Snowshoe hare adrenal weights in relation to population density

1977 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 634-637 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. O. Höhn ◽  
J. G. Stelfox

Adrenal and body weights of snowshoe hares from three areas in which hare population densities differed markedly were determined in a search for evidence of adrenal enlargement in the course of the population cycle. In the first area hares were in a sudden decline after a peak. Dead hares were found there in some numbers. Hare populations in the other two areas were still rising (population peaks occurred 18 months after sampling), but hare density was considerably greater in the second as compared with the third area. There were no significant differences in absolute adrenal weight between any of the groups. Relative adrenal weights were also similar, except for significantly higher relative adrenal weights in hares found dead as compared with those shot, but this was apparently due merely to the lower body weights of animals found dead compared with those killed. There was no evidence of significant differences in relative adrenal weight according to sex or age. No gastric ulcers were found in 26 hares taken from a population at the peak of the cycle.

1976 ◽  
Vol 54 (12) ◽  
pp. 2061-2081 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lamar A. Windberg ◽  
Lloyd B. Keith

Dispersal was investigated in snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) populations near Rochester, Alberta, from May 1970 to May 1974. Ingressing hares (dispersers) were removed every 3 to 4 weeks after removal of the initial resident population from an 11.3-ha study area. Dispersal into this vacant habitat occurred during all seasons of each year. The highest rates of ingress were recorded during the winter of peak population densities (1970–1971). There was a higher proportion of short-yearlings among ingressing hares than among residents. During two winters of known food shortage (1970–1971 and 1971–1972) dispersing hares had lower body weights than residents. Lighter adrenals and a higher incidence of scarring were also found among ingressing hares during winter 1970–1971.During winter 1971–1972 the resident hare population was removed from another area. Comparable recapture rates between marked immigrants on this area and hares on unmanipulated study areas indicated that ingressing individuals had settled in the vacant habitat.Hare population response to sex-ratio imbalance, created by partial removal of each sex on different areas, was studied during 1970 and 1971. Pregnancy rates declined significantly only on the male-removal area. Movements by adults during the breeding season and by predominantly juveniles over winter tended toward rebalancing population sex ratios.


1979 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 375-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
John R. Cary ◽  
Lloyd B. Keith

Reproduction was monitored during a 16-year study of snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) populations near Rochester, Alberta. Pregnancy rate, ovulation rate, and litter size changed markedly between successive litters within the breeding season; these parameters were thus further categorized by litter in our analyses. Most reproductive components varied significantly between years; a significant '10-year' periodicity was the dominant source of this variation. The cyclic fluctuations of reproductive parameters were broadly synchronous and tended to precede the population cycle by about 3 years, thereby producing a range in potential natality annually of 7.5 to 17.9 young per female. The year-to-year variability of pregnancy rate, ovulation rate, and litter size was markedly larger in the later litters than in the early ones. Paunched weight, mean age, incidence of endoparasites, liver and spleen weights, and midwinter-to-spring weight change also possessed significant 10-year cycles; paunched weight cycled directly with the hare population, but the others cycled either directly with or counter to reproduction. We believe that the correspondence between midwinter-to-spring weight change and reproduction implicates winter nutrition as the primary cause of the cyclic variation. Onset of spring accounted for a significant amount of variability in onset of breeding, adding to that due to the periodic change.


2003 ◽  
Vol 81 (2) ◽  
pp. 216-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
A R.E Sinclair ◽  
Dennis Chitty ◽  
Carol I Stefan ◽  
Charles J Krebs

Some mammals in high northern latitudes show regular population cycles. In snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus), these occur every 9–10 years. One hypothesis proposes extrinsic causes such as food shortage or predation. The other proposes intrinsic causes through different morphs that alternate between different phases of the cycle. The morphs should differ in behaviour or physiology. This hypothesis predicts that animal lineages bred from high and low phases of the population cycle should differ in reproduction and survivorship. In a 16-year breeding program, lineages of purebred high-phase female hares had reduced reproductive rates relative to those of purebred low-phase females, resulting in extinction of high-phase lineages. Reproductive output declined with age in high- but not low-phase animals. These lineages also differed in longevity and senescence. These results are consistent with the intrinsic hypothesis and suggest a mechanism for alternating population densities that could work synergistically with extrinsic causes like predation and food shortage.


