{"title":"Age Distribution of Red Tree Voles in Northern Spotted Owl Pellets Estimated from Molar Tooth Development","authors":"C. Marks-Fife, E. Forsman, Katie M. Dugger","doi":"10.3955/046.093.0304","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract We used molar measurements from 136 known-age red tree voles (Arborimus longicaudus) to develop regression models that could estimate tree vole age from skeletonized remains. The best regression included a quadratic structure of the ratio between two measurements, crown height and anterior height, and natural log-transformed age in days. The regression predicted that molar roots begin to develop at 40 days of age and that molar crowns are worn completely away at 1,177 days of age. We used the regression to estimate the age distribution of 1,703 red tree voles found in northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) pellets collected in western Oregon during 1970–2009. The age distribution of red tree voles in pellets was dominated by young individuals, with 81% younger than one year and only 0.5% older than two years. The proportion of individuals 61–120 days old was particularly high relative to other age classes. The proportion of subadult (52–120 days old) individuals exhibited regional variation between the Oregon Cascades and the Coast Range. Localized annual variation in age distribution was low, exhibited no evidence of cyclic variation, and was positively associated with local precipitation rates during the spotted owl nesting season (March–June). We hypothesize that the age distribution of tree voles in owl pellets may be similar to the age structure of tree vole populations in the wild, but acknowledge that this is virtually impossible to test because tree voles cannot be adequately sampled using conventional small mammal capture methods.","PeriodicalId":49743,"journal":{"name":"Northwest Science","volume":"93 1","pages":"193 - 208"},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2020-01-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Northwest Science","FirstCategoryId":"93","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3955/046.093.0304","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"环境科学与生态学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"ECOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract We used molar measurements from 136 known-age red tree voles (Arborimus longicaudus) to develop regression models that could estimate tree vole age from skeletonized remains. The best regression included a quadratic structure of the ratio between two measurements, crown height and anterior height, and natural log-transformed age in days. The regression predicted that molar roots begin to develop at 40 days of age and that molar crowns are worn completely away at 1,177 days of age. We used the regression to estimate the age distribution of 1,703 red tree voles found in northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) pellets collected in western Oregon during 1970–2009. The age distribution of red tree voles in pellets was dominated by young individuals, with 81% younger than one year and only 0.5% older than two years. The proportion of individuals 61–120 days old was particularly high relative to other age classes. The proportion of subadult (52–120 days old) individuals exhibited regional variation between the Oregon Cascades and the Coast Range. Localized annual variation in age distribution was low, exhibited no evidence of cyclic variation, and was positively associated with local precipitation rates during the spotted owl nesting season (March–June). We hypothesize that the age distribution of tree voles in owl pellets may be similar to the age structure of tree vole populations in the wild, but acknowledge that this is virtually impossible to test because tree voles cannot be adequately sampled using conventional small mammal capture methods.
摘要我们使用136只已知年龄的红树田鼠(Arborimus longicaudus)的臼齿测量来开发回归模型,该模型可以从骨骼化的遗骸中估计树田鼠的年龄。最佳回归包括两个测量值之间的比率的二次结构,即牙冠高度和前部高度,以及以天为单位的自然对数转换年龄。回归预测磨牙根部在40天大时开始发育,磨牙牙冠在1177天大时完全磨损。我们使用回归估计了1970年至2009年在俄勒冈州西部采集的北方斑点猫头鹰(Strix occidentalis caurina)颗粒中发现的1703只红树田鼠的年龄分布。颗粒中红树田鼠的年龄分布以年轻个体为主,81%的个体年龄小于一岁,只有0.5%的个体年龄大于两年。与其他年龄段相比,61~120天大的个体比例特别高。亚成年个体(52–120天大)的比例在俄勒冈州瀑布和海岸山脉之间表现出区域差异。年龄分布的局部年变化率较低,没有表现出周期性变化的证据,并且与斑点猫头鹰筑巢季节(3-6月)的局部降水率呈正相关。我们假设猫头鹰颗粒中树田鼠的年龄分布可能与野外树田鼠种群的年龄结构相似,但也承认这几乎不可能进行测试,因为使用传统的小型哺乳动物捕获方法无法对树田鼠进行充分采样。
期刊介绍:
The pages of Northwest Science are open to original and fundamental research in the basic, applied, and social sciences. All submissions are refereed by at least two qualified peer reviewers. Papers are welcome from authors outside of the Pacific Northwest if the topic is suitable to our regional audience.