'' The earliest actual records of decreases in European mink numbers occurred in
Germany, having already become extinct in several areas by the middle of the 18th century. A similar pattern occurred in
Switzerland, with no records of minks being published in the 20th century. Records of minks in
Austria stopped by the late 18th century. By the 1930s–1950s, the European mink became extinct in
Poland,
Hungary,
Czechoslovakia and possibly
Bulgaria. In
Finland, the main decline occurred in the 1920s-1950s and the species was thought to be extinct in the 1970s, though a few specimens were reported in the 1990s. In
Latvia, the European mink was thought to be extinct for years, until a specimen was captured in 1992. In
Lithuania, the last specimens were caught in 1978–79. The decline of the European mink in
Estonia and
Belarus was rapid during the 1980s, with only a few small, fragmented populations in the northeastern regions of both countries being reported in the 1990s. The decline of European mink numbers in
Ukraine began in the late 1950s, with now only a few small and isolated populations being reported in the upper courses of the Ukrainian Carpathian rivers. Their numbers in
Moldova began to drop very quickly in the 1930s, with the last known population having been confined to the lower course of the
River Prut on the
Romanian border by the late 1980s. In Romania, the European mink was very common and widely distributed, with 8000–10,000 being captured in 1960. Currently, Romanian mink populations are confined to the
Danube Delta. In
European Russia, the European mink was common and widespread in the early 20th century, but began to decline during the 1950s–1970s. The core of their range was in the
Tver Region, though they began to decline there by the 1990s, which was worsened by a colonisation of the area by the American mink. Between 1981 and 1989, 388 European minks were introduced to two of the
Kurile Islands, though by the 1990s, the population there was found to be lower than that originally released. In
France and
Spain, an isolated range occurs, extending from
Brittany to northern Spain. Data from the 1990s indicate the European mink has disappeared from the northern half of this previous range. Such hybridisation is very rare in the wild, and typically only occurs where European minks are declining. A polecat-mink hybrid has a poorly defined facial mask, yellow fur on the ears, grey-yellow underfur and long, dark brown guard hairs. Fairly large, the males attain the peak sizes known for European polecats (weighing and measuring in length), and females are much larger than female European minks (weighing and measuring in length). The majority of polecat-mink hybrids have skulls bearing greater similarities to those of polecats than to minks. The first captive polecat-mink hybrid was created in 1978 by Soviet zoologist Dr. Dmitry Ternovsky of
Novosibirsk. Originally bred for their fur (which was more valuable than that of either parent species), the breeding of these hybrids declined as European mink populations decreased. Studies on the behavioural ecology of free-ranging polecat-mink hybrids in the upper reaches of the
Lovat River indicate the hybrids will stray from aquatic habitats more readily than pure minks, and will tolerate both parent species entering their territories, though the hybrid's larger size (especially the male's) may deter intrusion. During the summer period, the diet of wild polecat-mink hybrids is more similar to that of the mink than to the polecat, as they feed predominantly on frogs. During the winter, their diets overlap more with those of polecats, and will eat a larger proportion of rodents than in the summer, though they still rely heavily on frogs and rarely scavenge ungulate carcasses as the polecat does.
Predation Predators of the European mink include the European polecat, the American mink, the
golden eagle, large
owls and the
red fox. Red fox numbers have increased greatly in areas where the
wolf and
Eurasian lynx have been extirpated, as well as areas where modern forestry is practised. As red foxes are known to prey on mustelids, excessive fox predation on the European mink is a possible factor, though it is improbable to have been a factor in Finland, where fox numbers were low during the early 20th century. ==References==