Difference between revisions of "Microtus arvalis"

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[[File:Feldmaus Microtus arvalis.jpg|250px|thumb|''Microtus arvalis'' (click on image to enlarge it)<br/>Source: [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Feldmaus_Microtus_arvalis.jpg Wikimedia Commons]]]
 
[[File:Feldmaus Microtus arvalis.jpg|250px|thumb|''Microtus arvalis'' (click on image to enlarge it)<br/>Source: [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Feldmaus_Microtus_arvalis.jpg Wikimedia Commons]]]
<font color="#800000">'''''Microtus arvalis'''''</font> (Pallas, 1778) - common vole<br/>
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<font color="#800000">'''''Microtus arvalis'''''</font> (Pallas, 1778) - (common vole)
damages various crops and young forest trees.
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For details see the respective page in [[wikipedia:Common Vole|Wikipedia]].
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The vole is found in Europe and neighbouring regions. It normally lives in grasslands near forests, but can become an agricultural pests when populations reach 1000 individuals per hectare. Crops attacked include cereals, lucerne and vegetables. During outbreak years, vole-related crop damage can reach 20% in some areas. It can also damage young forest and fruit trees by feeding on the bark during the winter. Death of fruit trees due to vole damage can exceed 50% ([[Plant Protection Science (2019) 55, 142-147|Suchomel et al., 2019]]).
  
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At low densities, the diet consists of grasses, the bark and roots of trees as well as various herbs. A vole population goes through cycles where several years of low densities (less than 10 individuals per ha) are followed by years of medium densities and then by several years of high densities (more than 1000 ind. per ha), before the population declines again.
 
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The common vole constructs an elaborate system of borrows, up to 50 cm deep. These are connected by well-maintained, above-ground runways which enable orientation and fast movement. Management involves the mechanical destructions of burrows and the use of baits treated with rodenticides.
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The body of the adult vole is about 10 cm long and the tail 3-4 cm. The colour is brownish to grayish with a lighter belly. There are 3-6 litters per year, each with an offspring of 4-5.
  
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<gallery widths=200px caption="Other images of Microtus arvalis (Wikimedia Commons - click to enlarge)">
 
<gallery widths=200px caption="Other images of Microtus arvalis (Wikimedia Commons - click to enlarge)">
File:Microtus arvalis lenghts.JPG|parts indicating lengths important for identification
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File:Microtus arvalis lenghts.JPG|lengths important for identification marked
 
File:Microtus arvalis entry holes.JPG|infestation - entry holes of burrows
 
File:Microtus arvalis entry holes.JPG|infestation - entry holes of burrows
 
File:Mapa Microtus arvalis.png|distribution map
 
File:Mapa Microtus arvalis.png|distribution map

Latest revision as of 08:30, 16 April 2019


Literature database
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Microtus arvalis (click on image to enlarge it)
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Microtus arvalis (Pallas, 1778) - (common vole)

The vole is found in Europe and neighbouring regions. It normally lives in grasslands near forests, but can become an agricultural pests when populations reach 1000 individuals per hectare. Crops attacked include cereals, lucerne and vegetables. During outbreak years, vole-related crop damage can reach 20% in some areas. It can also damage young forest and fruit trees by feeding on the bark during the winter. Death of fruit trees due to vole damage can exceed 50% (Suchomel et al., 2019).

At low densities, the diet consists of grasses, the bark and roots of trees as well as various herbs. A vole population goes through cycles where several years of low densities (less than 10 individuals per ha) are followed by years of medium densities and then by several years of high densities (more than 1000 ind. per ha), before the population declines again.

Vernacular names
• Deutsch: Feldmaus
• English: common vole
• Español: ratón de campo
• Français: campagnol des champs

The common vole constructs an elaborate system of borrows, up to 50 cm deep. These are connected by well-maintained, above-ground runways which enable orientation and fast movement. Management involves the mechanical destructions of burrows and the use of baits treated with rodenticides.

The body of the adult vole is about 10 cm long and the tail 3-4 cm. The colour is brownish to grayish with a lighter belly. There are 3-6 litters per year, each with an offspring of 4-5.