Dugan said:
Please, some of us would appreciate a warning, or perhaps a link and a warning, instead of clicking on an innocently titled thread only to find a sad and gory image.
Thanks for making my breakfast very unpleasant.
Not to hijack this thread completely, but, Dugan, if it helps any, here is an anecdote about a very live ermine that I watched in my front yard yesterday morning. First I saw a snowshoe (variegated) hare, now in white phase, leave the barn and head down the driveway. It hung a left when it reached the road and disappeared around the corner. I figured that was it, but no.
A few minutes later, an ermine, in white phase, pops up in the front yard and goes ballistic, i.e., runs around crazily in its zig zag pattern of hunting. For about 15 minutes it ran all over the yard and driveway in this berserk fashion, apparently hunting the rabbit, who was long gone down the road. It finally gave up and disappeared back to where I think it is denning up for the winter.
There's an ermine-and-hare story in here somewhere.
Forestgnome, as for your question, I would guess that an ermine gets at least several "signals" about when to turn white. I know that cats have at least several homing devices, not just one, as if they carry a compass, GPS, and a good sense of direction all at once.