Populations of ferruginous and Swainson's hawks increase in synchrony with ground squirrels

1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (10) ◽  
pp. 2596-2601 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josef K. Schmutz ◽  
Daniel J. Hungle

We compared changes in the densities of breeding ferruginous (Buteo regalis) and Swainson's hawks (Buteo swainsoni) over a period of 9 years with the abundance of a major prey species, Richardson's ground squirrel (Spermophilus richardsonii). We used the amount of poison distributed by landowners annually in their attempts to reduce crop damage by ground squirrels as an index of ground squirrel abundance. Though ground squirrel abundance was positively correlated with hawk density overall, the hawks differed in their responses to changing prey density. Breeding density and fledging success of the ferruginous hawk, a food specialist, were consistently correlated with squirrel abundance. The density of Swainson's hawks increased only where grassland was interspersed with agricultural fields. Fledging success of Swainson's hawks was not correlated with ground squirrel abundance. We suggest that the availability of small prey in spring affected breeding dispersion and reproductive success of Swainson's hawks.

1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 370-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard J. Cawthorn ◽  
Gary A. Wobeser ◽  
Alvin A. Gajadhar

Sarcocystis campestris sp. n. (Protozoa: Sarcocystidae) is an heteroxenous coccidium with badgers (Taxidea taxus) as natural and experimental definitive hosts and Richardson's ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii) as experimental intermediate hosts. Free sporocysts (10.2 × 8.0 μm with a large, round sporocyst residuum consisting of a single refractile granule), obtained from intestinal scrapings of badgers (carcasses frozen 2 years at −20 °C), were orally administered to juvenile Richardson's ground squirrels. Acute fatal sarcocystosis developed in some squirrels at 11–13 days postinoculation (p.i.). Meronts (second generation) were present 9–12 days p.i. in the vascular endothelium of many tissues (especially the lungs). Cysts developed in skeletal muscle, contained metrocytes (7 × 5 μm) 30 days p.i., and beginning 46 days p.i., bradyzoites (12.0 × 3.5 μm) were present. Cysts were macroscopic as early as 258 days p.i. Squirrel carcasses containing cysts (76 days p.i.) of S. campestris sp. n. were fed to Sarcocystis-free badgers. The prepatent period was 9 days and the patent period at least 13 days. Both badgers were ill early in the patent period and passed unformed feces during the patent period. Free sporocysts were 10.2 × 8.0 μm and each had an elongate sporocyst residuum containing numerous small refractile granules.


2006 ◽  
Vol 84 (9) ◽  
pp. 1322-1330 ◽  
Author(s):  
David R. Wilson ◽  
James F. Hare

Richardson’s ground squirrels ( Spermophilus richardsonii (Sabine, 1822)) produce audible (ca. 8 kHz) and (or) ultrasonic (ca. 48 kHz) alarm vocalizations that warn conspecifics of impending danger. Audible calls have a larger active space than ultrasonic calls because they travel farther, are louder, and contain frequencies to which conspecific and allospecific recipients are more sensitive. In our first experiment, we presented an alarming stimulus to 103 squirrels to examine the effect of threat proximity on signal type. The ratio of ultrasonic to audible alarm calls increased with increasing distance from the stimulus. We conclude that the size of the active space influences signalling strategy and that squirrels emitting ultrasonic calls can signal conspecifics to the exclusion of distant predators. As recipients of ultrasonic calls must be close to the signaler, one context in which ultrasonic calling may be most adaptive is during natal emergence when juveniles are particularly abundant, highly vulnerable to predation, and clustered in space. In our second experiment, we broadcast ultrasonic alarm signals to emerging juveniles and found that they, like older individuals, responded to calls by increasing vigilance. We discuss the adaptive utility of multiple signalling strategies in light of our findings.


