raccoon (
P. l. megaloudus) searching for food on a lake shore
Habitat Although they have thrived in sparsely wooded areas in the last decades, raccoons depend on vertical structures to climb when they feel threatened. Therefore, they avoid open terrain and areas with high concentrations of
beech trees, as beech
bark is too smooth to climb.
Tree hollows in old
oaks or other trees and rock crevices are preferred by raccoons as sleeping, winter, and litter dens. If such dens are unavailable or accessing them is inconvenient, raccoons use
burrows dug by other mammals, dense
undergrowth, or tree crotches. In a study in the
Solling range of hills in Germany, more than 60% of all sleeping places were used only once, but those used at least ten times accounted for about 70% of all uses. Since amphibians,
crustaceans, and other animals around the shore of lakes and rivers are an important part of the raccoon's diet, lowland
deciduous or
mixed forests abundant with water and marshes sustain the highest population densities. While population densities range from 0.5 to 3.2 animals per square kilometer (1.3 to 8.3 animals per square mile) in prairies and do not usually exceed 6 animals per square kilometer (15.5 animals per square mile) in upland hardwood forests, more than 20 raccoons per square kilometer (51.8 animals per square mile) can live in lowland forests and marshes.
Distribution in North America Florida raccoon (
P. l. elucus) in
Virginia Key, Florida Raccoons are common throughout North America from Canada to
Panama, where the subspecies
Procyon lotor pumilus coexists with the
crab-eating raccoon (
Procyon cancrivorus). The population on
Hispaniola was exterminated by Spanish colonists who hunted them for their meat; the historian
Oviedo said in 1513 that they were extirpated. Raccoons were also exterminated in
Cuba and
Jamaica; the last sighting in Jamaica was reported in 1687. The
Barbados raccoon became extinct relatively recently, with the last sighting in 1964. When they were still considered separate species, the Bahamas raccoon, Guadeloupe raccoon, and Tres Marias raccoon were classified as
endangered by the
IUCN in 1996. ,
Toronto In
Colonial America, raccoons were uncommon outside the
Eastern United States, the
Gulf Coast, and the
Great Lakes region. As raccoons were not mentioned in earlier reports of
pioneers exploring the central and north-central parts of the United States, their initial spread may have begun a few decades before the 20th century. Since the 1950s, raccoons have expanded their range from
Vancouver Island—formerly the northernmost limit of their range—far into the northern portions of the four south-central Canadian provinces. New habitats which have recently been occupied by raccoons (aside from urban areas) include mountain ranges, such as the
Western Rocky Mountains, prairies, and
coastal marshes. After a population explosion starting in the 1940s, the estimated number of raccoons in North America in the late 1980s was 15 to 20 times higher than in the 1930s, when raccoons were comparatively rare.
Urbanization, the expansion of
agriculture, deliberate introductions, and the extermination of natural predators of the raccoon have probably caused this increase in abundance and distribution.
Distribution outside North America As a result of escapes and deliberate
introductions in the mid-20th century, the raccoon is now distributed in several European and Asian countries. Sightings have occurred in all the countries bordering Germany, which hosts the largest population outside of North America. Another stable population exists in northern France, where several pet raccoons were released by members of the
U.S. Air Force near the
Laon-Couvron Air Base in 1966. Furthermore, raccoons have been known to be in the area around
Madrid since the early 1970s. In 2013, the city authorized "the capture and death of any specimen". It is also present in
Italy, with one self-sustaining population in
Lombardy. About 1,240 animals were released in nine regions of the former
Soviet Union between 1936 and 1958 to establish a population to be hunted for their fur. Two of these introductions were successful – one in the south of
Belarus between 1954 and 1958, and another in
Azerbaijan between 1941 and 1957. With a seasonal harvest of between 1,000~1,500;animals, in 1974 the estimated size of the population distributed in the
Caucasus region was around 20,000 animals, and the density was four animals per square kilometer (10 animals per square mile).
