Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The average eastern meadow vole lifespan is less than one month because of high nestling and juvenile mortality. [8] The average time adults are recapturable in a given habitat is about two months, suggesting the average extended lifespan (i.e. how much time adult eastern meadow voles have left) is about two months, not figuring in emigration. [8]
The western meadow vole (Microtus drummondii) is a species of North American vole found in western North America, the midwestern United States, western Ontario, Canada, and formerly in Mexico. It was previously considered conspecific with the eastern meadow vole ( M. pennsylvanicus ), but genetic studies indicate that it is a distinct species.
Another species from the same genus, the meadow vole, has promiscuously mating males, and scientists have changed adult male meadow voles' behavior to resemble that of prairie voles in experiments in which a viral vector was used to increase a single gene's expression within a particular brain region. [15]
Microtus is a genus of voles found in North America, Europe and northern Asia. The genus name refers to the small ears of these animals. They are stout rodents with short ears, legs and tails.
The gray-tailed vole (Microtus canicaudus) also known as the gray-tailed meadow vole or gray-tailed meadow mouse, is a rodent in the genus Microtus (small-eared "meadow voles") of the family Cricetidae. Voles are small mammals, and this species lies roughly in the middle of their size range.
However, voles may be spotted occasionally, while moles, which spend most of their lives underground, are seldom seen. Voles, which are herbivores, construct surface or underground runways in ...
AOL Mail welcomes Verizon customers to our safe and delightful email experience!
Meadow vole (ᐊᕕᙵᕋᓛᖅ) Microtus pennsylvanicus [2] Northern red-backed vole (ᐅᑭᐅᖅᑕᖅᑐᒥ ᐊᐅᐸᖅᑐᒥᒃ ᕐᑯᓖᓕᒃ ᐊᕕᙵᕋᓛᖅ) Myodes rutilus [2] Brown rat (ulimakka) Rattus norvegicus (introduced) [2] [13] Sciuridae (ᓯᒃᓯᑦ) [2] Arctic ground squirrel (ᓯᒃᓯᒃ, siksik) Spermophilus parryii ...