METHODOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE INTERVAL TRAPPING METHOD WITH COMMENTS ON NOCTURNAL ACTIVITY PATTERNS IN-HOUSE MICE LIVING IN OUTDOOR ENCLOSURES

Citation
Lc. Drickamer et Lm. Springer, METHODOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE INTERVAL TRAPPING METHOD WITH COMMENTS ON NOCTURNAL ACTIVITY PATTERNS IN-HOUSE MICE LIVING IN OUTDOOR ENCLOSURES, Behavioural processes, 43(2), 1998, pp. 171-181
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology, Biological","Behavioral Sciences",Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
03766357
Volume
43
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
171 - 181
Database
ISI
SICI code
0376-6357(1998)43:2<171:MAOTIT>2.0.ZU;2-Q
Abstract
Activity periods in small rodents are influenced by a variety of facto rs including climatic conditions, photoperiod, resource availability, and competitors. The timing of nocturnal activity was examined in free -living house mice inhabiting large outdoor enclosures. Live-traps wer e checked at 2-h intervals on specified nights. Mice were more active just after dusk and less active just before dawn. There was no signifi cant differential timing of activity by age or sex. Dominant males wer e more active in the latter half of the night and subordinate males we re more active in the first half of the night. Questions pertaining to the availability of traps, the proportion of mice still not captured, density effects on capture rates, and human activity influencing mous e activity were also.tested. On average, more than 86% of the traps re mained open even for the 2-h interval nearest dawn. A minimum of 70% o f the trappable mice were not captured on a given trap night. The rate of mouse captures did not increase with increasing density. There was no difference in the overall mean number of mice caught on nights wit h and without interval trapping. However, capture rates were significa ntly lower in the period after a 2-h trapping interval than in the per iods before or during that interval. Adult males and adult non-reprodu ctive females were caught again sooner if they spent more time in the trap. There was no effect of the amount of time spent in the trap on t he time to recapture for adult reproductive females or male or female juveniles. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.