Lk. Chambers et al., Movements and social organization of wild house mice (Mus domesticus) in the wheatlands of northwestern Victoria, Australia, J MAMMAL, 81(1), 2000, pp. 59-69
From September 1996 to May 1997, 187 wild house mice (Mus domesticus) were
fitted with radiotransmitters at an agricultural site in the wheatlands of
northwestern Victoria, Australia, to examine movements and social organizat
ion. Males had slightly larger home-range areas than females. Home-range si
ze was highly variable (0.0002-8.024 ha) but could not be predicted from bo
dy size or body condition in males and females, or by whether females were
breeding. Mice were site-attached during the breeding season, with extensiv
e intersexual overlap of home ranges but variable intrasexual overlap. Home
ranges were significantly larger during the nonbreeding season compared wi
th the breeding season. Evidence existed for exclusive home-range use by fe
males at all densities of mice, low to moderate home-range overlap for male
s when densities were low and increasing, and an apparent switch to a more
gregarious phase in male mice when the breeding season ceased and densities
were high. Nonbreeding mice seemed to be nomadic when densities were low,
which is consistent with an earlier study of home ranges and social organiz
ation of mice on the Darling Downs, Queensland.