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Description: The marten (often called the pine marten or American marten) is a weasel that lives in trees. Males are about two feet long, with an eight inch tail, and they weigh about 1 1/2 pounds. Females are 10 to 20 percent smaller than the males and weigh only half as much as males. Martens are brown, right to the tip of the tail, and a pale yellowish brown beneath. Martens are mostly nocturnal, but when they are hungry they are active day or night. As other weasels, martens are active year round. In the coldest weather they may den in a tree hole or chickaree nest.
Martens are tolerant of humans and easily accommodate to feeding areas. In the old days, a marten was the resident mouser in many a miner's cabin.
Range: Martens are mammals of coniferous forests in northern and western North America.
Habitat: In Colorado, favored habitats are old-growth subalpine forests of spruce, fir or lodgepole pine.
Diet: In these forests is where they pursue their preferred food, the chickaree or pine squirrel; as well as nesting birds. On the ground they also capture red-backed voles.
Reproduction: Mating occurs in the summer, but embryos don't implant until early spring. One to five young are born in April after about a month of gestation. Typical of weasels, the young are blind and nearly naked, but develop rapidly and are weaned at about two months of age. No species habitually preys on martens; trapping and habitat destruction from clear-cutting trees probably are the most important sources of mortality.
growing in leaf litter, marginate gills
habitat: leaf litter, under magnolia, gray top with white gills
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http://www.worldwildlife.org/species/finder/americanpika/americanpika.html
American Pika
The American pika, a small flower-gathering relative of the rabbit, may be one of the first mammals in North America known to fall victim to global warming if heat-trapping emissions are not reduced soon.
American pikas are typically found in rocky areas, called talus, within alpine regions of the western United States and southwestern Canada. Many hikers, while passing through pika habitat in these rocky areas, have heard these shy creatures call and whistle to each other.
Since food is difficult to obtain in winter in the alpine environment, pikas cut, sun-dry, and later store vegetation for winter use in characteristic 'hay piles.' They are often called 'ecosystem engineers' because of their extensive haying activities.
According to research, global warming appears to have contributed to local extinctions of pika populations. American pikas may be the 'canary in the coal mine' when it comes to the response of alpine and mountain systems to global warming. Find out how you can become part of the solution to global warming and help American pikas.
Physical Features
American pikas are smaller relatives of hares and rabbits, but have short, round ears. They are grayish-to-brown mammals frequently seen hunched up on boulders of nearly the same color. They have no visible tail and typically measure 6 1/5 to 8 1/2 inches and weigh between 4 and 6 1/3 ounces.
Diet
American pikas feed primarily on grasses and herbs. Since food is difficult to obtain in winter in the alpine environment, pikas cut, sun-dry, and later store vegetation for winter use in characteristic 'hay piles' on a rock in talus areas, and pikas are sometimes observed gathering wildflowers.
Habitat and Distribution
American pikas live where few people ever go--they are usually found in rocky areas, called talus, within alpine regions of the western United States and southwestern Canada. They may be spotted among some of the talus slopes along trails and roads in Glacier National Park; also in Crater Lake, Kings Canyon, Mount Rainier, Rocky Mount, Sequoia, Yellowstone, and Yosemite National Parks.
Behavior
Pikas have a vocal repertoire that consists of a series of peculiar short squeaks. They are active only by day and do not hibernate in winter. Pikas are colonial, and each pika has its territory within the colony.
American pikas are often called 'ecosystem engineers' because of their extensive haying activities. They breed in spring and possibly in summer, and their young are born between May/June and July/August, usually with between two and five in a litter. The gestation period is about 30 days.
Threats
Research suggests that American pikas are particularly vulnerable to global warming because they reside in areas with cool, relatively moist climates like those normally found in their mountaintop habitat. As temperatures rise due to increasing emissions of CO2 and other heat-trapping gases, many montane animals are expected to seek higher elevations or migrate northward in an attempt to find suitable habitat. Living essentially on high-elevation islands means that American pikas in these regions have little option for refuge from the pressures of climate change because migration across low-elevation valleys represents for them an incalculably high risk - and perhaps an impossibility under current climate regimes. Results from a new study suggest that climate may be interacting with other factors such as proximity to roads and smaller habitat area to increase extinction risk for pikas, creating detrimental synergistic effects.
American Pika Research
According to recent research by USGS ecologist Dr. Erik Beever, global warming appears to have contributed to local extinctions of pika populations in the Great Basin area - the area between the Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountains - during the last part of the 20th century.
American pikas disappeared from seven of twenty-five studied areas. WWF is funding the re-sampling of these pika populations to find out how they vary across shorter time scales. If the global warming trend is not reversed soon through a significant reduction in emissions of CO2 and other heat-trapping gases, population losses of the American pika may lead to the animal's disappearance.
Previous research results suggested that American pikas are particularly vulnerable to global warming because they reside in areas with cool, relatively moist climates like those normally found in mountaintop habitats. As temperatures rise due to increasing emissions of heat-trapping gases, many alpine animals are expected to seek higher elevations or migrate northward in an attempt to find suitable habitat. Yet, American pikas in these regions have little option for escape from the pressures of climate change because migration across low-elevation valleys represents an incalculably high risk-and perhaps an impossibility under current climate regimes-for them. Results from the study suggest that climate may be interacting with other factors such as proximity to roads and smaller habitat area to increase extinction risk for pikas, creating harmful synergistic effects.
