Posted on 10/31/2003 5:45:48 AM PST by OESY
For centuries, people have puzzled over lemmings, the northern rodents whose populations surge and crash so quickly and so regularly that they inspired an enduring myth: that lemmings commit mass suicide when their numbers grow too large, eagerly pitching themselves off cliffs to their death in a foamy sea.
Scientists debunked that notion decades ago. But they have never been certain what causes the rapid boom-and-bust cycles that gave rise to it. Now, in a study of collared lemmings in Greenland, being published today in the journal Science, a team of European researchers report that the reason has nothing to do with self-annihilation and everything to do with hungry predators.
After 15 years of research, the scientists report, they discovered that the actions of four predator species snowy owls, seabirds called long-tailed skuas, arctic foxes and weasel-like creatures known as stoats create the four-year cycles during which lemming populations explode and then nearly disappear.
Scientists say such cycles have been an enduring and hotly debated mystery in ecology. "There have been several dozen hypotheses, and sometimes everybody was almost killing each other they were sticking so close to their hypothesis," said Dr. Olivier Gilg, an ecologist at the University of Helsinki in Finland who is an author of the paper.
Many suspected the cycles might be caused by an array of forces, Dr. Gilg said, "but we were able to explain this cycle with only predation, and that was very surprising; it was very exciting."
Dr. Peter J. Hudson, a population ecologist at Pennsylvania State University who was not involved with the work but who wrote a commentary for Science on the paper, said that population cycles are also found in birds, insects and larger mammals, like lynxes.
Though their research deals with brown six-inch rodents, ecologists can be forgiven their excitement. Lemming population cycles have long captured the human imagination. In Scandinavia, ancient sagas describe lemming outbreaks, and as early as the 1500's there were writings attempting to explain why lemmings would periodically overrun regions, some suggesting that the animals rained down from the sky.
Recently, scientists have tested more plausible explanations, including climate change and the idea that the quality of plants eaten by lemmings might vary cyclically or that high densities might stress lemmings, decreasing their ability to reproduce and causing populations to crash. Even sunspots had been proposed as a possible cause.
In the new study, researchers took advantage of Greenland's never-ending daylight in summer to do extended observations of predators. The open tundra environment also allowed the small, skittering rodents to be seen and counted easily.
The scientists found that the tundra provided an excess of food and of sandy soil to burrow in, a setting for fast lemming population growth.
But when lemming numbers began to soar, foxes, skuas and owls began eating them in greater and greater quantity. A pair of snowy owls can bring back as many as 50 lemmings a day for their hungry nestlings.
Stoats specialize in hunting lemmings, and after a banner lemming year, stoat populations explode, decimating the lemmings the following year. Then the four-year cycle begins all over again.
When researchers created a model to predict lemming populations, based only on the behavior of their four predators, they found that the model precisely predicted nature's four-year fluctuations in numbers.
Despite the new finding, lemming scientists expect to continue to be plagued by suicide queries. In particular, they blame a 1958 Walt Disney nature film, "White Wilderness," in which lemmings were shown hurling themselves off a cliff.
In 1983 a Canadian documentary, "Cruel Camera," about abuse of animals in movies, asserted that the scene was faked, using lemmings bought from Eskimo children and herded into the water. That conclusion has come to be widely accepted, and yesterday Rena Langley, a spokeswoman for the Walt Disney Company, did not dispute it.
"We have done extensive research into what happened more than 40 years ago," she said, "but have been unable to determine exactly what techniques were used in producing `White Wilderness.' The standards and techniques were certainly different then than they are now."
One thing is certain: these scientist-investigators recommend further studies and more funding to hire teams of psychologists, social scientists and zookeepers to find out.
Mon Oct 27,11:43 AM ET |
Democratic presidential lemmings (From left) the very Rev. Al Sharpton, Union Rep. Richard Gephardt, registered Independent General Wesley Clark (news - web sites), Sen. Joseph Gore-Lieberman, Sen. John Edwards, esq., Rep. Dennis Kucinichlav, former Gov. Howard Dean-Marx (news - web sites), former gangsta Carol Moseley Braun and Sen. Jaques Kerry. |
I suggest a catchy name for this new discovery. Perhaps "Predator-Prey Relationship" or something similar. They might even be able to come up with a fancy graph that shows prey populations increasing, but then the predator population increasing (a lagging indicator). Then the prey population line would crash, followed by the predator population crash. Then the cycle would be repeated in waves within the graph.
Really exciting!!
Credit & Copyright: T. Credner & S. Kohle, AlltheSky.com
Nine Dwarf Hopefuls attacked Bush, and shut out all Light.
THE STOAT Mustela erminea
Recognition:
Long slender body with short legs. Medium-short tail (length 95-140mm) always with a black tip. Fur reddish brown to ginger above, white to cream below. Some animals turn white or partially white in winter. Head/body length: Males 275-312 mm; females 242-292 mm. Weight: Males 200-445g; females 140-280g.
General Ecology:
The stoat occurs throughout Britain and Ireland, living in any habitat at any altitude with sufficient ground cover and food. The stoat's presence on offshore islands depends upon prey availability.
Stoats feed mainly on small mammals, especially rabbits and water voles where these are abundant. Small rodents are also taken, supplemented by birds, eggs, fruit and even earthworms when food is scarce. Stoats don't like to be out in the open and so tend to hunt along ditches, hedgerows and walls or through meadows and marshes. They search each likely area systematically, often running in a zig-zag pattern. All but the largest prey is killed by a single bite to the back of the neck.
David Attenborough made an excellent programme about them for the BBC called "Stoats in the Priory". He got some spectacular footage of the tiny stoats single-handedly killing and hauling off rabbits, which are three to four times their size and weight.
Note: this topic is from . Thanks OESY.
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