Muskrats

Muskrats
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Identification
The
muskrat (Ondatra
zibethicus, is
the largest microtine rodent in the United States. It spends its life in aquatic
habitats and is well adapted for swimming. Its large hind feet are partially
webbed, stiff hairs align the toes , and its laterally flattened tail is
almost as long as its body. The muskrat has a stocky appearance, with small
eyes and very short, rounded ears. Its front feet, which are much smaller
than its hind feet, are adapted primarily for digging and feeding. The
overall length of adult muskrats is usually from 18 to 24 inches (46 to 61 cm).
Large males, however, will some-times be more than 30 inches (76 cm) long, 10
to 12 inches (25 to 31 cm) of which is the laterally flattened tail. The average
weight of adult muskrats is from 1 1/2 pounds (0.7 kg) to over 4 pounds (1.8
kg), with most at about 2 1/2 pounds (1.1 kg). The color of the belly fur is
generally light gray to silver to tan, and the remaining fur varies from dark
tan to reddish brown, dark brown, and black. The name muskrat, common throughout the
animal’s range, derives from the paired perineal musk glands found beneath
the skin at the ventral base of the tail in both sexes. These musk glands are
used during the breeding season. Musk is secreted on logs or other defecation
areas, around houses, bank dens, and trails on the bank to mark the area. The
muskrat has an upper and a lower pair of large, un-rooted incisor teeth that
are continually sharpened against each other and are well designed for gnawing
and cutting vegetation. It has a valvular mouth, which allows the lips to
close behind the incisors and enables the muskrat to gnaw while submerged.
With its tail used as a rudder and its partially webbed hind feet propelling
it in the water, the muskrat can swim up to slightly faster than 3 miles per
hour (4.8 kph). When feeding, the muskrat often swims back-ward to move to a
more choice spot and can stay underwater for as long as 20 minutes. Muskrat
activity is pre-dominantly nocturnal and crespuscular, but occasional
activity may be observed during the day. Muskrats in the wild have been known
to live as long as 4 years, although most do not reach this age. In good habitats
throughout the United States and Canada in streams, ponds, wet-lands, swamps,
drainage ditches, and lakes.
Habitat
Muskrats
can live almost any place where water and food are available year-round. This
includes streams, ponds, lakes, marshes, canals, roadside ditches, swamps,
beaver ponds, mine pits, and other wetland areas. In shallow water areas with
plentiful vegetation, they use plant materials to construct houses, generally
conical in shape. Elsewhere, they prefer bank dens, and in many habitats,
they construct both bank dens and houses of vegetation. Both the houses of
vegetation and the bank burrows or dens have several underwater entrances via
“runs” or trails. Muskrats often have feeding houses, platforms, and chambers
that are somewhat smaller than houses used for dens. Burrowing activity is
the source of the greatest damage caused by muskrats in much of the United
States. They damage pond dams, floating Styrofoam marinas, docks and
boathouses, and lake shorelines. In states where rice and aquaculture
operations are big business, muskrats can cause extensive economic losses.
They damage rice culture by burrowing through or into levees as well as by
eating substantial amounts of rice and cutting it down for building houses.
In waterfowl marshes, population irruptions can cause “eat-out” where aquatic
habitat and with little competition, muskrats are very prolific. With a gestation
period of between 25 and 30 days, females in the southern part of the range
commonly produce 5 to 6 litters per year. In some locations, such as in the rice-growing areas of
Arkansas, muskrats move from over wintering habitat in canals, drainage ditches,
reservoirs, and streams to make their summer homes nearby in flooded rice fields.
In aquaculture reservoirs, damage is primarily to levees or pond banks,
caused by burrowing.
Food Habits
Muskrats
are primarily herbivores. They will eat almost any aquatic vegetation as well
as some field crops grown adjacent to suitable habitat. Some of the preferred
natural foods include cattail, pickerelweed, bulrush, smartweed, duck potato,
horsetail, water lily, sedges, young willow regeneration, and other aquatics.
Crops that are occasionally damaged include corn, soybeans, wheat, oats, grain
sorghum, and sugarcane. Rice grown as a flooded crop is a common muskrat
food. It is not uncommon, however, to see muskrats subsisting primarily on
upland vegetation such as Bermuda grass, clover, Johnson-grass, and orchard
grass where planted or growing on or around farm pond dams. Although
primarily herbivores, muskrats will also feed on crayfish, mussels, turtles,
frogs, and fish in ponds where vegetation is scarce. In some aquaculture industry
areas, this feeding habit should be studied, as it may differ significantly from
normal feeding activity and can cause economic loss. Some are produced in the
summer and early fall months, but not as many as in winter months. The period
of highest productivity reported for the Great Plains is late April through
early May
Damage and Damage
Identification
:
Damage
caused by muskrats is primarily due to their burrowing activity. Burrowing
may not be readily evident until serious damage has occurred. One way to
observe early burrowing in farm ponds or reservoirs is to walk along the edge
of the dam or shore-lines when the water is clear and look for “runs” or
trails from just below the normal water surface to as deep as 3 feet (91 cm).
If no burrow entrances are observed, look for droppings along the bank or on
logs or structures a muskrat can easily climb upon. If the pond can be drawn
down from 1 ½ to 3 feet (46 to 91 cm) each winter, muskrat burrows will be
exposed, just as they would during extended drought periods. Any burrows
found in the dam should be filled, tamped in, and covered with rock to avoid
possible washout.
General Biology, Reproduction, and Behavior
Muskrats
generally have a small home range but are rather territorial, and during
breeding seasons some dispersals are common. The apparent intent of those
leaving their range is to establish new breeding territories. Dispersal of
males, along with young that are just reaching sexual maturity, seems to begin
in the spring. Dispersal is also associated with population densities and
population cycles. These population cycles vary from 5 years in some parts of
North America to 10 years in others. Population levels can be impacted by
food availability and accessibility. Both male and female muskrats become
more aggressive during the breeding season to defend their territories. Copulation
usually takes place while submerged. The young generally are born between 25
and 30 days later in a house or bank den, where they are cared for chiefly by
the female. In the southern states, some females may have as many as 6
litters per year. Litters may contain as many as 15, but generally average
between 4 and 8 young. It has been reported that 2 to 3 litters per female
per year is average in the Great Plains. This capability affords the
potential for a prolific production of young. Young may be produced any month
of the year. In the northern parts of its range, usually only 2 litters per
year are produced between March and September. Young muskrats are especially
vulnerable to predation by owls, hawks, raccoons, mink, foxes, coyotes, and
in the southern states — even largemouth bass and snapping turtles. The young
are also occasionally killed by adult muskrats. Adult muskrats may also be subject
to predation, but rarely in numbers that would significantly alter populations.
Predation cannot be depended upon to solve damage problems caused by
muskrats. Muskrats are hosts to large numbers of endo- and ectoparasites and
serve as carriers for a number of diseases, including tularemia, hemorrhagic
diseases, leptospirosis, ringworm disease, and pseudotuberculosis. Most
common ectoparasites are mites and ticks. Endoparasites are predominantly trematodes,
nematodes, and cestodes.
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