Comparative demography of Clethrionomys rutilus in taiga and tundra in the low Arctic

Our working hypothesis was that winter mortality of Clethrionomys rutilus would be more severe in tundra than in taiga, and in winters with "unfavorable" rather than "favorable" conditions during establishment or ablation of the snow cover or in the subnivean environment during m...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Canadian Journal of Zoology
Main Authors: Martell, A. M., Fuller, W. A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1979
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/z79-278
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/z79-278
Description
Summary:Our working hypothesis was that winter mortality of Clethrionomys rutilus would be more severe in tundra than in taiga, and in winters with "unfavorable" rather than "favorable" conditions during establishment or ablation of the snow cover or in the subnivean environment during midwinter. Vole mortality was higher in the tundra (90–95%) than in the taiga (55–75%), in accordance with our prediction, but year to year differences in snow conditions were not necessary determinants of winter survival during the 4 years of the study. Subnivean breeding was never detected. The onset of summer breeding was related to the time of snow melt, and a late spring was followed by a low rate of maturation of young-of-the-year females and small spring-to-fall increase in numbers. Few young of either sex matured in two of three summers in the taiga, whereas about half the females and one-third of the males matured each year on the tundra. Litters were significantly larger on the tundra and spring sex ratios were female biased. Thus reproductive output was high on the tundra, which would offset high winter losses. Intraspecific wounding was related to density and maturity except that on the tundra many immature young had bites. No superannual fluctuation was apparent on the tundra.