Voles and weasels in the boreal Fennoscandian small mammal community : What happens if the least weasel disappears due to climate change?
Ylönen, H., Haapakoski, M., Sievert, T., & Sundell, J. (2019). Voles and weasels in the boreal Fennoscandian small mammal community : What happens if the least weasel disappears due to climate change?. Integrative Zoology, 14(4), 327-340. https://doi.org/10.1111/1749-4877.12388
Published in
Integrative ZoologyDate
2019Copyright
© 2019 The Authors
Climate change, habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats for populations and a challenge for individual behavior, interactions and survival. Predator–prey interactions are modified by climate processes. In the northern latitudes, strong seasonality is changing and the main predicted feature is shortening and instability of winter. Vole populations in the boreal Fennoscandia exhibit multiannual cycles. High amplitude peak numbers of voles and dramatic population lows alternate in 3–5‐year cycles shortening from North to South. One key factor, or driver, promoting the population crash and causing extreme extended lows, is suggested to be predation by the least weasel. We review the arms race between prey voles and weasels through the multiannual density fluctuation, affected by climate change, and especially the changes in the duration and stability of snow cover. For ground‐dwelling small mammals, snow provides thermoregulation and shelter for nest sites, and helps them hide from predators. Predicted increases in the instability of winter forms a major challenge for species with coat color change between brown summer camouflage and white winter coat. One of these is the least weasel, Mustela nivalis nivalis. Increased vulnerability of wrong‐colored weasels to predation affects vole populations and may have dramatic effects on vole dynamics. It may have cascading effects on other small rodent–predator interactions and even on plant–animal interactions and forest dynamics.
...
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.ISSN Search the Publication Forum
1749-4869Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/28949716
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Biological interactions in the boreal ecosystem under climate change : are the vole and predator cycles disappearing?
Korpela, Katri (University of Jyväskylä, 2014) -
Out in the open : behavior’s effect on predation risk and thermoregulation by aposematic caterpillars
Nielsen, Matthew E.; Mappes, Johanna (Oxford University Press, 2020)Warning coloration should be under strong stabilizing selection but often displays considerable intraspecific variation. Opposing selection on color by predators and temperature is one potential explanation for this seeming ... -
Predation risk shaping individual behaviour, life histories and species interactions in small mammals
Trebatická, Lenka (University of Jyväskylä, 2009)Trebatická havaitsi, että Suomen yleisin nisäkäs, metsämyyrä, on erittäin hyvin sopeutunut lyhyen lisääntymiskauden tehokkaaseen käyttöön ja pahimpien petojen välttämiseen. Parempi pedonvälttäminen kuin esimerkiksi toisella ... -
Overwintering strategies of a boreal small mammal in a changing climate
Sipari, Saana (University of Jyväskylä, 2015) -
Social information use by predators : expanding the information ecology of prey defences
Hämäläinen, Liisa; M. Rowland, Hannah; Mappes, Johanna; Thorogood, Rose (Wiley-Blackwell, 2022)Social information use is well documented across the animal kingdom, but how it influences ecological and evolutionary processes is only just beginning to be investigated. Here we evaluate how social transmission may ...