15 Fascinating Facts About Otters (2024)

Charismatic otters are the largest members of the weasel family. Unlike other weasels, otters are semi-aquatic. Their sleek bodies range in size from 2 to 5.9 feet. Thirteen otter species slide down riverbanks, juggle rocks, and float on their backs in watersheds on five continents. The only places without endemic otters are Australia and Antarctica.

All otter species appear on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, and only one is listed as "least concern." Learn 15 more facts about these fascinating mammals.

1. They Aren't All Sea Otters

River otters are frequently mistaken for sea otters. River otters live primarily in freshwater, though they do swim and hunt in seawater. They have visible ears, swim belly down, use webbed feet to paddle, and move swiftly on land and water.

Sea otters live exclusively in the ocean along coastlines. They move clumsily on land, paddle with their hind feet and tail, and are significantly bigger than most river otters, with some males weighing as much as 100 pounds. A male river otter, by comparison, would not exceed 30 pounds.

2. Some Hold Hands While Sleeping

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Sea otters, particularly mothers and pups, sometimes hold hands while floating on their backs. Hand-holding keeps the otters from drifting away from each other and their food source while they sleep. They also sleep wrapped in long strands of kelp like a blanket. The kelp acts like an anchor and prevents them from floating out to the open ocean. When a pup is small, the mother will hold it on her belly to keep it from floating away.

3. They Are in Trouble

Of the 13 species of otter, IUCN lists five as endangered, five as near-threatened, and two as vulnerable. Only the North American river otter is a species of least concern.

Numerous threats to otters exist and primarily include pollution, habitat destruction, overfishing, and poaching. They can also be harmed by entanglement with ghost nets and other rogue fishing gear. Oceana reports, "It is thought that oil spills pose the greatest threat due to the proximity of sea otters to major tanker routes and their susceptibility to hypothermia if their fur comes into contact with oil."

A cat parasite called toxoplasmosis also poses a threat to these creatures. Found in cat feces, it enters waterways through runoff and flushable cat litter.

4. They Have Many Names

Baby otters usually are called pups. They can also be called kits or kittens. Female otters are sows, and males are boars.

Otter groups are called a family, bevy, lodge, or a romp. The latter is the most common term for a group of otters on land. A group of otters in the water is most often called a raft.

5. Giant River Otters Live Up to Their Name

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The giant otter is an endangered species found in South America, primarily along the Amazon river and the Pantanal. It is the longest of the otter species. Giant otters grow to as long as 6 feet and weigh as much as 75 pounds. They eat 9 pounds of food each day.

Poaching for their velvet-like fur caused significant population declines. Threats also include habitat degradation, pesticides, and pollution from mining. Experts estimate that fewer than 8,000 exist.

6. Hairy-Nosed Otters Are a Lazarus Species

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Hairy-nosed otters are an endangered species found in Asia. They were considered extinct until 1998 when a scientist in Thailand found small populations. This rediscovery, after presumed extinction, makes them a Lazarus species.

The biggest threats to hairy-nosed otters are poaching and habitat loss from wildfires, dam construction, and clearing swamp forests for oil palm plantations and fish farms. These otters seem to love peat swamp forests, especially those with Melaleuca, the swamp tea-tree. Unfortunately the number of tea-trees is diminishing.

7. Some Species Lack Claws

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Most otters have sharp claws at the end of each toe, which helps them to grab prey. However, there are three species of otter that have blunt claws or none at all. They are the Asian small-clawed otter, African clawless otter, and Congo clawless otter. These otters also have less webbing between their digits. This combination allows them to have greater nimbleness when foraging. They use their front paws with a dexterity that nearly rivals humans.

8. They Have Noteworthy Poop

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River otters perform "scat dances" by stomping their hind feet and lifting their tail. They then leave droppings called spraints, which refer to a single bowel evacuation and that researchers describe as smelling like violets.