The pikas' particular vulnerability to global warming is due to several factors. American pikas cannot easily migrate in response to climate change, as their habitat is currently restricted to small, disconnected habitat "islands" in numerous mountain ranges. Although talus within mountain ranges is often more continuous, this is not always the case; some ranges only have habitable talus at lower elevations or in broadly separated patches. Furthermore, American pikas generally do not appear to move large distances, as many individuals may spend their entire lifespan within a half-mile radius. Pikas do not inhabit burrows which could mitigate extreme temperatures and are highly active aboveground during the hottest months of the year. In the warmer months, pikas must cure vegetation for their overwinter survival as pikas are active year-round and food is scarce in winter in the alpine environment. Earlier maturation of vegetation associated with global warming may mean increased stress for pikas, and hotter temperatures during high activity periods can create direct thermal stress on the animals. Pikas are densely furred, and thus cannot dissipate heat easily.
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Description: The marten (often called the pine marten or American marten) is a weasel that lives in trees. Males are about two feet long, with an eight inch tail, and they weigh about 1 1/2 pounds. Females are 10 to 20 percent smaller than the males and weigh only half as much as males. Martens are brown, right to the tip of the tail, and a pale yellowish brown beneath. Martens are mostly nocturnal, but when they are hungry they are active day or night. As other weasels, martens are active year round. In the coldest weather they may den in a tree hole or chickaree nest.
Martens are tolerant of humans and easily accommodate to feeding areas. In the old days, a marten was the resident mouser in many a miner's cabin.
Range: Martens are mammals of coniferous forests in northern and western North America.
Habitat: In Colorado, favored habitats are old-growth subalpine forests of spruce, fir or lodgepole pine.
Diet: In these forests is where they pursue their preferred food, the chickaree or pine squirrel; as well as nesting birds. On the ground they also capture red-backed voles.
Reproduction: Mating occurs in the summer, but embryos don't implant until early spring. One to five young are born in April after about a month of gestation. Typical of weasels, the young are blind and nearly naked, but develop rapidly and are weaned at about two months of age. No species habitually preys on martens; trapping and habitat destruction from clear-cutting trees probably are the most important sources of mortality.
Information provided by
http://wildlife.state.co.us/WildlifeSpecies/Profiles/Mammals/Pages/Marmot.aspx
Description: The marmot is the largest of our ground squirrels, a close relative of the woodchuck of the East and Midwest.
The yellow-bellied marmot is a heavy-set, grizzled brown animal with white patches on the chin and (as the name suggests) a yellowish belly. Marmots can be waddling fat in the fall, and their long fur makes them look even fatter. Adults are about 26 inches long and weigh up to about 11 pounds.
Predators include the coyote, badger, bobcat, golden eagle, hawks, owls, weasels and marten. However, predation probably is a less important cause of mortality than is the stress of hibernation. Marmots are protected by a rocky habitat and a social system of alarm calls.
Range: Marmots are widespread in western North America. Marmots are often associated with alpine meadows, but they actually live in suitable habitat down to the lower foothills.
Habitat: Marmots burrow deep into the soil beneath boulders to den. Up to half of their summer weight is lost during hibernation; animals with insufficient fat, or a burrow too shallow to prevent freezing, do not arouse in the spring.
Diet: Preferred foods are flowering stalks, but marmots eat the leaves of a variety of grasses and forbs.
Reproduction: After hibernation, the marmot emerges to mate as soon as green forage is available. After a 30-day gestation period, approximately five offspring are born. They are weaned at 20 to 30 days. A single male maintains a territory with a harem of several females, yearlings, and young of the year.
By David M. Armstrong
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
Environmental Studies Program, University Museum of Natural History
University of Colorado-Boulder
mausmann@aol.com
At 15:00 we heard two different pikas calling from an east-facing slope.
At 15:07 we heard one pika calling from a southeastern-facing slope.
Around 16:10 pm we heard one pika.
At 8:30 we heard one pika on a northeastern-facing slope.
At 9:57 we heard one pika on a south-facing slope.
At 8:07 we heard one pika on a northwestern-facing slope.
At 14:08 we heard two pikas on a southeastern-facing slope.
At 15:31 we saw one pika on a western-facing slope.
At 16:07 we heard three pikas along a ridge.
At 18:54 we heard three pikas on a southwestern-facing slope.
At 8:05 we heard six pikas on a north-facing slope.
At 10:18 we heard three pikas on a north-facing slope.
At 9:23 we heard three pikas on a south-facing slope.
At 8:09 we heard six pikas on an eastern-facing slope.
At 7:44 we heard one pika on an eastern-facing slope.
At 16:00 we heard two pikas on a northwest-facing slope.
At 8:43 we heard five pikas.
At 8:21 we heard two pikas on a north-facing slope.
At 10:09 we heard one pika on a south-facing slope.
At 16:45 we heard five pikas on a south-facing slope.