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Nordicana D95 / DOI : 10.5885/45747CE-3BA23A9A7C48406B

Data from an experimental study to determine the impact of snow hardness on lemming locomotion

Mathilde Poirier1,2,3, Dominique Fauteux4,3, Gilles Gauthier1,3, Florent Dominé2,3, Jean-François Lamarre5
1Département de biologie, Université Laval,
2Takuvik Joint International Laboratory, Université Laval (Canada) & CNRS-INSU (France),
3Centre d’études nordiques, Université Laval,
4Musée canadien de la nature,
5Canadian High Arctic Research Station, Polar Knowledge Canada


Abstract

Lemmings are an essential link of the Arctic food web as they are the main prey of many predators inhabiting these regions. These small rodents exhibiting cyclic fluctuation of their population can stay active throughout the winter and must dig a network of tunnels in the snow to reach vegetation on which they are feeding. Therefore, snow hardness where they dig has the potential to affect their effort while digging as well as their performance. Data presented in this publication were obtained from an experimental study conducted in Cambridge Bay (Nunavut) to determine the effect of snow hardness on lemming locomotion. A total of 7 lemmings, 4 brown lemmings (Lemmus trimucronatus) and 3 collared lemmings (Dicrostonyx groenlandicus), were captured and kept in captivity in individual cages in the Canadian High Arctic Research Station (CHARS) from August to November 2019. We collected snow samples in 2 observation boxes with windows on the side (100 x 31 x 8 cm, length x height x width) allowing us to observe the lemmings while digging in the snow. The snow collected was categorized in 3 main types: soft, hard, rain-on-snow (ROS). Measurements of snow physical properties (density, hardness) were taken in all recognizable snow layers, from top to bottom: ros-A (only for ROS snow type), A, B, C (see Lemming locomotion codes). Each trial consisted in introducing a lemming on top of a snow sample in the observation box and filming its behavior for 30 minutes. Each lemming (n = 7) was tested 3 times on each snow type (soft, hard, ROS) for a total of 63 trials. Then, the 63 videos were processed to identify the time spent by the lemmings performing different behaviors during the trials. The total length of tunnels dug during each trial were also measured, as well as the time spend above and inside the snow, the time spent using their incisors and the time spent in every snow layer. Digging speeds were obtained in the different layers of the different types of snow. For further details regarding the methods, please refer to the related publication of Poirier et al. (2021).

Data citation

Poirier, M., Fauteux, D., Gauthier, G., Dominé, F., Lamarre, J.F. 2021. Data from an experimental study to determine the impact of snow hardness on lemming locomotion, v. 1 (2019-2019). Nordicana D95, doi: 10.5885/45747CE-3BA23A9A7C48406B.

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Key references

Poirier, M., D. Fauteux, G. Gauthier, F. Domine & J.-F. Lamarre, 2021. Snow hardness impacts intranivean locomotion of arctic small mammals. Ecosphere, in press

Status

Published

Version history

You can request for data from previous versions at nordicana@cen.ulaval.ca.


Version 1 (2019-2019) - Updated October 7, 2021

Measurement sites

  Site Latitude Longitude Altitude (m)
More info
Station canadienne de recherche dans l’Extrême-Arctique (SCREA)
69.119856 -105.041161 31
More info
Site d’échantillonnage de la neige
69.119943 -105.037823 31

Supplementary material


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