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mink

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mink

1. any of several semiaquatic musteline mammals of the genus Mustela, of Europe, Asia, and North America, having slightly webbed feet
2. the highly valued fur of these animals, esp that of the American mink (M. vison)
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

mink

[miŋk]
(vertebrate zoology)
Any of three species of slender-bodied aquatic carnivorous mammals in the genus Mustela of the family Mustelidae.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Mink

 

a predatory mammal of the genus Mustela of the family Mustelidae. There are two species—the European mink (M. lutreola), which is distributed in Europe, and the American mink (M. visen), which inhabits North America. The European mink inhabits the plains of the European USSR and southwestern Siberia. The American mink has been acclimatized in the USSR in a number of regions of the European part, Siberia, and the Far East.

Both species of mink have a long, slender, supple body. The European mink has a body length of up to 45 cm and a tail length of up to 20 cm. The American mink is somewhat larger, having a body length to 54 cm. Mink have short limbs and slightly webbed feet. The thick, shiny fur is various shades of brown. Mink live near lakes and swamps and near forest rivers with shallows and whirlpools that do not freeze. They make their own burrows or settle in the burrows of other animals (water voles, muskrats). Mink feed on small mammals, birds, bird eggs, frogs, and fish. The mating period is from February to April, and the gestation period is 43 to 47 days. Mink are valuable furbearers.

I. I. SOKOIOV

Of the two species, the American mink is more often used in fur farming, and large mink are currently being bred on fur farms. The mink reaches sexual maturity at nine or ten months of age. There are five or six (up to 12) young in a litter. The mink are given meat-fish (in the form of raw sausage), milk, and vegetable feeds. They are kept outdoors or indoors in metal mesh cages under lean-tos. The animals are killed at five or six months of age, at which time the winter fur has developed. The breeding animals are used for three or four years.

Mink breeding in the USSR and abroad is aimed at obtaining colored mink rather than the standard dark brown and black by using the genetic rules of inheritance of fur color. The first colored mink (light blue, beige, and white) appeared as a result of natural mutation; dozens of colored varieties were subsequently developed by means of crossbreeding. The mutations are more valuable than the fur of wild mink.

REFERENCES

Novikov, G. A. Evropeiskaia norka. Leningrad, 1938.
Mlekopitaiushchie Sovetskogo Soiuza, vol. 2, part 1. Edited by V. G. Geptner and N. P. Naumov. Moscow, 1967.
Pushnoe zverovodstvo i krolikovodstvo, 2nd ed. Moscow, 1971.

M. D. ABRAMOV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
We found that 653 C/T SNPs of KCNE1 were statistically different between the FMD and SMD groups, especially the 653 T/T (37.5%) and 653 C/T types (37.5%) in the FMD group.
In 2005, Doi [33] analyzed the genotype and sequence of KCNE1 and KCNE3 in 63 cases of Japanese patients with MD and found that 112 G/A SNPs in KCNE1 gene mutations (rs1805027) and 198 T/C SNPs in KCNE3 gene mutations (rs11702354) have a significant difference compared with the control group.
They investigated exons of KCNE1 and KCNE3 in 180 cases of Caucasian patients with MD and the control group (180 healthy Caucasians) about genotype and microsatellite markers but have not found any significant differences in mutation loci with the control group; thus, the author thinks that the KCNE gene family has no significant correlation with MD in Caucasian patients.
Based on the present studies and the results of our previous experiments, we proposed the "KCNE1-SMD, KCNE3-FMD"assumption that KCNE1 encodes protein Mink, and gene mutations of its functional exon 2 affect the beta subunit synthesis of K (+) channels, thus involving the onset of the SMD process, and that KCNE3 encodes protein MIRP2, and gene mutations of its functional exon 3 affect the functional K (+) channels on the lymph sac, thus involving the onset of the FMD process.
Wedekind et al., "KCNE1 mutations cause jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome" Nature genetics, vol.
Timothy et al., "Spectrum of mutations in Long-QT Syndrome genes: KVLQT1, HERG, SCN5A, KCNE1, and KCNE2" Circulation, vol.
Armstrong et al., "Genetic variations of HCNQ1, KCNH2, SCN5A, KCNE1, and KCNE2 in drug-induced long QT syndrome patients" Journal of Molecular Medicine, vol.
If no mutations are found, the following would be performed: (a) SSCP-HD screening of SCN5A, KCNE1, and KCNE2 and (b) sequencing of abnormal conformers.
Genomic structure of three long QT syndrome genes: KVLQTI, HERG, and KCNE1. Genomics 1998;51:86-97.
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