Cricetidae
Author
Don E. Wilson
Author
Russell A. Mittermeier
Author
Thomas E. Lacher, Jr
text
2017
2017-11-30
Lynx Edicions
Barcelona
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 7 Rodents II
204
535
book chapter
80832
10.5281/zenodo.6707142
ab66b2b7-9544-4411-bf61-5bc3651d7bca
978-84-16728-04-6
6707142
139.
Beach Vole
Microtus brewer
French:
Campagnol de Muskeget
/
German:
Strandw
(ihimaus
/
Spanish:
Topillo de Muskeget
Other common names:
Beach Meadow Mouse
,
Beach Mouse
Taxonomy.
Arvicola brewer: Baird, 1858
,
Muskeget Island, west of Nantucket Island,
Massachusetts
,
USA
.
Based on mtDNA and nDNA,
M. brewer
: is minimally distinctive from
M. pennsylvanicus
and nested in its eastern clade. The current population of
M. breweri
was founded from 26 relict individuals that survived depredation by introduced feral cats and were reintroduced to the main part of Muskeget Island in 1893. Monotypic.
Distribution.
Muskeget I, Massachusetts, USA.
Descriptive notes.
Head—body 124-155 mm (males) and 130-146 mm (females), tail 45-60 mm (males) and 35-55 mm (females), hindfoot 22-25 mm (males) and 22-25 mm (females); weight 45-1-62-9 g.
Males are larger than females. The Beach Vole differs from the Meadow Vole (
M. pennsylvanicus
) by having larger skull and longer narrower braincase. Nasals are wider anteriorly, and interparietal is longer. Dorsal pelage is paler, longer, and coarser than the Meadow Voles, and is buffy gray, with scattered brownor back-tipped hair; sides are paler. Tailis bicolored, with brown or black above and off-white below. It has a patch or blaze ofwhite fur on forehead, or less commonly on chin or throat (¢.25% of individuals). Chromosomal complement of the Beach Vole is nearly identical to that of the Meadow Vole, and both species have 46 chromosomes.
Habitat.
Variety of plant associations, dominantly
Ammophila
breviligulata (
Poaceae
) where runways are built, identified by grass clippings. The Beach Vole is also associated with
Rhus
radicans (
Anacardiaceae
),
Rosa
rugosa (
Rosaceae
),
Juniperus
virginiana (
Juniperaceae
), and
Myrica pennsylvanica (Myricaceae)
. It burrows and uses tunnels, and nests are constructed aboveand belowground.
Food and Feeding.
Beach Voles eat tender shoots of beach grass in warm months and cache grass stems in wet sand to eat in winter.
Breeding.
Beach Voles breed from spring to autumn, with young born in nests in underground burrows or under debris or driftwood cover. Females typically produce multiple litters of 4-5 young/year. Compared with Meadow Voles, Beach Voles reach sexual maturity later and have lower pregnancy rates and smaller litter sizes.
Activity patterns.
Activity patterns of Beach Voles vary temporally between sexes.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
In contrast to most other microtine voles, densities of Beach Voles have fewer and smaller fluctuations. Because it is an island species, lack of a dispersal sink and fewer predators may contribute to relatively stable populations, although density fluctuates from c.5 ind/ha in low years to c.15 ind/ha in peak years. A nearly sixfold fluctuation in density also has been reported, and very early reports suggested high densities of Beach Voles. Adult sex ratios vary little between years, and adult male and adult female daily home ranges are similar.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Vulnerable on The IUCN Red List. The Beach Vole occurs in less than 2:6 km?
Bibliography.
Miller (1896b), Modi (1987), Musser & Carleton (2005), Rothstein & Tamarin (1977), Tamarin (1977a, 1977b), Tamarin & Kunz (1974), Tamarin et al. (1987), Zwicker (1989).