Results 211 to 220 of about 6,600,454 (255)
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CONSERVING WATER VOLES: BRITAIN'S FASTEST DECLINING MAMMAL

Water and Environment Journal, 2004
ABSTRACTIn Britain, the water vole is a declining species because of habitat loss and land‐use change associated with the intensification of agriculture and urban encroachment. During recent years, this decline has accelerated due to predation by feral American Mink (escapees from fur farms) and population fragmentation.
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Effects of Density and Resources on the Social System of Water Voles

1990
Water voles (Arvicola terrestris) were studied in two different habitats, marsh and grassland, in Sweden. Voles breeding in the marsh moved to burrows in grassland when becoming nonreproductive, whereas voles breeding in grassland remained there all year. Home ranges in the marsh were much larger than in grassland.
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Water voles as prey for grey herons in an urban environment

The Glasgow Naturalist, 2022
E. Reid   +3 more
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Arvicola terrestris (Water vole)

1971
T. C. Hsu, Kurt Benirschke
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Water-vole

Notes and Queries, 1901
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Neuroanatomy of the Accessory Olfactory Bulb in the Fossorial Water Vole

Abstract The accessory olfactory bulb (AOB) plays a key role in processing chemical signals crucial for species-specific social and reproductive behaviors. While extensive research has focused on the vomeronasal system of laboratory rodents, less is known about wild species, particularly those that rely heavily on ...
Sara Ruiz-Rubio   +5 more
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