Abstract - Home ranges and space use of muskrats Ondatra ...
Indices / 2010 - Volume 16 / 4 / Home ranges and space use of muskrats Ondatra ...
Home ranges and space use of muskrats Ondatra zibethicus in restricted linear habitats


Adam H. Ahlers, Edward J. Heske, Robert L. Schooley & Mark A. Mitchell

Modern farming practices in the midwestern United States have drastically altered the landscape. Most wetlands have been drained, and small streams are channelized to transport excess water away from tile-drained agricultural fields. Loss of critical wetland habitat has shifted the distribution of muskrats Ondatra zibethicus, an economically important furbearer in the region, to highly altered riparian habitats with unstable flow regimes. However, information regarding home-range size and space use for muskrats occurring in these linear habitats is lacking. We used location data from 26 radio-marked muskrats to estimate home-range size and space use in riparian habitats in an agroecosystem in east-central Illinois, USA. Home ranges were highly linear and confined to stream bank edges. Contrary to our prediction, muskrats did not freely move to upland habitat (e.g. row-crop agriculture) adjacent to stream edges to forage. Linear home ranges were longer for adults than for juveniles. Home-range size also was related positively to number of burrows used by individuals. As expected, muskrats used space non-randomly within linear home ranges with most movements aggregated around established bank burrows. Muskrats in riparian habitat are multiple central-place foragers. Our study provides insight into how muskrats, a semi-aquatic species affected by large-scale landscape change, use space within highly restricted linear habitats.
 
Key words: home range, linear habitat, muskrat, Ondatra zibethicus, space use, telemetry
 
Adam A. Ahlers & Robert L. Schooley, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois, 1102 South Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA - e-mail addresses: aahlers2@illinois.edu (Adam A. Ahlers); schooley@illinois.edu (Robert L. Schooley)
Edward J. Heske, Illinois Natural History Survey, University of Illinois, 1816 South Oak Street, Champaign, Illinois 61820, USA - e-mail: eheske@illinois.edu
Mark A. Mitchell, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Illinois, 2001 South Lincoln Avenue, Urbana, Illinois 61820, USA - e-mail: mmitch@illinois.edu
 
Corresponding author: Adam A. Ahlers
 
Received 20 April 2010, accepted 27 October 2010
 
Associate Editor: John W. Laundré
 
Wildl. Biol. 16: 400-408 (2010)
DOI: 10.2981/10-044
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