Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Mice, Voles, Moles, And Shrews, OH MY!

Funny how sometimes think you know is wrong.   I thought I was identifying some lawn rodents correctly for years, but now I'm not as certain.  

I know what a mole looks like without much doubt, so I can kind of not worry about mistaken identity there.  They are simply bigger, have almost invisible eyes, and large paws.  I have a few around (Marley caught one once), but not many.  They tend to stay in their tunnels and leave and occasional, well, "molehill".  They eat only underground grubs and worms.  I begrudge them the worms (which I love for soil health) but applaud their taste for grubs.  They do have a side effect I will mention later.

Best Methods of Mole Control | Cardinal Lawns

So my problem is mice, voles, and shrews.  I forgot about shrews.  It's like when you have a lot of squirrels, you don't always notice the chipmunks.  So, after reading some articles of the differences between mice and voles, I thought I could tell them apart mostly through feeding habits and habitats.

Mice are not a real problem to a gardener.  They live above ground (though nest in small burrows).  They mostly just eat fallen flowerseeds.  And easy to identify by their long tails, prominent hairless ears, and plump round bodies.  If they get into the house, they are easy to control.  Cats and (in tight places like under the oven) traps take care of any invaders

A Guide to Field Mice - Effective Wildlife Solutions

So I thought that left just the voles.  And it made sense.  Voles use mole tunnels where available or dig their own near the surface.  They eat plant roots below-ground and stems at ground level.  They have short tails like moles but they are smaller.  They seldom invade houses (no plant roots to eat).  And the images I saw years ago seemed to show them as slender, chisel-toothed, and small-eared (as is suitable for travelling through tunnel).  And the little rodents that the cats brought up on the deck (for play or as "gifts" to me) matched that description perfectly.  

But as I decided to post about the little evil things, I looked at pictures of voles.  They didn't match my recollection of previous images.

2014 May - Gardening in Washington State | Washington ...

This is not what the cats have been catching!  

Allow me to interject.  I DO indeed have some moles, some field or house mice, and many voles.  I have come across a couple of molehills.  I have trapped mice in the house and the shed (a natural wintering place where I have found nests and they have chewed into corn gluten fertilizer bags).  

I know I have voles because of the shallow surface tunnels and them eating unprotected tulip and hyacinth bulbs by digging tunnels belowground and also digging down from the surface.  They also leave small clean holes in tunnels for surface access.  Moles don't do that and mice don't tunnel.

I have no idea why shrews completely escaped my mind for many years.  Sometimes, you just miss things.   It's embarrassing to miss basic stuff, but it happens. I think the cats are catching shrews.

Mating of the Shrews - Mitch's Musings

Sure looks like what they have been catching to me...

According to Wikipedia,shrews forage for seeds, insects, nuts, worms, and a variety of other foods in leaf litter and dense vegetation, living both over and under ground.  They say (to my surprise), shrews are not even rodents, being more related to hedgehogs.  

I know a lot of "stuff".  But what I DON'T know is so much greater...


A wise person once said that it isn't what you know that gets you in trouble, it's what you think you know that isn't true.  It wouldn't be the first time for me.  I thought I knew my yard's rodents; I didn't.  Live and learn.


If so, they have the perfect place here other than the cats. My back yard is semi-wild, mostly organic, covered with leaf litter and groundcover plants and brambles (so there are rarely disturbed by my activities).  I have many large seed-bearing plants (hollies, berries, and nandinas), rich undisturbed soil (lots of earthworms), and many small-rooted plants.


I gather that they (like voles) use existing tunnels, but usually live aboveground (or The Mews wouldn't be catching them).


I don't actually mind what rodent or shrew The Mews catch.  All are annoying in some way.  I respect a certain degree of lethality in them and glad to see that Laz has joined the club (Ayla used to be a great "mouser" but has retired in her senior years).


But I should probably retire "mousies" as meaning all small furry mammals.  Convincing them to change the term might be more difficult.  It's their blog, after all...  


But for myself, I will try to remember the differences.  Shrews are not mice or voles and they don't eat my plants (but like moles, they do eat my worms).  Mice aren't a garden problem, but voles are.  Voles don't invade the house, but mice do (but The Mews get them).  I don't have many moles or mice, but I do have a lot of voles and shrews.


And the moles aren't much of a problem themselves, but the tunnels they build are highways for the voles and shrews.


So my original plan to reduce the moles that make the tunnels the voles (and now shrews) use is still good.  Mole repellent (industrial castor oil) and stomping the tunnels flat and milky spore powder (organic) to kill off the grubs so the moles have less food is still the way to go.  


Just that The Mews are catching shrews, not voles...  I THINK.

4 comments:

Meezer's Mews & Terrieristical Woofs said...

We have tons of shrews as well, the big fat moles are the grossest to see when the dogs get them! LOL! We have more voles than mice, though deer mice come inside a lot at season changes.
Likely Benji & Dalton are catching/chasing way more voles and shrews then the others.

Memories of Eric and Flynn said...

That was interesting. I did recognise Laz's trophies as shrews, but like you I collectively call all of them mice. I didn't know shrews weren't rodents, but that explains why Eric and Flynn would eat the mice that were caught, but never the shrews. They must be unpalatable.
We used to have a lot of moles who used to run underground tracks across the lawn, but Flynn despatched them over the years. We never have any in the garden now, but the horse fields are a different matter with mole hills everywhere. Eric used to make a beeline for them, not to catch them but because the loose soil made excellent pooping spots.
We have voles which we call field mice, but ours do make tunnels and eat any bulbs they find on their way.
We also have house mice which go into the garage/workshop where they live in the indoor woodpile. This winter we trapped 27. Yes, we do keep a tally!

Megan said...

I vote to keep using the term 'mousies' on the cats' blog as a generic term. I'm sure that they wouldn't be fussed about these relatively minor distinctions - they probably just think it's the rodent equivalent of having a Siamese, ginger, tabby, Tokinese pusscat.

We have mice here, of course, but I've never heard of anyone here referring to moles or voles. We get the occasional bandicoot - they dig holes straight down into the soil. It's the snakes and large lizards that I don't like, although the rock wallabies, which eat the garden in almost its entirety, are a real nuisance too - and a tad too large to be brought down by a mere pusscat.

Megan
Sydney, Australia

pilch92 said...

Those do look like shrews. Whatever they are, good job to the cats!

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