This detailed account covers the range, habitat, description, reproduction. lifespan, behaviour, communication, food habits, economic importance and conservation of the Palawan stink badger.
A page on the Endangered Endemic Species of the Philippines website. The information is as detailed as it can be - mostly from Neal & Cheeseman\'s "Badgers" - and features a sketch and a colour photo. WARNING - pop-up adverts accompany this page!
This page on The Field Museum website provides some brief details on the status of the Palawan stink badger, plus a photo showing four views of the skull of this species.
This page features a photo of a replica Palawan stink badger skull, and gives brief notes including the average skull length and the dental formula for the species. There is a link to a larger version of the photo.
For a 28k picture of the Indonesian stink badger, try this link. The picture shown is a rather old painting - completed when the species was known as Mydaus meliceps rather than Mydaus javanensis - and it is not very realistic! The artist probably worked from a skin or from a description, or both.
On this page of The Virtual Badger Sett website, there is a map showing the distribution of the Indonesian stink badger, some brief information about the species, and a link to a separate page with a picture.
This web page, gone from its original location but archived at the Wayback Machine website, provides some brief but interesting information about the Indonesian stink badger Mydaus javanensis.
This page provides brief information about the distribution, appearance, measurements, habits, reproduction, diet and lifespan of the Indonesian stink badger.
This article on the stink badgers covers the basics, and if I have translated correctly, suggests that Americans and Europeans like to look after these animals like cats and dogs just because they look nice!
Another page on The Virtual Badger Sett website, with a map showing the distribution of the Palawan stink badger, plus some brief information about the species and a link to a picture on a separate page.
This page presents the entry for the stink badgers in the online version of Walker\'s Mammals of the World. The page is archived on the Wayback Machine website.
A detailed article, with several photos taken from other websites, on the badgers of the world. After an introduction covering badgers in general, it gives brief accounts the Eurasian, American, hog, stink, ferret and honey badgers.