Longevity of the Northern Short-Tail Shrew

Material Information

Title:
Longevity of the Northern Short-Tail Shrew
Creator:
Sara Ressing ( author )
Publication Date:

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Shrew
SUNY Oswego
Quest 2008
Genre:
Article

Notes

Abstract:
Long-term longitudinal studies can provide information on habitat quality over time. The Short-tailed shrew (Blarina brevicauda) is carnivorous, abundant in most habitats and lives 18 months or less. Ageing criteria based on weight or reproductive condition provide unreliable results since shrews are nearly adult weight at emergence from the nest and can begin reproduction shortly thereafter. The only reliable ageing criterion is microscopic evaluation of wear on cheek teeth of preserved specimens: not applicable to live animals. We used field measurements of incisors of marked individuals trapped repeatedly over a 7 month period to see if incisor length could be reliably related to known age. We live trapped short-tailed shrews (Blarina brevicauda) at SUNY Oswego’s Rice Creek Field Station every 1-2 weeks, May- November 2007. Individuals were marked with PIT tags and released. We trapped 62 individuals a total of 263 times (max. captures/individual = 14; max. interval between first and last capture: 193 days). Tooth wear is measurable over longer intervals of time, and incisor length can be used to place individuals into 3 age classes.
General Note:
Submitted by Shannon Pritting (pritting@oswego.edu) on 2008-10-24.
General Note:
Made available in DSpace on 2008-10-24T19:56:30Z (GMT).
General Note:
Blarina Brevicuda, Rice Creek Field Station, SUNY Oswego

Record Information

Source Institution:
SUNY Oswego
Holding Location:
SUNY Oswego
Rights Management:
All applicable rights reserved by the source institution and holding location.

Related Items

Related Item:
http://hdl.handle.net/1951/43852

OswegoDL Membership

Aggregations:
SUNY Oswego Historical Materials
Quest