urbpan: (dandelion)
urbpan ([personal profile] urbpan) wrote2006-04-27 10:57 pm

365 Urban Species. #117: Muskrat


Photos by [livejournal.com profile] cottonmanifesto

Urban species #117: Muskrat Ondatra zibethicus

More than once, an excited friend has reported seeing a beaver or an otter in a waterway in the city. "Really?" I ask, "how big was it?" With their hands they indicate the size of a rabbit--too small to be either. Those animals have habitat requirements that generally preclude them from being thought of as urban species. The muskrat, on the other hand, is a common resident of many cities across North America. Despite its name, the muskrat is more properly called a water vole than any kind of rat. It has a blunt face and long vertically flattened tail for swimming, and on land has a rounder appearance than a rat.

Muskrats are tolerant of fairly polluted water, and need only a muddy bank or even a culvert to build a den in. In an area with adequate aquatic plants they will build a den of vegetation. They feed mostly on plant life, but like most rodents, are somewhat omnivorous, taking mollusks and crustaceans. Urban muskrats are preyed upon by red-tailed hawks, and can drown in their burrows during flooding rains. Their fur was an important part of the North American economy in past years. These days I find they have great value in sparking interest in urban nature.

This time of year they feed on large amounts of maple and oak flowers that fall into the water and onto the riverbanks.

A very similar-looking, but much larger aquatic rodent has been introduced to the Gulf States, and the Pacific Northwest. The nutria, Myocastor coypus, from South America to the United States, and many other countries around the world, to boost fur industries, is about five times as massive as the muskrat. They can be distinguished by their tail, which is round in cross-section, as well as their size: averaging about ten pounds as compared to the less than two pound muskrat. Nutria are urban fixtures in cities like New Orleans, and major ecological problems wherever they are introduced, considered one of the 100 worst invasive species in the world.





[identity profile] badnoodles.livejournal.com 2006-04-28 03:10 am (UTC)(link)
Might want to put the text before the LJ-cut for those of us who don't always click to see cottonmanifesto's lovely pictures. :)

I've never been fortunate enough to live in an area with appreciable mammalian aquatic life - Texas has too many water moccasins, and California doesn't appear to have running water.

[identity profile] bunrab.livejournal.com 2006-04-28 03:41 am (UTC)(link)
Quibble: the muskrat is a nutria, not a vole. Originally native to South America, but now widespread over much of North America, and a downright problem in the southern US; in cities like Austin, and anywhere along the gulf coast, especially Louisiana, muskrats/nutria are great despoilers of trees, gardens, yards, etc. (Nutria live all over Town Lake, the lake/river impound which the Bat Bridge goes over. So of course, I have gotten to know more about nutria than any sane person wants to know. Also, since they are related to my beloved guinea pigs, I wind up knowing a bit more...)

Is that Susie or Sam?

[identity profile] brush-rat.livejournal.com 2006-04-28 05:59 am (UTC)(link)
Did whirl and twirl and tango while Singin' and jinglin' a jangle? Did it float like the heavens above?

So, they aren't even proper rats? How disappointing.

[identity profile] ninthraven.livejournal.com 2006-04-28 12:21 pm (UTC)(link)
[livejournal.com profile] cottonmanifesto takes really great nature photos. I am always amazed how she captures the details so clearly.

[identity profile] bunrab.livejournal.com 2006-04-28 07:26 pm (UTC)(link)
When my mom first moved to Austin, in the early 90's, she called me up excitedly a few days after she moved into the apartment I had found her, which was near a creek, to report that she had seen an otter, and enjoyed watching it frolic. She was heartbroken when I told her she had seen a rodent, not an otter, and all my descriptions of how fascinating the whole ecology of nutria were, and how they fit into the general picture of South American rodents, from cavies to capybaras, did not console her. People have that reaction to rodents. If something is a rodent it's somehow no longer cute. Sheesh. Anyway, that's why your paragraph about people reporting otters immediately brought nutria to mind - 'cause that's what people think they're seeing in Austin.

[identity profile] bunrab.livejournal.com 2006-04-28 07:30 pm (UTC)(link)
P.S. The worst part about nutria in Austin is that they are NOT escapees from fur farms; they were deliberately brought to Austin to live in the lakes because someone thought they'd help control the massive duckweed problem that most of Austin's lakes have, by eating the stuff. Of course, it didn't work that way, and Austin now has a massive duckweed problem AND a nutria problem.

[identity profile] maybethecat.livejournal.com 2006-04-28 10:48 pm (UTC)(link)
we just opened up an invasive species exib, but it is small and only have some animals destroying our environment like some zebra mussels and red eared sliders and some fish

[identity profile] miwasatoshi.livejournal.com 2006-05-01 06:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I finally saw my first muskrat this year -- in a riparian habitat just south of downtown Phoenix.