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  2. Eastern meadow vole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_meadow_vole

    Eastern meadow voles eat most available species of grasses, sedges, and forbs, including many agricultural plant species. [5] [9] In summer and fall, grasses are cut into match-length sections to reach the succulent portions of the leaves and seedheads. Leaves, flowers, and fruits of forbs are also typical components of the summer diet.

  3. Short-tailed field vole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-tailed_field_vole

    The short-tailed field vole breeds throughout the year but the breeding season peaks in spring and summer. The nest is made on or just under the surface of the ground, often in a clump of grass or sedge. The gestation period is about three weeks and up to a dozen young are borne.

  4. Woodland vole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodland_vole

    Alfisol and Ultisol soil types are particularly favored due to being favorable to the vole's burrowing system. [2] Voles feed on both the roots and stem system and the vegetation of plants, as well as fruits, seeds, bark, subterranean fungus and insects. [4] Because they feed on roots and tubers, voles do not need to drink water much. [3]

  5. Looking Out: The mystery of the yard holes

    www.aol.com/looking-mystery-yard-holes-083057601...

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  6. Townsend's vole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Townsend's_vole

    Townsend's vole lives in a burrow system and creates runways among the vegetation in its habitat. The runways are used all year round by successive generations of voles and may be 2.5 to 5 cm (1 to 2 in) deep. [5] In the summer the voles may take advantage of the denser cover available and also move about elsewhere.

  7. Western meadow vole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_meadow_vole

    Meadow voles appeared to be randomly distributed within a grassland habitat in southern Quebec. [14] Grant and Morris [14] were not able to establish any association of meadow vole abundance with particular plant species. They were also unable to distinguish between food and cover as the determining factor in meadow vole association with dense ...

  8. Warning after detectorists dig up nature reserve - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/warning-detectorists-dig-nature...

    Visitors to a nature reserve have been warned to take care because of a series of holes made by metal detectorists. Kent Wildlife Trust said "someone may be injured by the trip hazard" at The ...

  9. Robots are helping restore lost seagrass meadows - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/robots-helping-restore-lost-sea...

    Chris Oakes, CEO of ReefGen, is seen here in the southern end of the Outer Banks, North Carolina, preparing to place Grasshopper, a seagrass planting robot, on the ocean floor to plant eel grass ...