Otters have a communal latrine area. There they exchange information via chemical cues in feces. Otters also excrete something called anal jelly that contains secretions from anal glands and shed intestinal linings.

9. Sea Otters Have the World's Thickest Fur

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Sea otters don't just have the densest fur of all otters—they have the densest fur of all animals. Otters have as many as 2.6 million hairs per square inch. That makes it about a thousand times more dense than human hair. That thick coat is needed because otters are the only marine mammal without a blubber layer for insulation. They rely on all that fur to trap a layer of air against the surface of their skin, and their fur is perfectly designed to do so because it's dense and spiky. The barbs on each hair strand hold in place the air bubbles that the otters blow into their pelts while grooming—which they can spend up to five hours doing each day.

This air has the sometimes undesirable side effect of making them highly buoyant. Occasionally an otter must grab on to a rock or some kelp to remain submerged while swimming.

10. They All Eat a Lot

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Hefty appetites aren't unique to giant otters: All otters eat 20-33% of their body weight each day. They spend around five hours each day foraging. They tuck prey into pockets of loose skin under their arms and use rocks as tools to open shellfish. Otters' big appetites protect kelp forests by eating sea urchins. Without sea otters, the urchin population booms and destroys the kelp forest habitat.

11. They Are a Keystone Species

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The presence of a healthy otter population indicates a healthy watershed. Otter disappearance is evidence of pollutants, habitat fragmentation, or loss of prey due to habitat destruction. Prey shortages are very damaging due to high caloric needs. Otters may emigrate to find food in that case. Being at the top of the food chain causes pollutants to become concentrated in their bodies, leading to illness and death.

12. Mothers Have a Lot of Work

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Sea otters cannot swim at all for their first month, despite being born in the open sea. Clean fluffy fur keeps them warm and traps air, which allows them to float. Mothers groom pups and blow air into the clean coat to create buoyancy. She wraps the pup with kelp to anchor it while she hunts.

Mothers spend up to 14 hours per day foraging to support a pup's intense nutrition needs. This high demand leaves otter mothers depleted, and many die from minor illnesses. They do it all on their own, with no help from the fathers. They provide full-time care for their babies for six to eight months, until the babies can survive independently.

13. They Take Over Other Animal's Homes

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Otters sometimes take up residence in abandoned beaver lodges or muskrat dens. Some even move in while beavers are still present.

They also take over the riverbank dens of foxes, badgers, and rabbits. Resting spots, called hovers or couches, are usually little more than a bed of reeds. Otter "holts" are small underground dens where otters escape danger, take shelter, or raise their young. These usually show evidence of regular use in the form of tracks, smell, spraints (feces), and general wear-and-tear. These holts can be found along riverbanks, among tree roots, under branches, brush, or boulders.

14. They Are Speedy Swimmers

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Otters reach swim speeds of up to 7 miles per hour. This pace is three times faster than the average human swimmer. Otters can hold their breath for 3-4 minutes, closing their nostrils and ears to keep out water. Powerful tails propel them through the water. River otters have webbing between their toes to aid them as well.

15. Their Play Surprised Researchers

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Few animals play as adults, and otters are one of them. Researchers found that playful sliding on a riverbank was not just efficient locomotion, but play. Rock juggling doesn't improve hunting skills or efficient extraction of meat from shells. Instead, researchers learned, they are more likely to juggle rocks when hungry or bored. Young and old otters most often juggle rocks. Playfulness does disappear, though, when food is scarce. This suggests that the otters must first satisfy their nutritional needs before engaging in playful behaviors.

Save the Otters

  • Pick up litter.
  • Don't flush hazardous chemicals or cat litter.
  • Use permeable pavers and native plants in landscaping.
  • Volunteer as an otter spotter or water monitor.
15 Fascinating Facts About Otters (2024)

FAQs

How many fingers do otters have? ›

Paws are partially webbed with five fingers, but without opposable thumbs. All lack claws except for digits 2, 3, and 4 of the hind feet. Its large skull is broad and flat, with a relatively small orbit and a short snout. Molars are large and flat, used for crushing of prey.

