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1 November 2003 LONG-TERM DECLINE OF VOLE POPULATIONS IN NORTHERN SWEDEN: A TEST OF THE DESTRUCTIVE SAMPLING HYPOTHESIS
Pernilla Christensen, Birger Hörnfeldt
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Abstract

Time series data on cyclic vole populations in 1971–1999 in northern Sweden show a long-term decline in numbers from the early 1970s to the late 1990s. We tested the destructive sampling hypothesis predicting that previously unsampled (new) plots in remote areas would yield higher density indices than the density level of permanent plots in the early 1970s. In autumn 1999 we sampled both permanent (treatment) plots and new (control) plots. Density was not higher on new than on permanent sampling plots for any of the predominant vole species, Clethrionomys glareolus, C. rufocanus, and Microtus agrestis. It appears unlikely that destructive sampling has caused the observed decline in vole numbers.

Pernilla Christensen and Birger Hörnfeldt "LONG-TERM DECLINE OF VOLE POPULATIONS IN NORTHERN SWEDEN: A TEST OF THE DESTRUCTIVE SAMPLING HYPOTHESIS," Journal of Mammalogy 84(4), 1292-1299, (1 November 2003). https://doi.org/10.1644/BBa-014
Accepted: 1 January 2003; Published: 1 November 2003
KEYWORDS
catch-removal trapping
Clethrionomys
density indices
field experiment
Microtus
permanent sampling plots
snap-trapping
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