The ecology and ecophysiology of Marion Island house mice, Mus Musculus L.

English: This thesis presents the results of a studv of the biotic and abiotic conditions experienced by house mice on Marion Island, their morphological and reproductional adaptations to island conditions, the seasonal changes in their diet. and of the densities and biomasses of their prey items. B...

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Main Author: Avanant, Nico Loubser
Other Authors: Kok, O. B., Smith, V. R.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11660/2720
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spelling ftunivfreestate:oai:scholar.ufs.ac.za:11660/2720 2023-05-15T17:10:19+02:00 The ecology and ecophysiology of Marion Island house mice, Mus Musculus L. Avanant, Nico Loubser Kok, O. B. Smith, V. R. 1999 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11660/2720 en eng University of the Free State http://hdl.handle.net/11660/2720 University of the Free State Mice -- Environmental aspects -- Marion Island (Prince Edward Islands) Thesis (D.Phil. (Zoology and Entomology))--University of the Orange Free State 1999 Thesis 1999 ftunivfreestate 2022-07-09T06:05:20Z English: This thesis presents the results of a studv of the biotic and abiotic conditions experienced by house mice on Marion Island, their morphological and reproductional adaptations to island conditions, the seasonal changes in their diet. and of the densities and biomasses of their prey items. By establishing burrow systems and sheltered aboveground runways nuce experience a microelimate that is far less harsh than the macroelimatie regime. In terms of warmth, this extends the season of mouse activity significantly compared with what would be allowed by the macroclimate. House mice are opportunistic feeders and this plays a major role in their survival under the harsh conditions on Marion Island. The mice are primarily carnivores and impact severely on soil macroinvertebrate populations, annually removing up to several times the average instantaneous standing crop of some macroinvertebrate populations. Since macroinvertebrates are cardinal agents of ecosystem functioning by being the main mediators of nutrient cycling on the island, their predation by mice has severe ecological implications. Between 1979/80 and 1992/93 the densities and biomasses of the mouse's major invertebrate prey species have decreased. The percentage composition of the various prey types in the macroinvertebrate population has also changed. These changes have caused changes in the composition of the mouse's diet. Seasonal changes in reproductive status, sex ratio, age structure, body mass and length, kidney- and adrenal mass, and length and shape of intestines were determined, in order to provide information concerning the house mouse's response to fluctuating environmental parameters and to assess the levels of stress experienced by mice at different times of the year. Stress levels are influenced by population density, sex, reproductive status, temperature and availability of food. In 1992/93 mice had significantly larger body to tail length ratios than in 1979/80, despite the fact that the island warmed considerably in the interim. ... Thesis Marion Island Prince Edward Islands KovsieScholar Repository (University of the Free State - UFS UV)
institution Open Polar
collection KovsieScholar Repository (University of the Free State - UFS UV)
op_collection_id ftunivfreestate
language English
topic Mice -- Environmental aspects -- Marion Island (Prince Edward Islands)
Thesis (D.Phil. (Zoology and Entomology))--University of the Orange Free State
1999
spellingShingle Mice -- Environmental aspects -- Marion Island (Prince Edward Islands)
Thesis (D.Phil. (Zoology and Entomology))--University of the Orange Free State
1999
Avanant, Nico Loubser
The ecology and ecophysiology of Marion Island house mice, Mus Musculus L.
topic_facet Mice -- Environmental aspects -- Marion Island (Prince Edward Islands)
Thesis (D.Phil. (Zoology and Entomology))--University of the Orange Free State
1999
description English: This thesis presents the results of a studv of the biotic and abiotic conditions experienced by house mice on Marion Island, their morphological and reproductional adaptations to island conditions, the seasonal changes in their diet. and of the densities and biomasses of their prey items. By establishing burrow systems and sheltered aboveground runways nuce experience a microelimate that is far less harsh than the macroelimatie regime. In terms of warmth, this extends the season of mouse activity significantly compared with what would be allowed by the macroclimate. House mice are opportunistic feeders and this plays a major role in their survival under the harsh conditions on Marion Island. The mice are primarily carnivores and impact severely on soil macroinvertebrate populations, annually removing up to several times the average instantaneous standing crop of some macroinvertebrate populations. Since macroinvertebrates are cardinal agents of ecosystem functioning by being the main mediators of nutrient cycling on the island, their predation by mice has severe ecological implications. Between 1979/80 and 1992/93 the densities and biomasses of the mouse's major invertebrate prey species have decreased. The percentage composition of the various prey types in the macroinvertebrate population has also changed. These changes have caused changes in the composition of the mouse's diet. Seasonal changes in reproductive status, sex ratio, age structure, body mass and length, kidney- and adrenal mass, and length and shape of intestines were determined, in order to provide information concerning the house mouse's response to fluctuating environmental parameters and to assess the levels of stress experienced by mice at different times of the year. Stress levels are influenced by population density, sex, reproductive status, temperature and availability of food. In 1992/93 mice had significantly larger body to tail length ratios than in 1979/80, despite the fact that the island warmed considerably in the interim. ...
author2 Kok, O. B.
Smith, V. R.
format Thesis
author Avanant, Nico Loubser
author_facet Avanant, Nico Loubser
author_sort Avanant, Nico Loubser
title The ecology and ecophysiology of Marion Island house mice, Mus Musculus L.
title_short The ecology and ecophysiology of Marion Island house mice, Mus Musculus L.
title_full The ecology and ecophysiology of Marion Island house mice, Mus Musculus L.
title_fullStr The ecology and ecophysiology of Marion Island house mice, Mus Musculus L.
title_full_unstemmed The ecology and ecophysiology of Marion Island house mice, Mus Musculus L.
title_sort ecology and ecophysiology of marion island house mice, mus musculus l.
publisher University of the Free State
publishDate 1999
url http://hdl.handle.net/11660/2720
genre Marion Island
Prince Edward Islands
genre_facet Marion Island
Prince Edward Islands
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11660/2720
op_rights University of the Free State
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