How long do otters sleep? ›

Unless their fur becomes matted, from an oil spill, for example, sea otters' skin never gets wet. Otters spend eleven hours a day resting and sleeping. Except for some that stake out breeding territories and live alone, male sea otters tend to rest and sleep in rafts. Rafts range from two to 60 or 100 animals.

Do otters have 5 toes? ›

The river otter is adapted for both land and water with short legs, webbed toes, and a strong, flattened tail. Otters have five toes and the heel pad tends to be somewhat horseshoe shaped. The ears appear large on its small flattened head.

What are 5 cool random facts? ›

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Feb 23, 2024

What is a fun fact otters hold hands? ›

Sea otters are very social animals that often form groups called rafts. When they sleep, they hold hands with each other to prevent drifting apart. This behavior is also known as “rafting” and it is one of the most adorable sights in nature.

How fast can otters swim? ›

They can dive to 60 feet deep and swim a quarter mile before coming up for air. They may swim as fast as 6-7 miles per hour. How long can a river otter hold its breath? More than 4 minutes, with some estimates reaching as high as 8 minutes.

Do 6 foot otters exist? ›

The Giant River Otter (Pteronura brasiliensis), often referred to as the river wolf, is a species in the Mustelid (weasel) family that is endemic to South America. It is both the world's largest otter and largest member of the mustelid family, reaching up to 6 feet (1.8 meters) in length.

How long can otters hold? ›

Don't challenge otters to a breath holding competition.

Sea otters have been known to stay submerged for more than 5 minutes at a time. River otters, however, can hold their breath for up to 8 minutes.

How smart is an otter? ›

Sea otters are quickly rising up the list of intelligent marine animals. Their ability to use rocks to open clams is rare in the animal world. But that's not the only skill they've got: it's also possible that sea otters are the first species to use tools, according to a recent study.

What do otters love? ›

Otters have teeth perfectly adapted for crushing their favourite food — fish, shellfish and crabs! While crabs form as much as 80 per cent of the otter's diet, they will also eat other water creatures such as fish and snails as well as small land animals such as lizards, frogs and mice.

Do otters lay eggs? ›

Pregnancy lasts two months, but the young may be born up to a year after mating because these otters delay the implantation of the fertilized egg. Births occur from November to May, with a peak in March and April. Females give birth to from 1 to 6 young per litter, with an average of 2 to 3, in a den near the water.

Can otters purr? ›

River otters use chirping and humming sounds as contact calls. They hiss, purr, and whistle in other contexts.

How many colors can otters see? ›

In a recent study, A. cineria showed the ability to discriminate gray from white, green, blue, and red (Svoke, Snyder, & Elgart, 2014). In Svoke et al.'s (2014) study, one otter could discriminate blue versus green and blue versus red, but not red versus green.

Do otters have teeth? ›

Though otter pups only have a few gummy nubs, adult otters have about 32 teeth — that's upwards of 24,000 teeth that Aquarium veterinary and animal care staffers have scrutinized.

What do otters do for fun? ›

Sliding and wrestling, belly flopping, and somersaulting, river otters really know how to play! They take advantage of any slippery slope for fun, whether it's a summer slide down a muddy hill or a winter thrill on snow and ice. They glide on their bellies with their front paws by their sides.

What are otters special traits? ›

The otter's ears and nostrils close underwater. River otters have long, stiff and highly sensitive facial whiskers that aid in locating and capturing prey. The otters typically capture prey in their mouths but occasionally use their thumbs and forepaws to grasp and manipulate prey.

What is the largest danger to otters? ›

Disease. Parasites, such as intestinal worms, and infectious disease cause a significant percentage of otter deaths. Protozoal diseases are often fatal to marine mammals. Wild sea otters acquire many infectious diseases because of high pathogen and contaminant pollution levels in coastal ocean waters.

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