1993 ◽  
Vol 71 (7) ◽  
pp. 1385-1392 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lloyd B. Keith ◽  
Sara E. M. Bloomer ◽  
Tomas Willebrand

During November 1988 – December 1991 we livetrapped, radio-collared, and monitored the survival, reproduction, and movements of snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus) in highly fragmented habitat near the species' geographic limit in central Wisconsin. Our 7 study areas centered on 5- to 28-ha patches of prime habitat: dense stands of willow (Salix), alder (Alnus), and regenerating aspen (Populus) on poorly drained soils. Maximum hare densities averaged 1.6 – 0.8/ha, and were unrelated to patch size. Rapid declines to extinction occurred on 3 of the 5 smallest study areas; on another, where extinction seemed imminent, juvenile ingress restored the population. On the 2 largest areas (23 – 28 ha of prime habitat) hare populations were stationary during the first 2 years, but declined by 50 – 70% in the third as mean annual (September – August) survival of radio-collared hares fell from 0.27 (1988 – 1990) to 0.07 (1990 – 1991). Annual survival on the 3 extinction sites averaged just 0.015 compared with 0.179 elsewhere. Reproduction did not differ between small (5 – 7 ha) vs. larger (23 – 28 ha) patches nor between years. Estimated dispersal of adult and juvenile hares from the 5 small study areas was twice as high as from the 2 larger, viz. 16 vs. 35% annually. Dispersers appeared to have markedly lower survival. Predation, chiefly by coyotes (Canis latrans), was the proximate cause of 96% (117 of 122) of natural deaths among radio-collared hares, and was therefore the overwhelming determinant of survival and thus population trend. Results of this study suggest that probabilities of extinction in such fragmented habitat depend importantly on patch size and attendant hare numbers; i.e., fall populations of < 10 hares frequenting patches of prime habitat ≤ 5 ha are not likely to persist long without ingress.


1995 ◽  
Vol 73 (10) ◽  
pp. 1891-1898 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara E. M. Bloomer ◽  
Thomas Willebrand ◽  
Ingegerd M. Keith ◽  
Lloyd B. Keith

We tested the hypothesis that helminth parasitism is demographically significant to a noncyclic population of snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus) near the species' geographic boundary in central Wisconsin (U.S.A.). During November 1988 to December 1991, we injected 93 individuals (≥760 g, aged ≥2 months) with anthelmintics: Ivermectin for nematode and Droncit for cestode infections. We injected 98 control hares with propylene glycol, the common vehicle for both drugs. All treated and control hares were radio-collared with mortality-sensing transmitters and monitored daily to weekly from the ground or air. Prevalence and intensity of lungworms (Protostrongylus boughtoni), intestinal worms (Nematodirus triangularis), and stomach worms (Obeliscoides cuniculi) were markedly reduced by Ivermectin treatment. No other nematodes were found to be present. Treatment with Droncit to remove intestinal cestodes was apparently unnecessary, as prevalence among necropsied untreated hares and controls was just 10%. We compared body-condition indices (mass changes, response to trap stress, and bone-marrow fat), reproduction (pregnancy rate and litter size), home-range sizes, and time-specific survival rates of anthelmintic-treated versus control hares. None of these demographic variables differed significantly between treated and control cohorts, nor was there any evidence that parasitism increased the risk of death from predation, which was the proximate cause of 96% of all natural mortalities. We conclude that helminth parasitism played no detectable role in the dynamics of this Wisconsin snowshoe hare population.


