Otters. You know why you’re reading about them, right? JVA is the home of the otters; you’re an otter. The picture for the student group in Schoology and the weekly Otter News shows that… and, well, tells that. Our drawn mascot may not have the appearance of real otters–they don’t have abs and can’t stand on just two legs unfortunately–but the spirit is still there. No one can deny that we’re the JVA otters. But what about the real deal? What is the real life animal our mascot is modeled after like? Glad you asked.
As you may remember, there are 13 species of otters. They’re all otters, but there’s still differences between them. What are those differences? Well, let’s take a deeper look at each species to see!
Asian Small-Clawed Otter
Smooth-Coated Otter
An obvious difference between these two species is their genus and scientific name, as well as their appearance. With different species or subspecies differences in color, size, location, family life, and diet can be predicted. However, that is not always the case.
Some similarities include:
- Inhabiting the continent of Asia
- Living in swamps and rivers
- Living in a tropical climate zone
- Being monogamous
- Carrying pups for around 60 days
- Eating frogs and fish
- Having habitat destruction and hunting as population threats
- Having a conservation status of vulnerable and a decreasing population trend
Some differences include:
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- Size: smooth-coated otters are quite a bit bigger than Asian small-clawed otters
- Color: Asian small-clawed otters have lighter undersides than smooth-coated otters
- Location: smooth-coated otters are also in West Asia as well as South, East, and Southeast Asia
- Environment: Asian small-clawed otters have a range that expands to the coast while smooth-coated otters have a landlocked range
- Climate zone: smooth-coated otters live in a temperate climate as well as a tropical climate
- Family life: Asian small-clawed otters form groups consisting of a breeding pair and their grown pups while smooth-coated otter females primarily raise pups until the father helps as they get a bit older; Asian small-clawed otters breed year-round while smooth-coated otters breed in the late summer into winter; Asian small-clawed otter pups get weaned earlier than smooth-coated otter pups; Asian small-clawed otter pups learn to swim later than smooth-coated otter pups; and Asian small-clawed otter pups are mature sooner than smooth-coated otter pups
Clearly these two otter species, living on the same continent, are similar and different in numerous ways. No matter how they live, where they live, or what they eat, Asian small-clawed otters and smooth-coated otters are both amazing animals and deserve all the love!