<h2><SPAN name="THE_CRAB-EATING_OPOSSUM" id="THE_CRAB-EATING_OPOSSUM"></SPAN> THE CRAB-EATING OPOSSUM.</h2>
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<p class="drop-cap">THE crab-eating opossum (<i>Philander
philander</i>) is one of the
largest of the family. The
body is nine and one-half
inches long, and the tail nearly thirteen
inches. It has a wide range, extending
throughout all of tropical America. It
is numerous in the woods of Brazil,
preferring the proximity of swamps,
which furnish it with crabs. It lives
almost exclusively in trees, and descends
to the ground only when it
wishes to forage.</p>
<p>While it proceeds slowly and awkwardly
on the ground, its prehensile
tail enables it to climb trees with some
facility. This opossum readily entraps
smaller mammals, reptiles, and insects,
and especially crabs, which are its
favorite food. It preys upon birds and
their nests, but it also eats fruit, and is
said to visit poultry yards and to cause
great devastation among chickens and
pigeons.</p>
<p>The young of the crab-eating opossum
differ in color from the old animals.
They are completely naked at
birth, but when they are sufficiently developed
to leave the pouch, they grow
a short, silky fur of a shining nut-brown
color, which gradually deepens
into the dark brownish-black color of
maturity. All observers agree that the
little creatures escape from the pouch
and, moving around and upon the
mother's body, afford a charming spectacle.
The pouch is formed by two
folds of skin, which are laid over the
unformed young attached to the mammae.</p>
<p>The opossum is extensively hunted
on account of the havoc it works among
poultry.</p>
<p>The negroes are its enemies, and kill
it whenever and wherever they can.
The flesh is said to be unpalatable to
most white persons, for two glands
impart a very strong and repellent odor
of garlic to it, but the negroes like it,
and the flesh repays them for the
trouble of the pursuit. The opossum,
however, is not easily killed, and resorts
to dissimulation when hard
pressed, rolls up like a ball, and feigns
to be dead. To anyone not acquainted
with its habits, the open jaws, the extended
tongue, the dimmed eyes would
be ample confirmation of it, but the
experienced observer knows that it is
only "'possuming," and that as soon
as the enemy withdraws it will gradually
get on its legs and make for the
woods.</p>
<p>It is said that the opossum was formerly
found in Europe, but now only
inhabits America. Nearly all of the
species live in the forest or in the underbrush,
making their homes in hollow
trees, holes in the ground, among
thick grass and in bushes. All are
nocturnal in their habits and lead a
solitary, roving life. The opossum
lives with its mate only during the
pairing time. It has no fixed habitation.
In captivity it is the least interesting
of animals. Rolled up and motionless,
it lies all day, and only when
provoked does it make the slightest
movement. It opens its mouth as wide
as possible, and for as long a time as
one stands before it, as if it suffered
from lockjaw.</p>
<p>The opossum can hardly be classed
among the game animals of America,
yet its pursuit in the South in old plantation
days used to afford the staple
amusement for the dusky toilers of the
cotton states. It was the custom, as
often as the late fall days brought with
them the ripened fruit and golden
grain, for the dark population of the
plantation, sometimes accompanied by
young "massa," to have a grand 'possum
hunt <i>a la mode</i>. We would describe
the method of taking it, were it
the policy of this magazine to show approval
of a most cruel practice. Happily
the custom, through change of
circumstances, has fallen into disuse.</p>
<p>The specimen of this interesting
animal which we present in this number
of <span class="sc">Birds and All Nature</span> was
captured, with its mother and five
young ones, in a car load of bananas,
having traveled all the way from the
tropics to Chicago in a crate of the
fruit. The mother and young were
kept alive by eating the bananas, another
proof that the crab-eating opossum
does not feed exclusively upon
animal food.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</SPAN></span></p>
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