Social organization in cyclic subarctic populations of the voles Clethrionomys rufocanus (Sund.) and Microtus agrestis (L.)

Fluctuating populations of C. rufocanus and M. agrestis were studied by capture-marking- recapture trapping and snap-trapping at Kilpisjärvi, Finnish Lapland during several years. All categories of C. rufocanus were nearly twice as trappable as those of M. agrestis, but differences in social status...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Viitala, Jussi
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 1977
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-39-9995-7
id ftjyvaeskylaenun:oai:jyx.jyu.fi:123456789/92858
record_format openpolar
spelling ftjyvaeskylaenun:oai:jyx.jyu.fi:123456789/92858 2024-02-11T10:05:31+01:00 Social organization in cyclic subarctic populations of the voles Clethrionomys rufocanus (Sund.) and Microtus agrestis (L.) Viitala, Jussi 1977 application/pdf http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-39-9995-7 unknown 978-951-39-9995-7 URN:ISBN:978-951-39-9995-7 http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-39-9995-7 openAccess Diss. 1977 ftjyvaeskylaenun 2024-01-25T00:02:21Z Fluctuating populations of C. rufocanus and M. agrestis were studied by capture-marking- recapture trapping and snap-trapping at Kilpisjärvi, Finnish Lapland during several years. All categories of C. rufocanus were nearly twice as trappable as those of M. agrestis, but differences in social status caused differences in trappability between individuals of the same category. Trappability was therefore used as a measure of the social status of the individual. In both species the population had a group structure; each group consisted of many mature females with territories and some semi-territorial or non-territorial mature males. The immatures were non-territorial. In M. agrestis these groups, increased by immigrants, changed during the summer to harem-like structures defended by highly aggressive territorial males. The numbers of reproducing females were controlled by territorial behaviour. In C. rufocanus maturation ceased when all habitable space was occupied, whereas in M. agrestis the young females emigrated to independent home ranges shortly before the birth of their first or second litter. In males of both species maturation was controlled by the aggressive behaviour of the highly mobile mature males. These formed a dominance hierarchy, and as a result some of the males that matured at a later stage were forced to emigrate. During a population decline the oldest dominant age classes survived best, whereas during a population increase the young age groups survived somewhat better. In suboptimal habitats, changes in age structure always resembled those of a declining population. In competition M. agrestis is superior to C. rufocanus, but the difference is slight, as indicated by the impact of M. agrestis upon the age structure of C. rufocanus. Neither the early cessation of breeding observed in some years nor the population declines were directly correlated with population density, but other factors must be involved, possibly nutrition. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Kilpisjärvi Subarctic Lapland JYX - Jyväskylä University Digital Archive Kilpisjärvi ENVELOPE(20.767,20.767,69.034,69.034) Sund ENVELOPE(13.644,13.644,66.207,66.207)
institution Open Polar
collection JYX - Jyväskylä University Digital Archive
op_collection_id ftjyvaeskylaenun
language unknown
description Fluctuating populations of C. rufocanus and M. agrestis were studied by capture-marking- recapture trapping and snap-trapping at Kilpisjärvi, Finnish Lapland during several years. All categories of C. rufocanus were nearly twice as trappable as those of M. agrestis, but differences in social status caused differences in trappability between individuals of the same category. Trappability was therefore used as a measure of the social status of the individual. In both species the population had a group structure; each group consisted of many mature females with territories and some semi-territorial or non-territorial mature males. The immatures were non-territorial. In M. agrestis these groups, increased by immigrants, changed during the summer to harem-like structures defended by highly aggressive territorial males. The numbers of reproducing females were controlled by territorial behaviour. In C. rufocanus maturation ceased when all habitable space was occupied, whereas in M. agrestis the young females emigrated to independent home ranges shortly before the birth of their first or second litter. In males of both species maturation was controlled by the aggressive behaviour of the highly mobile mature males. These formed a dominance hierarchy, and as a result some of the males that matured at a later stage were forced to emigrate. During a population decline the oldest dominant age classes survived best, whereas during a population increase the young age groups survived somewhat better. In suboptimal habitats, changes in age structure always resembled those of a declining population. In competition M. agrestis is superior to C. rufocanus, but the difference is slight, as indicated by the impact of M. agrestis upon the age structure of C. rufocanus. Neither the early cessation of breeding observed in some years nor the population declines were directly correlated with population density, but other factors must be involved, possibly nutrition.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Viitala, Jussi
spellingShingle Viitala, Jussi
Social organization in cyclic subarctic populations of the voles Clethrionomys rufocanus (Sund.) and Microtus agrestis (L.)
author_facet Viitala, Jussi
author_sort Viitala, Jussi
title Social organization in cyclic subarctic populations of the voles Clethrionomys rufocanus (Sund.) and Microtus agrestis (L.)
title_short Social organization in cyclic subarctic populations of the voles Clethrionomys rufocanus (Sund.) and Microtus agrestis (L.)
title_full Social organization in cyclic subarctic populations of the voles Clethrionomys rufocanus (Sund.) and Microtus agrestis (L.)
title_fullStr Social organization in cyclic subarctic populations of the voles Clethrionomys rufocanus (Sund.) and Microtus agrestis (L.)
title_full_unstemmed Social organization in cyclic subarctic populations of the voles Clethrionomys rufocanus (Sund.) and Microtus agrestis (L.)
title_sort social organization in cyclic subarctic populations of the voles clethrionomys rufocanus (sund.) and microtus agrestis (l.)
publishDate 1977
url http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-39-9995-7
long_lat ENVELOPE(20.767,20.767,69.034,69.034)
ENVELOPE(13.644,13.644,66.207,66.207)
geographic Kilpisjärvi
Sund
geographic_facet Kilpisjärvi
Sund
genre Kilpisjärvi
Subarctic
Lapland
genre_facet Kilpisjärvi
Subarctic
Lapland
op_relation 978-951-39-9995-7
URN:ISBN:978-951-39-9995-7
http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-39-9995-7
op_rights openAccess
_version_ 1790602573341786112