The Influence of Ship Rats (Rattus Rattus) on the Habitat Preferences of the House Mouse (Mus Musculus)

As methods and successes of Rattus rattus (ship rat) control progress, particularly in island environments, the importance of managing Mus musculus (house mouse) increases. M. musculus can negatively impact on a variety of native fauna and flora, potentially creating long term cascading effects. M....

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Main Author: Hancock, Benjamin (11664529)
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Rat
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.16959115.v1
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spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/16959115 2023-05-15T18:05:15+02:00 The Influence of Ship Rats (Rattus Rattus) on the Habitat Preferences of the House Mouse (Mus Musculus) Hancock, Benjamin (11664529) 2008-01-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.16959115.v1 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/The_Influence_of_Ship_Rats_Rattus_Rattus_on_the_Habitat_Preferences_of_the_House_Mouse_Mus_Musculus_/16959115 doi:10.26686/wgtn.16959115.v1 Author Retains Copyright Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified Rat Mouse Ecology School: School of Biological Sciences 059999 Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified Marsden: 300805 Conservation (Environmental Science) Degree Discipline: Ecology and Biodiversity Degree Level: Masters Degree Name: Master of Science Text Thesis 2008 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.16959115.v1 2021-12-19T22:24:40Z As methods and successes of Rattus rattus (ship rat) control progress, particularly in island environments, the importance of managing Mus musculus (house mouse) increases. M. musculus can negatively impact on a variety of native fauna and flora, potentially creating long term cascading effects. M. musculus populations benefit with the reduction in R. rattus abundance and recover sooner from pest control programs. This three-part study investigated the habitat utilisation of M. musculus and how their relationship with R. rattus influences their habitat preferences. Firstly, hypotheses about the habitat preferences of M. musculus were tested over a landscape scale to determine the features of the environment most important to their distribution. Then the direct effect of R. rattus presence on M. musculus habitat-use was investigated in arena trials. Lastly, in the same arenas, canopy cover was tested as an indirect cue for M. musculus to evaluate the presence of R. rattus. Across 32 sites, M. musculus were the most abundant in warm dry habitats. North facing slopes and rank grass cover were the features of the environment that had the strongest relationship with abundance. In arenas M. musculus foraging activity was 52% lower in patches of short grass when R. rattus scent was present but foraging in rank grass and bare ground was not altered, suggesting activity was suppressed not competitive displacement. There were no significant changes in M. musculus foraging behaviour between different canopy treatments. Although a trend of nocturnal foraging activity dropping 26% when high canopy cover was over short grass compared to short grass patches with lower or no canopy treatments may indicate a risky habitat. M. musculus use of dense ground cover was common theme in this study and in the literature. R. rattus do influence the habitat selection of M. musculus though this was with direct presence more than indirect cues. Thesis Rattus rattus Unknown Marsden ENVELOPE(66.067,66.067,-67.867,-67.867)
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified
Rat
Mouse
Ecology
School: School of Biological Sciences
059999 Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified
Marsden: 300805 Conservation (Environmental Science)
Degree Discipline: Ecology and Biodiversity
Degree Level: Masters
Degree Name: Master of Science
spellingShingle Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified
Rat
Mouse
Ecology
School: School of Biological Sciences
059999 Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified
Marsden: 300805 Conservation (Environmental Science)
Degree Discipline: Ecology and Biodiversity
Degree Level: Masters
Degree Name: Master of Science
Hancock, Benjamin (11664529)
The Influence of Ship Rats (Rattus Rattus) on the Habitat Preferences of the House Mouse (Mus Musculus)
topic_facet Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified
Rat
Mouse
Ecology
School: School of Biological Sciences
059999 Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified
Marsden: 300805 Conservation (Environmental Science)
Degree Discipline: Ecology and Biodiversity
Degree Level: Masters
Degree Name: Master of Science
description As methods and successes of Rattus rattus (ship rat) control progress, particularly in island environments, the importance of managing Mus musculus (house mouse) increases. M. musculus can negatively impact on a variety of native fauna and flora, potentially creating long term cascading effects. M. musculus populations benefit with the reduction in R. rattus abundance and recover sooner from pest control programs. This three-part study investigated the habitat utilisation of M. musculus and how their relationship with R. rattus influences their habitat preferences. Firstly, hypotheses about the habitat preferences of M. musculus were tested over a landscape scale to determine the features of the environment most important to their distribution. Then the direct effect of R. rattus presence on M. musculus habitat-use was investigated in arena trials. Lastly, in the same arenas, canopy cover was tested as an indirect cue for M. musculus to evaluate the presence of R. rattus. Across 32 sites, M. musculus were the most abundant in warm dry habitats. North facing slopes and rank grass cover were the features of the environment that had the strongest relationship with abundance. In arenas M. musculus foraging activity was 52% lower in patches of short grass when R. rattus scent was present but foraging in rank grass and bare ground was not altered, suggesting activity was suppressed not competitive displacement. There were no significant changes in M. musculus foraging behaviour between different canopy treatments. Although a trend of nocturnal foraging activity dropping 26% when high canopy cover was over short grass compared to short grass patches with lower or no canopy treatments may indicate a risky habitat. M. musculus use of dense ground cover was common theme in this study and in the literature. R. rattus do influence the habitat selection of M. musculus though this was with direct presence more than indirect cues.
format Thesis
author Hancock, Benjamin (11664529)
author_facet Hancock, Benjamin (11664529)
author_sort Hancock, Benjamin (11664529)
title The Influence of Ship Rats (Rattus Rattus) on the Habitat Preferences of the House Mouse (Mus Musculus)
title_short The Influence of Ship Rats (Rattus Rattus) on the Habitat Preferences of the House Mouse (Mus Musculus)
title_full The Influence of Ship Rats (Rattus Rattus) on the Habitat Preferences of the House Mouse (Mus Musculus)
title_fullStr The Influence of Ship Rats (Rattus Rattus) on the Habitat Preferences of the House Mouse (Mus Musculus)
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Ship Rats (Rattus Rattus) on the Habitat Preferences of the House Mouse (Mus Musculus)
title_sort influence of ship rats (rattus rattus) on the habitat preferences of the house mouse (mus musculus)
publishDate 2008
url https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.16959115.v1
long_lat ENVELOPE(66.067,66.067,-67.867,-67.867)
geographic Marsden
geographic_facet Marsden
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/The_Influence_of_Ship_Rats_Rattus_Rattus_on_the_Habitat_Preferences_of_the_House_Mouse_Mus_Musculus_/16959115
doi:10.26686/wgtn.16959115.v1
op_rights Author Retains Copyright
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.16959115.v1
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