American Marten (Martes americana)

Group Carnivors
Code AMAJF01010
Order Carnivora
Family Mustelidae
Author (Turton, 1806)
Rank G5 (definitions)
Occurrence P (definitions)
Scale N (definitions)

County List:

Western UP all
Eastern UP all
Northern LP Charlevoix, Emmet, Crawford, Grand Traverse, Cheboygan, Leelanau, Antrim, Alpena, Missaukee, Montmorency, Otsego, Presque Isle, Wexford, Kalkaska
Southern LP none

Rule:

Forested Landscapes

Habitat Requirements may be distributed across the NEIGHBORHOOD

      (Spruce/Fir (Pole or Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven))
      or (Hemlock (Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven))
      or (Jack Pine (Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven))
      or (Any Upland Mixed (Pole or Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven))
    containing:
      (Stand/Gap Openings 
      and Dead Down Woody Debris 
      and Snags 
      and Living Cavity Trees)
   neighboring:
      (Northern White Cedar (Pole or Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven))
      or (Black Spruce (Pole or Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven))
      or (Any Lowland Mixed (Pole or Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven))
      or Treed Bog
   containing:
      (Stand/Gap Openings 
      and Dead Down Woody Debris 
      and Snags 
      and Living Cavity Trees)
view decision rule term definitions

Habitat List:

Habitats Regen Sap Pole Sm Saw Lg Saw Uneven
Aspen nonononono-
Paper Birch nonononono-
Oak nononononono
Assorted Hardwoods nononononono
Northern Hardwoods nononononono
Spruce/Fir nonoYESYESYESYES
Hemlock nononoYESYESYES
Jack Pine nononoYESYESYES
Red Pine nononononono
White Pine nononononono
Conifer Plantations nonononono-
Mixed Upland Hardwoods nonoYESYESYESYES
Mixed Northern Hardwoods nonoYESYESYESYES
Mixed Upland Conifer nonoYESYESYESYES
Mixed Pine nonoYESYESYESYES
Swamp Hardwoods nononononono
Balsam Poplar & Swamp Aspen & Swamp Birch nononononono
Bottomland Hardwoods nononononono
Tamarack nononononono
Northern White Cedar nonoYESYESYESYES
Black Spruce nonoYESYESYESYES
Mixed Lowland Hardwoods nonoYESYESYESYES
Mixed Lowland Conifer nonoYESYESYESYES
Non-ForestedTreed Bog
Special FeaturesDead Down Woody Debris, Snags, Living Cavity Trees, Stand (Gap) Openings

view size class definitions

Literature:

Kurta, A. 1995. Mammals of the Great Lakes Region. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor. 376 pp.

The marten primarily resides in closed, coniferous woodlands underlain by a lush growth of shrubs and forbs and appears less frequently in mixed stands. It occurs in upland forests of spruce, fir, or hemlock as well as in cedar swamps. Logging clear-cuts, burned areas, and other open sites are useless to a marten.

In winter it often searches for prey in snow-covered spaces found beneath woody debris. Other than females with young, a marten has no fixed shelter; it rests in a tree hollow, rotting stump, or rock pile or simply on an exposed branch. A maternity den is usually a leaf-lined tree cavity or rock crevice.

Ground-dwelling rodents, especially red-backed voles, are preferred food, although a marten commonly eats red squirrels and northern flying squirrels as well. Other prey animals include shrews, hares, birds, reptiles, and amphibians. Beetles and bugs form a small but consistent, part of the diet, and carrion is eaten whenever it is available. In summer, the marten adds fruits, particularly blueberries and raspberries, to its meaty menu.


DeGraaf, R. M. and D. D. Rudis. 1986. New England wildlife: habitat, natural history, and distribution. GTR NE-108. Broomall, PA:USDA, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest Experiment Station. 491 pp.

Habitat: A diversity of wooded habitats including coniferous forests of fir, spruce, and hemlock, dense mixed hardwood-conifer forests, cedar swamps. Softwood dominated mixed stands preferred in undisturbed forest in Maine. In the Adirondacks, martens are found in 30-year-old mixed stands, and in pole and mature hardwood stands at elevations of 530m to 1463m.

Special Habitat Requirements: Den sites (hollow trees or logs are most commonly used). Martens seem to have no permanent den sites.


Baker, R. H. 1983. Michigan Mammals. Michigan State University Press, East Lansing, MI. 642 pp.

Habitat Preferences: Biologists have noted that marten in the western parts of its North American range appear to thrive in stands of spruce and fir, consisting chiefly of mature trees having a canopy coverage of at least 30%. In contrast, marten in eastern parts of its range not only utilize conifer forests (including cedar swamps) but also mixed stands of both conifers and hardwoods. In Michigan, Wood noted that beech-maple forests in the vicinity of Whitefish Point in Chippewa County sustained marten populations. Clear-cutting practices and severe fires apparently reduce forest habitat quality drastically for marten. Selective cutting and scattered fires provide some habitat diversity and can increase marten food supplies in the form of small mammals, birds, and fruits. Ideally, marten are best adapted to mature northern forests, probably mostly coniferous, in which the extensive canopy maintains a shaded and moist interior with a substrate well-strewn with windfalls and other forest debris.

Behavior: The young are born and reared in a cavity (lined with vegetation) in a hollow tree, an opening in a fallen log or stump, or in a rock pile. The selection of this site is the responsibility of the pregnant female. Otherwise, martens have no fixed or permanent dens. Temporary resting places, often in exposed locations, are used through the year, mostly as daytime retreats. These sites are located in live tree hollows, or tops of branches, in logs, in stumps, in ground burrows, and in rock piles. Tree resting sites include hemlock, yellow birch, and balsam fir.


