Biology and control of the coast mole, Scapanus orarius orarius True, in British Columbia

Publication Type:

Journal Article

Source:

Canadian Journal of Animal Science, Canadian Society of Animal Science, Volume 39, Issue 1, p.34-44 plus plate (1959)

Call Number:

A59GLE01IDUS

URL:

http://pubs.aic.ca/doi/pdf/10.4141/cjas59-006

Keywords:

coast mole, Scapanus orarius orarius

Abstract:

Coast moles were studied and trapped from 1935 to 1945 at Agassiz, British Columbia. They cause economic damage in the lower Fraser Valley by injuring growing crops and by covering up to 15% of the surface of a field with their hills. The moles ate almost any arthropod, annelid, or molluscan that they captured, but earthworms comprised 93% of the stomach contents. Adults ate nearly twice their weight in earthworms daily, or 100-150 g, representing more than 100 worms. The populations of moles apparently varied in proportion to those of the earthworms. The moles mated from January to early March. The young were born in March or April. Yearling females had two embryos, 2-year-old females had three, and mature females had four. Of 940 individuals trapped during the winters, 45% were over 1, and 6% were over 3 years old. The average weight of 74 mature males was 74.3 +/- 5.6 g; the average weight of 50 mature females was 69.8 +/- 4.1 g. Natural control was ineffective. The disastrous Fraser River flood of 1948 lowered the numbers significantly, but recovery was rapid. Artificial controls tested included poisons, caustic irritants, explosives, flooding, earthworm poisons, combinations of chemical fertilizers and irrigations, mechanical and chemical barriers, commercial mole destroyers, poison gases, deterrents, and traps. Only the latter two were of value; crude flake naphthalene was a deterrent, and the scissors type was the most effective trap. In heavy infestations as many as three moles per man-hour were trapped. Naphthalene was expensive but protected small plots for up to six weeks. For economic control by trapping, an area of 300 to 300 acres should be trapped in one season. Smaller areas are quickly re-infested, since the moles travel up to I mile.

Notes:

ELECTRONIC FILE - Zoology