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Subterranean rodents continuously extend their burrow systems primarily in search of food, which has an important impact on the ecosystem in which they live. Excavated soil may be pushed either into aboveground mounds or into tunnels underground. Factors affecting the amount of burrowing and the preference of aboveground or underground soil deposition are, nevertheless, little known. We investigated the influence of food supply, soil hardness, and the animal’s body mass on the mode of soil deposition in ten burrow systems of free ranging silvery mole-rats Heliophobius argenteocinereus Peters, 1846. In each burrow system, we estimated the volume of backfilled tunnels and the volume of soil deposited aboveground. The highest amount of variation in these parameters was explained by the interaction of food supply and soil hardness. The ratio of the volume of backfilled tunnels to the volume of mounds was not significantly dependent on any of the explanatory variables. The proportion of backfilled tunnels decreased with the increasing volume of the complete burrow system. We propose that both low food supply and soft soil lead to an increased amount of burrowing, which results in a larger volume of soil deposited both above ground and under ground over a given period of time.
The feeding habits and hoarding behaviour of the Eurasian red squirrel Sciurus vulgaris Linnaeus, 1758 were examined during autumn in Nopporo Forest Park (43°20'N, 141°30'E), in western Hokkaido, Japan. The diet consisted of 32 plant species. Twelve species were both eaten and hoarded (the two most common of which were Abies sachalinensis and Pinus koraiensis), and 20 species were eaten but not hoarded. The distance from where a food item was found to the hoarding spot averaged 50 m and differed significantly according to food type. Walnuts Juglans regia were transported farthest, and chestnuts Castanea crenata to the second farthest from the site of origin. Most food was hoarded beneath the ground surface (95%), but some were hoarded in forks of trees and in small tree holes. Squirrels selected food items of high energy content for hoarding, in preparation for winter and the breeding season.
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