Allen, A. W. 1987. The relationship between habitat and furbearers. Pages 164-179 In: M. Novak, J. A. Baker, M. E. Obbard, B. Malloch (eds.) Wild Furbearer Management and Conservation in North America. Published by The Ontario Trappers Association, Ashton-Potter Limited, Concord, Ontario. 1150 pp.

Key Components of Habitat: Relative dense mature to old-growth coniferous to mixed deciduous forest; mosaic of forest and successional habitats; suitable den sites (e.g. snags, downfall, rock crevices) in association with forest cover.

Management Actions to Enhance or Maintain Habitat Quality: Maintain high degree of interspersion between intensively managed stands and stands managed with sufficiently long rotation to provide structural and vegetative diversity similar to old-growth; ensure snag availability; maintain vegetation in riparian areas and ridgelines for dispersal; maintain large debris and downfall.


Stickland, M. A. and C. W. Douglas. 1987. Marten. Pages 531-546. In: M. Novak, J. A. Baker, M. E. Obbard, B. Malloch (eds.) Wild Furbearer Management and Conservation in North America. Published by The Ontario Trappers Association, Ashton-Potter Limited, Concord, Ontario. 1150 pp.

Habitat: Martens prefer mature conifer or mixed wood forests, although they will tolerate a variety of forest habitats if food and cover are available. Severe disturbance of a forest by extensive clearcutting or large fires will seriously reduce its habitat value for martens for as many as 15 years. Snyder reported that clearcut areas in Newfoundland had not regenerated adequately even after 23 years. Perhaps these differences in regeneration time merely reflect differences in tree species and latitudes. These disturbances will also change habitat values for prey. Lesser disturbances, however, may increase habitat values by creating better habitat for prey and better den sites. In California, Hargis and McCullough recommended a diversity of tree sizes and age classes to provide hunting sites and protective cover under different snow conditions, and suggested that such mixed-age stands can support more prey species. In Maine, islands of conifers within clearcut areas and partially cut mixed stands were heavily used during both summer and winter. Snyder found that martens in Newfoundland seldom used clearcut areas or residual stands less than 37 acres but used larger residual stands. She recommended that the distance between these residual blocks be nor more than 820 feet and that uncut strips at least 328 ft wide be left along waterways. Because clearcutting lowers the carrying capacity of an area for martens, resulting in larger home range sizes and lower population densities, Soutiere recommended that clearcutting be done in small blocks or patches and that 25% of the area be retained in forest cover that has a basal area of at least 109 ft²/acre of pole stage and larger trees.

Raine found that during winter martens in Manitoba seldom traveled on frozen lakes but made extensive use of alder bogs and old beaver meadows, especially if they had good access to subnivean space. Koehler and Hornocker in Idaho found that openings that are avoided during winter may be used during summer and fall if food and cover are available. Martens in California showed preferences for areas with low overhead cover (<10 feet above the snow) but were not selective for dense forest stands.

Allen reviewed the literature and prepared a winter habitat suitability index (HSI) model for martens in the boreal coniferous forest of the western United States. He assumed, perhaps incorrectly, that food availability would not be limiting for martens if adequate cover was present. For the purposes of the model, the most significant limiting factors were the percentage of canopy closure (>30%) and the successional stage of the stand (pole-sized or larger trees). The coniferous composition of the overstory (>25%) and the percentage of the ground covered by fallen trees and stumps (20-50%) were also important.

If subnivean access routes such as those provided by slash, stumps, or downfall, which give access to prey below deep snow; are limited, as in the case of clearcut areas, this may be more restrictive on marten winter densities than the actual density of available prey. Large old trees and large logs are important as den sites for martens.


Thomasma, L. E. 1996. Winter habitat selection and interspecific interactions of American martens and fishers in the McCormick Wilderness and surrounding area. Ph.D. Dissertation, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI. 116 pp.

Abstract: Both species preferred coniferous types and avoided deciduous ones. Even though American martens and fishers overlapped in cover type preference, they did not overlap in patch size selection. American martens selected larger patch sizes of the preferred type than did fishers.

See Literature Cited section within the dissertation for specific citations.

Habitat Use - Literature Review: American martens in Alaska, Yukon Territory, Manitoba, Washington, Idaho, Wyoming, Central Rocky Mountains, Minnesota, Ontario, New York, Maine, and Newfoundland preferred coniferous or mixed coniferous-deciduous forest cover types. Within preferred types, American martens used stands considered to be of late successional stage, old-growth, or mature age class. American martens avoided clear-cuts and recently logged areas. Thompson and Colgan observed greater survival and reproduction rates for American martens in old-growth forests than in post clear-cut forests in Ontario.

Snyder and Bissonette found that American marten populations in Newfoundland were denser in undisturbed forests with large core areas. American martens were sensitive to the size of residual stands, preferring residual forest patches >15 ha in size. Koehler and Hornocker found the greatest American marten activity in forested stands with >30% closure. Bateman found that American martens preferred forested stands with overstory densities >75%. Snyder and Bissonette reported that their most successful trap sites were associated with trees ³15 cm dbh and overhead cover of 50-100%. Within forested stands, American martens used dead down woody material, stumps, snags, rock piles, cavity trees, and red squirrel middens as den and rest sites, subnivean access points, and foraging areas. Female American martens in Maine used 40-70 cm dbh logs or cavities in mature trees of declining vigor for their maternal dens.

Appendix A.