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Species Profile

African Palm Civet

Nandinia binotata

Not a true civet-one of a kind
Subhumanfreak at the English Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

African Palm Civet Distribution

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Two-spotted palm civet Nandinia binotata mounted specimen in Manchester Museum

At a Glance

Wild Species
Also Known As Palm civet, Two-spotted palm civet, Tree civet, African tree civet
Diet Omnivore
Activity Nocturnal+
Lifespan 9 years
Weight 5 lbs
Status Least Concern
Did You Know?

It's the only surviving species in its family (Nandiniidae) and genus (Nandinia)-a unique branch of feliform carnivorans (IUCN; modern phylogenies).

Scientific Classification

The African palm civet (Nandinia binotata) is a small, mostly nocturnal, arboreal carnivoran native to sub-Saharan Africa. Despite the ‘civet’ name, it is placed in its own family (Nandiniidae) and is not a true viverrid.

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Mammalia
Order
Carnivora
Family
Nandiniidae
Genus
Nandinia
Species
binotata

Distinguishing Features

  • Arboreal, catlike body with relatively long tail; agile climber
  • Often shows two pale spots/markings on the neck/shoulder region (basis of the name binotata = “two-marked”)
  • Omnivorous diet with substantial fruit intake in addition to small animals
  • Nocturnal habits; typically solitary

Physical Measurements

Length
2 ft 6 in (2 ft – 2 ft 11 in)
Weight
5 lbs (4 lbs – 6 lbs)
Tail Length
1 ft 7 in (1 ft 3 in – 1 ft 11 in)
Top Speed
16 mph
About 25 km/h (estimate)

Appearance

Primary Colors
Secondary Colors
Skin Type Dense, short-to-medium length fur covering most of the body; skin is mostly concealed by the coat, with relatively hairless paw pads and a bare nose typical of carnivore mammals.
Distinctive Features
  • Small, arboreal, forest-dwelling carnivore in its own family (separate from the civets) with a long balancing tail and flexible body for climbing; mainly nocturnal and often uses the canopy and understory.
  • Adult size: head-body length 37-61 cm; tail length 34-60 cm (species accounts in standard mammalogy references such as Nowak, Walker's Mammals of the World / Mammals of the World).
  • Adult mass commonly reported around ~1.5-3+ kg, with larger individuals recorded in some references (reported ranges vary by source and locality; see major compendia such as Kingdon/Mammals of Africa and Nowak).
  • Craniofacial profile: pointed muzzle, relatively large eyes adapted for nocturnality; small rounded ears.
  • Pelage diagnostic: dark spotting/ocelli and a darker dorsal stripe with the typical paired pale 'two-spot' marking on the shoulder/neck region; tail often faintly banded.
  • Well-developed scent-marking anatomy typical of civet-like carnivorans (perineal/anal gland region used in territorial/communication scent marking), consistent with solitary nocturnal behavior described for the species.
  • Longevity: captive lifespan commonly reported up to ~15 years in mammalogy/zoo-reference summaries (e.g., Nowak/Walker's compendia; captive longevity records vary by institution).

Sexual Dimorphism

Sexual dimorphism is weak. Males tend to average slightly larger/heavier than females, but external coat coloration/pattern is broadly similar in both sexes; field identification by sex usually requires close inspection rather than pelage differences (as summarized in standard species accounts).

  • On average slightly larger body size and mass than females (subtle; overlaps strongly).
  • Genital morphology; males may show more obvious perineal/anal gland area when closely examined (not a pelage color difference).
  • On average slightly smaller body size and mass than males (subtle; overlaps strongly).
  • Visible nipples when lactating; otherwise pelage and markings match males closely.

Did You Know?

It's the only surviving species in its family (Nandiniidae) and genus (Nandinia)-a unique branch of feliform carnivorans (IUCN; modern phylogenies).

Adults measure about 43-71 cm head-body with a 40-66 cm tail, and weigh ~1.7-5.0 kg (standard field references; e.g., Kingdon).

Diet is strongly fruit-based (often including figs and oil-palm fruit) but also includes insects and small vertebrates-an omnivore that still has a carnivore's toolkit (IUCN/field syntheses).

Mostly nocturnal and solitary; it spends much of its active time moving and foraging in the canopy and mid-story (IUCN).

It can descend trunks head-first thanks to very mobile ankle joints-an adaptation shared with other tree-climbing small carnivorans.

Maximum recorded longevity in captivity is about 15-16 years (AnAge longevity records; captive data).

Despite the name "civet," it is not a true civet (Viverridae); the resemblance is partly convergent-similar lifestyles, different lineage.

Unique Adaptations

  • Highly arboreal build: long tail (often ~as long as head-body length) aids balance on narrow branches (morphometrics from field references).
  • Mobile ankle joints: allow effective head-first descent and maneuvering on vertical supports-an advantage for a forest canopy hunter-forager.
  • Generalist dentition/feeding strategy: able to process both fruit and animal prey, supporting omnivory in seasonal forests (diet ecology summaries).
  • Camouflage patterning: mottled, spotted coat breaks up outline in dappled forest light, especially at night in the understory/canopy.
  • Evolutionary distinctness: sole extant representative of Nandiniidae-important for conserving unique evolutionary history (EDGE-style rationale; phylogenetic distinctness noted in reviews).

Interesting Behaviors

  • Nocturnal canopy foraging: travels along branches and vines, often feeding quietly on ripe fruit before switching to animal prey when available (IUCN).
  • Solitary ranging: adults are typically encountered alone outside of mating and mother-young periods (field observations summarized by IUCN).
  • Arboreal resting: commonly shelters in dense foliage, tree hollows, or tangles of lianas during daylight hours (IUCN).
  • Omnivorous "menu switching": seasonally emphasizes fruit when abundant, but opportunistically takes insects, small mammals, birds/eggs, and reptiles (diet summaries in field literature/IUCN).
  • Scent communication: uses scent marking and latrine-like deposition typical of many small carnivorans to advertise presence and reproductive status (general small-carnivoran behavior; reported for the species in field accounts).
  • Agile trunk descent: frequently climbs down head-first-enabled by flexible ankles and gripping feet, useful for quick retreats and route changes in trees.

Cultural Significance

The African palm civet (Nandinia binotata) is a secretive tree-dweller in sub‑Saharan forests, sometimes hunted for meat. It eats many fruits and spreads seeds. Not a true civet (family Nandiniidae), it helps teach convergent evolution and carnivore diversity.

Myths & Legends

Naming story: The African Palm Civet (Nandinia binotata) gets its English name from palm fruit and palm habitats where it often eats; 'binotata' means 'two-marked', for paired marks noted by Gray (1830).

In the 1800s, collectors and travelers called the African palm civet (Nandinia binotata) a civet because it looked like one. Later anatomy and genetics showed it is the only species in its family.

Other civet species were linked to musk for perfume, so the African palm civet (Nandinia binotata) is often mixed up with them. That link comes from names and trade, not one folktale.

Conservation Status

LC Least Concern

Widespread and abundant in the wild.

Population Decreasing

Protected Under

  • Occurs in numerous protected areas across its broad sub-Saharan African range; site-level protection is primarily via habitat conservation and enforcement against illegal hunting/trapping (strength varies by country).
  • International trade: not generally subject to a species-specific global trade ban; protections are typically through national wildlife laws and protected-area regulations rather than a dedicated international listing.
  • HUBS (small African forest carnivorans such as civets/genets and related taxa): conservation statuses range from Least Concern (many widespread generalists) to Near Threatened/Vulnerable for more range-restricted or forest-dependent species; the most recurrent pressures are forest loss/fragmentation (logging, agricultural expansion), snaring/bushmeat hunting, and localized live capture for trade. Notable higher-risk examples in the broader 'civet/genet' landscape are typically those tied to shrinking forest blocks or high hunting pressure, while adaptable generalists often remain LC but can decline locally where access increases.

Life Cycle

Birth 2 kits
Lifespan 9 years

Lifespan

In the Wild
5–12 years
In Captivity
10–20 years

Reproduction

Mating System Promiscuity
Social Structure Solitary
Breeding Pattern Transient
Fertilization Internal Fertilization
Birth Type Internal_fertilization

African palm civet (Nandinia binotata) is solitary and nocturnal. Males overlap several females; mating is promiscuous (many males and females mate), with short courtship during female estrus and no long-term bonds. Females raise young alone; gestation ~64 days, litters 1–4 (commonly 2).

Behavior & Ecology

Social No fixed group name (typically described as solitary) Group: 1
Activity Nocturnal, Crepuscular
Diet Omnivore Fleshy fruits-commonly reported as especially frequent are figs (Ficus spp.) and oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) fruits.

Temperament

Secretive/shy; avoids open areas and human presence when possible, spending much time in canopy cover (IUCN; Mammals of Africa/Kingdon).
Strongly arboreal and cautious; spends daytime in tree hollows, dense foliage, or similar covered resting sites; foraging largely occurs at night.
Territorial or semi-territorial spacing typical of solitary carnivorans, with heavy reliance on scent marking and avoidance rather than prolonged physical conflict.
Behaviorally flexible: persists in secondary forest and forest-farm mosaics and may exploit cultivated fruit or food waste near settlements, which can increase local encounter rates without forming stable groups (IUCN).

Communication

Hisses and growls during threat/aggression Reported in handling/captivity descriptions and general field accounts for the species
Snarls and sharp distress squeals/screams when frightened or restrained Reported in species accounts/field syntheses
Soft contact calls between mother and young have been noted in captive/close observation contexts General behavioral descriptions in mammal reference works
Olfactory communication via scent marking Perineal/anal gland secretions) on trunks/branches and along travel routes; used for spacing and reproductive signaling (Mammals of Africa/Kingdon; IUCN
Urine marking on substrates/vegetation, especially in frequently used pathways/rest areas Species accounts
Fecal deposition at repeated sites (latrine-like use) is reported for many civet-like carnivorans and is included in descriptions of Nandinia's scent-based communication in reference works.
Visual/tactile signals at close range: threat postures (arched back, piloerection), facial expressions, and tactile contact during mating and maternal care.

Habitat

Biomes:
Tropical Rainforest Tropical Dry Forest Savanna Wetland
Terrain:
Plains Hilly Valley Riverine Coastal Island
Elevation: Up to 8202 ft 1 in

Ecological Role

Arboreal omnivorous mesopredator and important fruit consumer in African forests.

Seed dispersal for fleshy-fruited trees and lianas (via endozoochory after fruit consumption) Regulation of some invertebrate populations (e.g., termites and other insects) Opportunistic control of small-vertebrate prey populations (rodents, small reptiles) Trophic link transferring energy from fruit production to higher trophic levels (as prey for larger predators)

Diet Details

Main Prey:
Insects Termites Small mammals Small birds and nestlings Bird eggs Lizards and small reptiles Frogs +1
Other Foods:
Forest fruits Oil palm fruit Berries and fleshy fruits

Human Interaction

Domestication Status

Wild

Nandinia binotata (African palm civet) has no history of domestication. People sometimes catch and keep it as a pet or trap it for local trade or meat, but it has not been bred for many generations or kept with animal care. It is solitary, nocturnal, arboreal, may raid fruit crops, spread seeds, and rarely link to disease.

Danger Level

Low
  • Defensive bites/scratches when captured/handled; small carnivoran dentition can still cause lacerations and infection risk.
  • Potential zoonotic exposure typical of wild small carnivores (e.g., ectoparasites; theoretical/region-dependent rabies exposure risk); risk increases with hunting, butchering, or keeping as pets.
  • Property nuisance complaints in some regions (fruit raiding), but serious attacks on humans are not characteristic for this species.

As a Pet

Not Suitable as Pet

Legality: Legality for African Palm Civet (Nandinia binotata) varies by country and state. Often seen as an exotic wild carnivore needing permits; many places ban private ownership. Not usually CITES-listed; import and welfare regulated.

Care Level: Expert Only

Purchase Cost: $1,000 - $3,500
Lifetime Cost: $15,000 - $45,000

Economic Value

Uses:
Bushmeat/subsistence hunting Local wildlife trade (live capture) Human-wildlife conflict (crop/fruit raiding perception) Ecosystem services (seed dispersal)
Products:
  • meat (local consumption in some areas)
  • live animal (small-scale trade/keeping)
  • minor/occasional use of skins (localized)

Relationships

Classification And Evolution

The African Palm Civet, also referred to as the Two-Spotted Palm Civet, is a Civet species native to the tropical jungles of eastern and central Africa. The African Palm Civet is in a genetic group of its own, Civettictis civetta, unlike the other Civet species, belonging to the larger group Viverra, which are closely related to each other, making it the most distinctive among the Civet species.

It is believed that the African Civet evolved from the Viverra genus of Civets around 12.3 million years ago, during the Miocene era. It is the last surviving member of its genus.

This mammal is widespread throughout numerous habitats with a large population in certain locations. They are great opportunists and are thought to be the most common forest-dwelling small carnivore in all of Africa.

Types Of

The African civet, which is the last surviving member of its genus Civettictis civetta, belongs to a larger family of civets, the group Viverra, of which there are around 19 species, placed in 10 to 12 genera. Here are just a few:

  • Malabar large-spotted civet (Viverra civettina)
  • Asian palm civet (Paradoxurus hermaphroditus)
  • Masked palm civet (Paguma larvata)
  • Small Indian civet (Viverricula indica)
  • Banded palm civet (Hemigalus derbyanus)
  • Large-spotted civet (Viverra megaspila)
  • Owston’s palm civet (Chrotogale owstoni)

Anatomy And Appearance

In spite of their Cat-like appearance and behaviors, these Civets are not felines but rather closely related to other small carnivores including genets, mongooses, and weasels. One of their most characteristic features is their brown to light-tan to yellow colored thick fur, which is flecked with an array of darker brown spots. The fur is darker on the top half of its body and allows the civet to be more easily camouflaged amongst the trees. As with other Civet species, the African Palm Civet has a muzzle that is sharply pointed and has strong, muscular yet comparably short limbs. They have small, rounded ears and yellow-green eyes with slit-shaped pupils.

Distribution And Habitat

The African Palm Civet is generally found inhabiting the tropical jungles and forests across much of eastern Africa and is even found in parts of central and western Africa, where its native habitats still exist. Today its range extends from southern Sudan to Guinea, throughout Angola, and into eastern Zimbabwe. African Palm Civets have proved to be extremely adaptable animals and may also be found in a wide variety of habitats from deciduous forests and lowland rainforests to river and savanna woodlands. The African Palm Civet however is being threatened in much of its natural range due to deforestation causing destruction to or total loss of many of their historical regions.

Behavior And Lifestyle

African Palm Civet (Nandinia binotata) - african palm civet at night

These mammals only emerge for a few hours at dawn and dusk to hunt for food.

A solitary animal that leads a crepuscular lifestyle, the African Palm Civet, only emerges for a few hours at dawn and dusk in order to hunt for food. They are chiefly tree-dwelling animals and much of the day and night is spent resting safely in the shelter of the trees. In spite of being rather solitary animals, when food is in abundance, these mammals have been known to assemble in groups of up to 15 members. African Palm Civets have two sets of scent glands that secret strong-smelling substances. Found between the third and fourth toes on each foot, and on the lower part of their abdomen, these glandular secretions are primarily for marking territories and are involved in mating.

Reproduction And Life Cycles

African Palm Civets are able to breed twice a year in May and October during the rainy seasons when there is more food available. After a gestation period that lasts for a couple of months, the female African Palm Civet generally gives birth to as many as 4 babies. The young are then weaned by their mother until they are strong enough and able to fend for themselves, which is usually around 60 days old. The female’s mammary glands produce an orange-yellow liquid that stains both her tummy and the baby’s fur the same color. This is thought to discourage males that are either looking for a mate or who want to harm her young. The lifespan of African Palm Civets is usually 15 years old, although it is rare for them to reach this age in the wild.

Diet And Prey

An omnivorous animal, the African Palm Civet survives on a diet comprised of both plants and other animals, although pineapples and other fruits still make up the majority of its diet. In addition to insects, small animals such as birds, rodents, frogs, and lizards, are also hunted by the African Palm Civet. African Palm Civets feed by holding their prey in their hands and biting it powerfully a number of times to kill it, before swallowing it whole. The long, sturdy tail is thought to be used as a brace where the Civet is balancing only on its hind legs, and along with the thick-skinned pads on the bottom of its feet, stabilizes the African Palm Civet on the branch while it’s eating.

Predators And Threats

Even though they are a secretive and somewhat ferocious predator, the African Palm Civet is in fact still preyed upon by numerous predators in their natural environment. Although they do spend most of their lives in the trees, African Palm Civets come down to the ground to look for food fairly often, and will even venture outside of the forest if their prey is in short supply. The most common predators of the African Palm Civet are large predatory cats, which include leopards and lions, that are able to hunt the Civet in the trees. Reptiles such as crocodiles and large snakes also hunt the African Palm Civet if given the chance. One of the biggest threats to the African Palm Civet today though is the loss of much of its natural habitat, mainly due to deforestation.

Interesting Facts And Features

African palm civets were once hunted as bushmeat in certain parts of Africa.

The African Palm Civet has a musk by their glands close to their reproductive organs that is secreted that has been collected by humans for hundreds of years. When in its concentrated form, the smell is said to be quite offensive to people, but when diluted, it is much more pleasant. It was this scent that became one of the ingredients in some of the most expensive perfumes in the world. African Palm Civet females are known to produce milk from the exact number of teats as they have young, to ensure that each of their offspring has enough milk to drink and individuals are not so easily excluded during feeding time. Although it is not so common today, African Palm Civets were once commonly hunted as bushmeat in certain parts of the continent.

Relationship With Humans

Farmers that live in the native habitats of the African Palm Civet view these animals very much as pests, as they are commonly known to raid poultry coops in order to get an easy meal. They are extremely persistent and abundant carnivores, which added to their secretiveness, has meant that they have caused great damage to livestock numbers in the past. Humans though have been a bigger threat to the African Palm Civet for years as they were hunted and trapped for their meat, scent, and thick fur coat which is used to make traditional ceremonial garments. The destruction of the African Palm Civet’s natural environment by people is thought to be the biggest threat to the species today.

Conservation Status And Life Today

The African Palm Civet has been listed as an animal that is at lower risk and therefore of Least Concern of becoming extinct in the wild in the immediate future. They are known to be widely distributed, and found in a variety of habitats and population numbers are also in abundance in certain areas. The African Palm Civet is currently under threat from deforestation and has been subjected to the drastic loss of much of its natural habitat. The main reason for such extensive deforestation in these areas is logging and land clearing for plantations used to make palm oil.

View all 326 animals that start with A
How to say African Palm Civet in ...
German
Pardelroller
English
African Palm Civet
Finnish
Afrikanpalmunäätä
French
Civette palmiste africaine
Dutch
Pardelroller
English
Afrikansk palmeruller
Turkish
Afrika palmiye misk kedisi

Sources

  1. David Burnie, Dorling Kindersley (2011) Animal, The Definitive Visual Guide To The World's Wildlife / Accessed August 10, 2010
  2. Tom Jackson, Lorenz Books (2007) The World Encyclopedia Of Animals / Accessed August 10, 2010
  3. David Burnie, Kingfisher (2011) The Kingfisher Animal Encyclopedia / Accessed August 10, 2010
  4. Richard Mackay, University of California Press (2009) The Atlas Of Endangered Species / Accessed August 10, 2010
  5. David Burnie, Dorling Kindersley (2008) Illustrated Encyclopedia Of Animals / Accessed August 10, 2010
  6. Dorling Kindersley (2006) Dorling Kindersley Encyclopedia Of Animals / Accessed August 10, 2010
  7. David W. Macdonald, Oxford University Press (2010) The Encyclopedia Of Mammals / Accessed August 10, 2010
  8. African Palm Civet Information / Accessed August 10, 2010
  9. African Palm Civet Diet / Accessed August 10, 2010
  10. African Palm Civet Appearance / Accessed August 10, 2010
  11. African Palm Civet Conservation / Accessed August 10, 2010
  12. African Palm Civet Lifestyle / Accessed August 10, 2010
Melissa Bauernfeind

About the Author

Melissa Bauernfeind

Melissa Bauernfeind was born in NYC and got her degree in Journalism from Boston University. She lived in San Diego for 10 years and is now back in NYC. She loves adventure and traveling the world with her husband but always misses her favorite little man, "P", half Chihuahua/half Jack Russell, all trouble. She got dive-certified so she could dive with the Great White Sharks someday and is hoping to swim with the Orcas as well.
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African Palm Civet FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions)

African Palm Civets are Omnivores, meaning they eat both plants and other animals.