1990 ◽  
Vol 122 (3) ◽  
pp. 449-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Terry D. Galloway ◽  
John E. Christie

AbstractTwenty-one species of fleas, seven of which are considered true ground squirrel fleas, were collected by various means from Spermophilus richardsonii (Sabine), S. tridecemlineatus (Mitchell), and S. franklinii (Sabine) in Manitoba. Opisocrostis tuberculatus tuberculatus (Baker), O. labis (Jordan and Rothschild), Neopsylla inopina Rothschild, and Rhadinopsylla fraterna (Baker) are ground squirrel fleas reported from Manitoba for the first time. These, in addition to Oropsylla rupestris (Jordan) and Thrassis bacchi bacchi (Rothschild), were restricted to the southwestern region of the province, but Opisocrostis bruneri (Baker) was collected throughout the range of the ground squirrels, irrespective of location. Fourteen species collected were considered accidental on ground squirrels, one of which, Tamiophila grandis (Rothschild) (an eastern chipmunk parasite), was recorded for the first time in the province.


1997 ◽  
Vol 75 (7) ◽  
pp. 1035-1041 ◽  
Author(s):  
James R. Zelenak ◽  
Jay J. Rotella

In 1993–1994, we investigated nest success and productivity of Ferruginous Hawks (Buteo regalis) in north-central Montana. The 171-km2 study area contained a variety of habitats, a high density of breeding raptors, and 24 occupied Ferruginous Hawk territories. Only 42% of occupied nests produced fledglings. Occupied territories produced an average of 0.96 fledglings (SE = 0.19). Successful nests produced an average of 2.30 fledglings (SE = 0.21, n = 20). Lagomorphs were scarce on the area. Richardson's ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii) were more numerous along the edges of cropfields and roads than in grasslands. Multiple regression indicated that Ferruginous Hawk nests closer to cropfields and roads and farther from other breeding raptors produced more young than other nests. Thus, habitats altered by humans, which were not extensive (20% cultivated), apparently had higher densities of ground squirrels and thereby benefited breeding hawks. However, because our multivariate analysis was exploratory and based on a moderate sample size, our results should be interpreted cautiously and further evaluated in future studies.


2001 ◽  
Vol 79 (4) ◽  
pp. 569-573 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kurtis J Warkentin ◽  
Annika TH Keeley ◽  
James F Hare

Richardson's ground squirrels, Spermophilus richardsonii, produce both repetitive and non-repetitive antipredator calls. While many hypotheses have been advanced to explain non-repetitive calls, the function of repetitive calling has received relatively little attention. We presented juvenile Richardson's ground squirrels with a predator model at distances ranging from 1 to 8 m and recorded the subsequent repetitive calls on digital audiotape. The rate of calling was inversely correlated with the distance between the model and the caller, with distance explaining almost 24% of the variation in call rate. To determine whether call recipients use that information, we manipulated the intersyllable latency of a single repetitive call exemplar to form 3 test stimuli varying only in call rate. Across 16 Richardson's ground squirrel colonies to which these calls were broadcast, the proportion of squirrels assuming the highly vigilant, alert posture increased with the rate of the repetitive call presented. Hence, juvenile Richardson's ground squirrels appear to communicate the proximity and presumably the degree of threat posed by potential predators.


1972 ◽  
Vol 50 (12) ◽  
pp. 1577-1581 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. H. Sheppard

Adult Richardson's ground squirrels (n = 238) were collected near Regina, Saskatchewan in April and May of 1969 and 1970. The adult sex ratio (males: females) of collected animals was 1:3.3 compared with a juvenile sex ratio of 1:1 obtained by live trapping in 1967and 1968. The breeding season extended from 3 to 28 April but 77.8% of all conceptions occurred between 7 and 16 April. All yearlings seemed to be sexually mature and the mean litter size for all females baaed on living embryos was 6.93 ± 0.18. Mortality of embryos was 6.83%. Yearlings were smaller than adults but mean litter sizes of yearlings and adults did not differ. Ground squirrels collected from cropland had a significantly larger mean litter size, were somewhat heavier, and had significantly longer humeri than those from native grassland.


