The Chinese ferret-badger is active at
dusk and at night. It is a good climber. When alarmed it emits foul-smelling anal secretions. It rests during the day in burrows, such as small rodents' dens, or natural formations, such as rock crevices. They also construct makeshift shelters in shallow depressions in the ground. It also eats fleshy fruits such as of
Chinese plum,
oriental raisin tree,
date-plum and
Chinese kiwi.
Reproduction Chinese ferret-badgers mate in March. The female gives
birth to a litter of up to three young in May or June. The new-borns are blind and well-furred, with the same colour pattern as the adults. Their eyes open at about two weeks of age.
Diseases The Chinese ferret-badger is associated with reported outbreaks of human
rabies in southeastern China and Taiwan, which were first reported in 1997 and the most recent case in 2008. There have been no reported deaths in these cases; however, there is currently no rabies vaccine for ferret-badgers. ==Threats==