Solar Energy News  
Research Finds Rodents Thrive Near Highways

On the roadsides and in the triangles, they have found white-footed mice, deer mice and voles (pictured). In the medians, they have found white-footed mice, deer mice and shrews, including one type of shrew that is on the Indiana watch list. That same shrew is not on the Illinois watch list where the crew is working.
by Staff Writers
Terre Haute IN (SPX) Dec 17, 2007
There is something out there, and what an Indiana State University professor and his students are finding is surprising them. Dale Sparks, associate professor and research scientist in the department of ecology and organismal biology, and a team of students are evaluating the quality of Interstate 70 as a small mammal habitat from the Indiana state line to Marshall, Ill., with the permission of the Illinois Department of Transportation.

"Biologists have often considered roadways as useless or worse for wildlife," Sparks said. "The traditional view is that these areas are too badly damaged to serve as effective habitat. However, any birdwatcher and many bored drivers know that hawks spend a lot of time sitting on the roadside staring at the ditches, medians and highway triangles, so there must be something out there."

Previous studies in Kansas have shown highway triangles have a different mammal community than the surrounding landscapes, including high densities of one mouse considered rare. A student in northwest Indiana set up traps in a few triangles and caught deer mice considered extinct in the Chicago area.

"All those scattered reports convinced me that we should take a closer look at highways as habitat for small animals," Sparks said about obtaining support from the Indiana Academy of Science.

It is an in-depth study that hasn't been done before, according to ecology doctoral student Justin St. Juliana of Wheaton, Ill.

"Medians are considered junk habitat," he said. "That's not necessarily been confirmed. We're finding a pretty good community of rodent species, a variety."

Just like the hawks, Sparks said they are finding mice and other rodents that call the medians, triangles and roadsides home.

"Everything in the preliminary data says medians are great habitats," Sparks said.

On the roadsides and in the triangles, they have found white-footed mice, deer mice and voles. In the medians, they have found white-footed mice, deer mice and shrews, including one type of shrew that is on the Indiana watch list. That same shrew is not on the Illinois watch list where the crew is working.

"Certainly from the preliminary data, it's a denser, more diverse community in the median than the triangles and ditches," he said.

Senior biology major Gabriella Gonzalez-Olimon from Baja California, Mexico, called the project interesting.

"Before doing this, I didn't even imagine what could be on the roadsides," she said. "Letting the people know what's there is fun for me. It's not as simple as it looks out there."

The biology major said she has enjoyed being on the roadsides, setting traps for the animals and putting out feeding trays.

"You learn a lot more things by doing it than by listening to a teacher," she said. "You really have to apply everything you know."

The team traps the small mammals before marking and releasing them in order to estimate populations. Also, they set out feeding trays of seeds mixed with sand.

"Mice that have no fear of predation can spend all night digging up each seed," Sparks said. "Scared mice, conversely, eat very little of the seed and soon leave. We can get an estimate of the habitat quality by seeing how much seed the mice leave behind."

Related Links
Indiana State University
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Immediate Action Needed To Save Corals From Climate Change
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 14, 2007
The journal Science has published a paper that is the most comprehensive review to date of the effects rising ocean temperatures are having on the world's coral reefs. The Carbon Crisis: Coral Reefs under Rapid Climate Change and Ocean Acidification, co-authored by seventeen marine scientists from seven different countries, reveals that most coral reefs will not survive the drastic increases in global temperatures and atmospheric CO2 unless governments act immediately to combat current trends.







  • Italy begins shipments of uranium to France: report
  • Soaring energy needs, oil prices push SE Asia to nuclear power
  • Bulgaria forced to import electricity after semi-closure of nuclear plant
  • Iran, Russia resolve problems on nuclear station: Moscow

  • Global warming pact set for 2009 after US backs down
  • Moss Genome Shows How Plants Invaded The Land And Learned To Survive Heat And Drought
  • UN Climate Conference Hears How EO Can Help
  • Another Warm Year As Bali Conference Ends

  • Fish Farms Drive Wild Salmon Populations Toward Extinction
  • Moss Is A Super Model For Feeding The Hungry
  • A High Rise Apartment Complex With Built-In Greenhouse
  • Grim harvest for Australian farmers

  • Research Finds Rodents Thrive Near Highways
  • Immediate Action Needed To Save Corals From Climate Change
  • Threatened Birds May Be Rarer Than Geographic Range Maps Suggest
  • Massive Dinosaur Discovered In Antarctica Sheds Light On Life, Distribution Of Sauropodomorphs

  • Constellation Services International And Space Systems Loral Team On NASA COTS Proposal
  • NASA Selects Prime Contractor For Ares I Rocket Avionics
  • ATK Test Fires Liquid Oxygen-Methane Rocket Engine In Vacuum
  • Russian Carrier Rocket Proton Puts Military Satellite Into Orbit

  • Nuclear Power In Space - Part 2
  • Outside View: Nuclear future in space
  • Nuclear Power In Space

  • Outside View: Russia's new sats -- Part 2
  • Use Space Technology And IT For Rural Development
  • China, Brazil give Africa free satellite land images
  • Ministerial Summit On Global Earth Observation System Of Systems

  • Russia And France Developing New Satellite Platform
  • Light Is Shed On New Fibre's Potential To Change Technology
  • Major Physics Breakthrough In Understanding Supersolidity
  • MIT Creates New Oil-Repelling Material

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement