Fishers (Martes pennanti) in the mountains of California's Sierra Nevada oc
cur at the southwestern margin of their distribution and inhabit different
forest types with different potential prey than elsewhere in their range. T
wo typical fisher prey, the snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) and the porcup
ine (Erethizon dorsatum), are absent from our Sierra Nevada study area. We
characterized the diet of fishers in the southern Sierra Nevada by analyzin
g the content of 201 feces (44 males : 157 females) collected either from t
rapped animals or from the rest sites of radio-collared animals. Mammals we
re the most frequent food item; however, unlike previous reports, reptiles
(20.4% of feces) and insects (55.7%) were major components of the diet. We
also sampled 24 feces for the presence of spores of hypogeous fungi (false
truffles) and found that 91.7% had spores representing at least six fungal
species. Diversity of the diet was indicated by the fact that remains of no
single family of animal or plant group were found in >22% of feces. The fi
sher is reputed to be a habitat specialist in the late-seral mixed conifer-
deciduous forests of the western United States. Perhaps it is for this reas
on that our data depict the species as a dietary generalist, for whom it ma
y be necessary to forage on many of the animal, plant, and fungal species t
hat occur in and near mature coniferous habitat.