Distribution in Japan In Japan, up to 1,500 raccoons were imported as pets each year after the success of the
anime series
Rascal the Raccoon (1977). In 2004, the descendants of discarded or escaped animals lived in 42 of 47
prefectures. The range of raccoons in the wild in Japan grew from 17 prefectures in 2000 to all 47 prefectures in 2008. It is estimated that raccoons cause thirty million yen (~$275,000) of agricultural damage on
Hokkaido alone.
Distribution in Germany In Germany – where the raccoon is called the (literally, 'wash-bear' or 'washing bear') due to its habit of "dousing" food in water – two pairs of pet raccoons were released into the German countryside at the
Edersee reservoir in the north of
Hesse in April 1934 by a forester upon request of their owner, a poultry farmer. He released them two weeks before receiving permission from the
Prussian hunting office to "enrich the
fauna". Several prior attempts to introduce raccoons in Germany had been unsuccessful. A second population was established in eastern Germany in 1945 when 25 raccoons escaped from a
fur farm at Wolfshagen (today a district of
Altlandsberg), east of Berlin, after an air strike. The two populations are parasitologically distinguishable: 70% of the raccoons of the Hessian population are infected with the
roundworm Baylisascaris procyonis, but none of the
Brandenburgian population is known to have the parasite. In the Hessian region, there were an estimated 285 raccoons in 1956, which increased to over 20,000 in 1970; in 2008, there were between 200,000 and 400,000 raccoons in the whole of Germany. The raccoon was once a protected species in Germany, but has been declared a
game animal in 14 of the 16
German states since 1954. Hunters and
environmentalists argue the raccoon spreads uncontrollably, threatens protected bird species, and supersedes indigenous competitors. In the 1990s, only about 400 raccoons were hunted yearly. This increased dramatically over the next quarter-century: during the 2015–2016 hunting season, 128,100 raccoons were hunted, 60 percent of them in the state of
Hesse.
Distribution in the former Soviet Union Experiments in acclimatising raccoons into the
Soviet Union began in 1936, and were repeated a further 25 times until 1962. Overall, 1,222 individuals were released, 64 of which came from zoos and fur farms (38 of them having been imports from Western Europe). The remainder originated from a population previously established in
Transcaucasia. The range of Soviet raccoons was never single or continuous, as they were often introduced to different locations far from each other. All introductions into the
Russian Far East failed; melanistic raccoons were released on Petrov Island near
Vladivostok and some areas of southern
Primorsky Krai, but died. In
Central Asia, raccoons were released in
Kyrgyzstan's
Jalal-Abad Province, though they were later recorded as "practically absent" there in January 1963. A large and stable raccoon population (yielding 1,000~1,500 catches a year) was established in
Azerbaijan after an introduction to the area in 1937. Raccoons survived an introduction near
Terek, along the
Sulak River into the
Dagestani lowlands. Attempts to settle raccoons on the
Kuban River's left tributary and
Kabardino-Balkaria were unsuccessful. A successful acclimatization occurred in
Belarus, where three introductions (consisting of 52, 37, and 38 individuals in 1954 and 1958) took place. By January 1963, 700 individuals were recorded in the country.
Urban raccoons , Germany Due to its adaptability, the raccoon has been able to use
urban areas as a habitat. The first sightings were recorded in a
suburb of
Cincinnati in the 1920s. Since the 1950s, raccoons have been present in
metropolitan areas like
Washington, D.C.,
Chicago,
Toronto, and
New York City. Since the 1960s,
Kassel has hosted Europe's first and densest population in a large urban area, with about 50 to 150 animals per square kilometer (130 to 390 animals per square mile), a figure comparable to those of urban habitats in North America. In small towns and suburbs, many raccoons sleep in a nearby forest after foraging in the settlement area. Fruit and insects in gardens and leftovers in municipal waste are easily available food sources. Furthermore, a large number of additional sleeping areas exist in these areas, such as hollows in old garden trees, cottages, garages, abandoned houses, and attics. The percentage of urban raccoons sleeping in abandoned or occupied houses varies from 15% in Washington, DC (1991) to 43% in Kassel (2003). == Health ==