… but I can’t think of anything “fishy” about q….s.

  4. Allen Hazen's avatar

    Pleasantly– Yup. (Though I wasn’t familiar with that name, which is apparently for one species of the genus.)

    Bad news: checking Wikipedia for pictures, it looks as if at least some species of this group have larger white spots than the one in the picture… So I’m not at all sure.

  5. Allen Hazen's avatar

    Many quolls have white spots (big ones, and anyway this is a norther hemisphere critter). I went on a … fishing expedition? … on the internet, looking for possible Viverrids, Felids,and Mustelids: a lot of them have BLACK spots, but I didn’t find any with small whit ones. (The shoulder blades look like a cat’s, but are hardly distinctive: crouching V,M, etc would look the same in that department.)

    • Adam Yates's avatar

      Paolo more or less confirmed that the spots are not a normal feature of this species. So based on his ‘fishy’ clue and rough size and shape, I’m guessing its a mustelid that has a kind of flag in its species name.

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