Wildlife Journal Junior!
New Hampshire PBS

Home       |       Wild Files       |       N.H. Animals       |       Animals A-Z       |       Watch Online

Raccoon - Procyon lotor

raccoon

Classification

 Kingdom: Animalia
 Phylum: Chordata
 Class: Mammalia
 Order: Carnivora
 Family: Procyonidae
 Genus: Procyon

Description

raccoonThe raccoon has gray to brown fur. It has a black mask around its eyes with white fur around the mask. It has a stripe that runs from its forehead to its nose and white fur around its nose. It has a bushy, ringed tail and black paws with five toes. The raccoon's paws look a little like human hands. The raccoon's toes are flexible and it is very good at grabbing, pulling things apart, and holding things. The raccoon is a very good climber and can go down a tree backwards or face first! The raccoon is one of only three species of the Procyonidae family found in the United States. The other species are the ringtail and the white-nosed coati.

Range

RaccoonThe raccoon is found in most of the United States, except for parts of the Rocky Mountains, central Nevada, Utah, and Arizona. It is also found in southern Canada and from  Mexico to northern South America.

Habitat

raccoonThe raccoon lives in wooded areas near water. It is very adaptable and is also found in suburbs and cities. It usually makes its den in a tree, but it  may make its home in an abandoned woodchuck burrow, a cave, barn, sewer, or even a house!

Diet

raccoonThe raccoon is omnivorous and opportunistic. Common foods include fruits, nuts berries, insects, rodents, frogs, eggs and crayfish. In some rural areas, corn is a large part of the raccoon's diet. In suburban and urban areas, it often digs through trash cans for food. If water is near, the raccoon sometimes puts its food in the water and rolls it around. It looks like it is washing its food, but it is not. The raccoon is softening the food and looking for foreign objects on the food.

Did You Know?

raccoonThe name raccoon is from the Powhatan word aroughcun which means "he scratches with his hands." Captain John Smith was the first European to write about the raccoon in 1608.

Life Cycle

raccoonMating season runs January through March. A little over two months after mating, the female gives birth to a litter of between four to six young. The babies are able to stand when they are about four to six weeks old. They are weaned at 70 days and start to hunt when they are between 9-12 weeks old. When they first come out of the den, the mother may carry them around by the neck, like a cat carries a kitten.

raccoon The mother also teaches them how to hunt for food and climb trees. The mother raccoon is very protective of her young and attacks predators that come too close. Young raccoons have darker coats than mature raccoons. The babies may stay with their mother for up to a year.

Behavior

raccoonThe raccoon is mostly nocturnal. It is also solitary, except for mothers and their young. In the winter, the raccoon may sleep in its den for a few weeks, but it does not hibernate. The raccoons usually walks, but it can run at speeds of up to 15 miles an hour. It is also a good swimmer and often hunts for food in the water. The raccoon makes a variety of vocalizations including hisses, whistles, screams, growls, and snarls.