The 'Sable' (''
Martes zibellina'') is a small
mammal, closely akin to the
marten, living in southern
Russia near the
Ural Mountains through
Siberia and
Mongolia to
HokkaidÅ in
Japan. Its range in the wild originally extended through European
Russia to
Poland and
Scandinavia. It has achieved fame for its
fur, which is integrated into various clothes fashions (for example the
shtreimel). Sables range in color from tan to black, black being the most prized. The top grade of black sable fur is called "black diamond".
Sables are diurnal predators, using their sense of smell and hearing to hunt for small prey. They have been observed to hide in their dens for days during periods such as snow storms, or when they are being hunted by humans. In the wild they are potentially vicious; although there are "domesticated" sables who have been described as playful, curious, and even "tame" (if taken from their mother at a young age). They are mostly terrestrial, hunting and constructing dens on the forest floor. They feed on
chipmunks,
squirrels,
mice, small
birds and
fish. When primary sources are scarce they eat
berries, vegetation, and
pine nuts. When weather conditions are extreme they will store their prey in their den.
The name ''sable'' appears to be
Slavonic in origin: compare Russian ''sobol'', whence various languages have adapted the term:
German ''Zobel'',
Dutch ''Sabel''; the
French ''zibelline''
Spanish ''cibelina, cebellina'',
Finnish ''soopeli'' and
Mediaeval Latin ''zibellina'' derive from the
Italian form. The
English and Mediaeval Latin word ''sabellum'' comes from the
Old French ''sable'' or ''saible''.
Sable hair is highly prized by the
fur trade. The so-called
Kolinsky sable-hair brushes used for watercolor or oil painting are not however manufactured from sable hair, but that of the
siberian weasel.
The term has become a generic description for some black-furred animal breeds, such as sable
cats or
rabbits.
In popular media
In the 1981 book (and 1983 film)
Gorky Park, sables feature heavily in the plot.
References
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