1974 ◽  
Vol 52 (10) ◽  
pp. 894-902 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans W. Behrisch

Liver of the hibernating (H) Arctic ground squirrel (Citellus undulatus) contains a single species of pyruvate kinase (PyK) that is distinct from the single isoenzyme of pyK observed in the non-hibernating (NH) ground squirrel, which has been previously described (Behrisch &Johnson (1974) Can. J. Biochem. 52, 547–559). The H-PyK has a pI value of 5.7 and a molecular weight of 241 000 – 243 000. Affinity of the H-PyK for the substrates phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and ADP is not affected by changing temperature. It is argued that this stability of the apparent Km's for substrate over a wide temperature range permits the hibernator to take advantage of the Q10 effect in maintaining a low rate of the PyK reaction. Similarly, affinity of H-PyK for the allosteric activator fructose-1,6-phosphate (FDP) and the inhibitor ATP is also conspicuously independent of temperature, suggesting a fine stoichiometry in the relative concentrations of the regulatory ligands in control of H-PyK over a wide temperature range. Further, affinity of H-PyK for the inhibitor ATP is about three- to fourfold lower than that of the NH-PyK, a condition that would favor the maintenance of a high energy charge in the hibernating liver cell. ATP apparently inhibits PyK by causing a dissociation of the enzyme molecule into two "halves" of about 110 000 molecular weight each. This dissociation is offset and reversed by FDP. Removal of the ATP by dialysis does not of itself result in a reassociation of the PyK "halves"; FDP and/or the substrates are required for the two subunits of PyK to reassociate. As the apparent Ki of H-PyK for ATP is higher than that of NH-PyK, substantially higher concentrations of ATP are required to effect the dissociation of H-PyK. Similarly, elevated concentrations of FDP are required to offset the ATP-caused dissociation of the H-PyK.Hibernating Arctic ground squirrels that are preparing to emerge finally from the hibernating state already possess substantial activities of the NH-PyK isoenzyme. This suggests that the animal "anticipates" its transition from one metabolic state from another. On the basis of these data a formal mechanism is proposed for the regulation of liver PyK in the Arctic ground squirrel in both the non-hibernating and hibernating states.


1976 ◽  
Vol 54 (8) ◽  
pp. 1294-1306 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Keith Kivett ◽  
Jan O. Murie ◽  
André L. Steiner

Location and hisiology of integumentary glands were investigated in six species of ground squirrels of the genus Spermophilus found in northwestern North America; S. columbianus, S. undulatus, S. richardsonii, S. tridecemlineatus, S. lateralis, and S. franklinii. Among these species, glands in oral, dorsal, and anal regions were structurally similar. Locations of oral and anal glands were identical but location of individual glands in dorsal-gland fields varied considerably. Gland development was greater in S. columbianus and S. undulatus and least in S. franklinii. Active scent marking was most frequent and extensive in S. columbianus and S. undulatus, less frequent in S. lateralis and S. tridecemlineatus, and absent in S. franklinii. In most instances, greeting behavior (which is focused on the mouth-corner oral-gland area) and the degree of sociality paralleled levels of scent marking. A hypothetical scheme of development or scent marking in relation to habitat and social organization is presented. This scheme fits, in general, classical interpretations of phylogeny.


1979 ◽  
Vol 236 (3) ◽  
pp. R162-R167 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Glass ◽  
L. C. Wang

Simultaneous measurements of heat production (HP) and heat loss (HL) and brain and rectal temperatures were made in Richardon's ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii) rewarming from hibernation at an ambient temperature of 6.0 +/- 0.5 degrees C. Calculations from HP and HL measurements from control animals showed that due to differential rewarming, there was a reduction of apparent specific heat of the animal to 0.59 cal/g. degrees C. This resulted in an energy saving of 30%. Three intracerebroventricular injections of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) of 56 microgram each at brain temperatures of 10, 20, and 30 degrees C caused initial suppression of HP and a greater overall HL, which resulted in a slower rate of arousal as compared to the controls. Injections of norepinephrine (NE) of 12.5 microgram each at similar brain temperatures caused a greater rate of HP, which resulted in a faster rate of arousal as compared to the controls. The respective actions of 5-HT and NE on thermoregulation during rewarming are similar to those in some euthermic hibernators and nonhibernating species. Our data indicated that these substances evoke thermoregulatory responses during arousal in much the same manner as during normothermia.


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