1964 ◽  
Vol 42 (6) ◽  
pp. 975-986 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin Newson ◽  
Antoon de Vos

The age structure and body weight of two snowshoe hare populations, just at or passing a cyclical peak in numbers, were studied over 3 years. The survival of the young was poor. Each winter, the young of the previous summer were already too few to replace all the normally expected losses of adults. Numbers therefore decreased from year to year. Shot samples were biased towards adult females in the breeding season. It appeared that they were feeding more heavily than the males as their gut weights at this time were markedly increased. There was a clear annual cycle in body weight with females consistently heavier than males. Immature hares were lighter than adults during their first winter and remained so until they were at least a year old.


1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 606-610 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stan Boutin ◽  
C. J. Krebs ◽  
A. R. E. Sinclair ◽  
J. N. M. Smith

We used radiotelemetry to monitor proximate causes of mortality of snowshoe hares during a population increase, peak, and decline at Kluane Lake, Yukon. Predation and starvation rates increased 1.6- and 9-fold, respectively, in the winter of peak population density. Predation accounted for 58% of the losses during the winter of peak densities while losses were equally divided between predation and starvation in the winter following the peak. Starvation and predation rates were lower on a food-supplemented grid than on control grids in the peak winter. In the following spring and winter, starvation rates remained low on the food grid while predation rates increased to equal those on control areas. We conclude that both starvation and predation were the proximate causes of mortality during the hare decline at Kluane Lake.


2005 ◽  
Vol 83 (2) ◽  
pp. 280-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
K E Hodges ◽  
A R.E Sinclair

If snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus Erxleben, 1777) change their foraging behaviour through the population cycle as food supply and predation pressure change, these shifts could contribute to their population cycles by affecting survival and reproduction. We examined whether hares change their foraging movements and browse site selection in response to manipulations of food addition and predator reduction during a cyclic low phase. Snowshoe hares on sites with supplemental rabbit chow ate fewer species per site and preferred to browse in slightly denser cover than unfed hares. Differences in foraging behaviour were linked to season and site characteristics. Snowshoe hares moved similar distances and spent similar amounts of time per browse site in the presence and absence of terrestrial predators. Hares protected from predators used slightly more browse sites in thick cover, but this pattern was partially due to differences in availability. The absence of terrestrial predators had little effect on snowshoe hare foraging behaviour; instead, browse distribution patterns explained most of the behavioural variation. Thus, the predicted patterns in response to the manipulations did not occur, and our results challenge the idea that changes in snowshoe hare foraging behaviour contribute to their cyclic dynamics.


1996 ◽  
Vol 74 (3) ◽  
pp. 456-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kim G. Poole ◽  
Ron P. Graf

We examined the winter diet of marten (Martes americana) from northern (65–67°N) and southern (60–62°N) regions of the western Northwest Territories from 1988–1989 to 1993–1994 during a decline in snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) abundance that started in 1990. We used 4256 marten carcasses collected from trappers to examine changes in diet, productivity, age and sex structure of the harvest, and body and reproductive indices. Arvicoline rodents formed the greatest proportion (41–95% occurrence of total prey items) of the annual winter diet in both regions and snowshoe hares constituted 1–39% of prey items. Snowshoe hares constituted 3–64% of the diet when expressed as biomass. Dietary proportions of arvicolines increased and snowshoe hares decreased with time in the northern region but not in the southern region. Female marten took proportionately more arvicolines and males took more snowshoe hares. Juvenile marten took proportionately more snowshoe hares, while adults took more arvicolines. The proportion of juvenile marten in the harvest declined in both regions between 1991–1992 and 1993–1994. The ratio of juveniles to adult females in the harvest also declined with time in the southern region but not in the northern region. The amount of omental fat declined with time for most age and sex classes. Ovulation rates (as determined by counts of corpora lutea) declined with time among yearlings, and among adults from the southern region but not in the northern region. In utero litter size did not change. We suggest that the snowshoe hare population cycle has a significant impact on marten populations in the northern boreal forest.


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