Golden palm civet
Kingdom
Phylum
Subphylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
SPECIES
Paradoxurus zeylonensis
Weight
1.4-3.2
3.1-7
kglbs
kg lbs 
Length
90
35
cminch
cm inch 

The golden palm civet (Paradoxurus zeylonensis ) is a palm civet endemic to Sri Lanka. It is listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List. Its distribution is severely fragmented, and the extent and quality of its habitat in Sri Lanka's hill regions are declining.

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The golden palm civet was described by Peter Simon Pallas in 1778.

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In Culture

In Sri Lanka the golden palm civet is called pani uguduwa පැනි උගුඩුවා, sapumal kalawaddha සපුමල් කලවැද්දා, or ranhothambuwa රන් හොතබුවා / hotambuwa හොතබුවා, by the Sinhala speaking community. Both golden and Asian palm civets are sometimes collectively called kalawedda in Sinhala and maranai (மரநாய்) in Tamil.

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However, the word hotambuwa is mostly used to refer altogether a different species, the ruddy mongoose (Herpestes smithii ). Due to similar appearance and coloration, they are mistaken as the same animal.

This civet appears on the 3-rupee Sri Lankan postal stamp. However, it is labeled "Golden Palm Cat" on the stamp.

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No

Nocturnal

He

Herbivore

Fr

Frugivore

Ar

Arboreal

Zo

Zoochory

Is

Island endemic

Te

Terrestrial

Mo

Monogamy

So

Solitary

No

Not a migrant

G

starts with

Appearance

The golden palm civet is gold to golden brown on the upper side and paler gold on the belly. Individuals vary from dark sepia to ochreous, rusty or golden-brown. The tips of the contour hairs are frequently lustrous, sometimes greyish. The legs are about the same tint as the back, but the tail and the face are sometimes noticeably paler, buffy-grey. The face does not have a pattern, and the vibrissae are dirty white. The hair in front of the shoulders radiates from two whorls and grows forward along the sides of the neck and the nape to the head. It also grows forward on the fore throat, radiating from a single whorl. The dorsal pattern consists of faint bands and spots that are slightly darker than the ground colour. The lower side is slightly paler and sometimes greyer than the upper.The golden palm civet has two morphs — one golden and one dark brown. Specimens from montane areas are darker, slightly greyish-toned wood-brown, and paler on the underside with a yellowish-white tail tip.

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The rounded ears have hairless edges. The eyes are large with vertical pupils. It emits a pleasant odour from anal glands, which is reminiscent of Michelia champaca flowers.

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Distribution

Geography

Continents
Countries
Biogeographical realms

The golden palm civet inhabits lowland rain forest, montane evergreen forests, and also dense monsoon forest.

Golden palm civet habitat map

Climate zones

Golden palm civet habitat map
Golden palm civet
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Habits and Lifestyle

The golden palm civet is forest-dependent, yet tolerant of minor habitat modification where some continuous forest remains. It is arboreal, nocturnal, and solitary; its diet consists of fruits, berries, invertebrates, and a wide range of small vertebrates.

Seasonal behavior

Diet and Nutrition

Mating Habits

MATING BEHAVIOR
PREGNANCY DURATION
72 to 85 days
BABY CARRYING
2 to 3

Population

References

1. Golden palm civet Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_palm_civet
2. Golden palm civet on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/41694/45218119

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