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28 - Big Problems – Small Animals

from Part II - Essays: Inspiring Fieldwork

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2020

Tim Burt
Affiliation:
Durham University
Des Thompson
Affiliation:
Scottish Natural Heritage
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Summary

Few mammals have inspired more fieldwork by ecologists than lemmings and voles. Who has not heard of the tale of lemmings jumping off cliffs or of hoards of voles attacking crops of wheat or barley? The base of ecologists’ interest in these small animals is that they contradict our assumed balance of nature idea, drilled into us from an early age. Lemmings of the tundra, and voles of grasslands and forests, often fluctuate in three–four-year cycles of abundance, and the challenge to the field biologist has enduringly been to understand why these cycles occur.

Type
Chapter
Information
Curious about Nature
A Passion for Fieldwork
, pp. 241 - 245
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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References

Krebs, C. J. (2011). Of lemmings and snowshoe hares: the ecology of northern Canada. Proceeding of the Royal Society of London, Series B 278, 481489.Google ScholarPubMed
Krebs, C. J. (2013). Population Fluctuations in Rodents. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL.Google Scholar
Krebs, C. J., Boonstra, R. and Boutin, S. (2018). Using experimentation to understand the 10-year snowshoe hare cycle in the boreal forest of North America. Journal of Animal Ecology 87, 87100.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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