Exploring the influence of density‐dependence and weather on the spatial and temporal variation in common vole (Microtus arvalis) abundance in Castilla y León, NW Spain

[EN] BACKGROUND: The common vole has invaded the agroecosystems of northwestern Spain, where outbreaks cause important crop damage and management costs. Little is yet known about the factors causing or modulating vole fluctuations. Here, we used 11 years of vole abundance monitoring data in 40 sites...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Caminero Saldaña, Constantino, Correa Cuadros, Jennifer Paola, Baños Herrero, Ana, Riquelme, Carlos, Pallavicini, Yesica, Fernández Villán, Mercedes, Plaza Martín, Javier, Pérez Sánchez, Rodrigo, Sánchez Martín, Nilda, Mougeot, François, Luque Larena, Juan José, Jaksic, Fabián M, García Ariza, Carmen
Format: article
Status:Published version
Publication Date:2024
Country:España
Institution:Universidad de Salamanca (USAL)
Repository:GREDOS. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Salamanca
OAI Identifier:oai:gredos.usal.es:10366/163124
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10366/163124
Access Level:Embargoed access
Keyword:Common vole
Dense-dependence drivers
Population dynamics
Spatiotemporal fluctuations
Weather modulation
Topillo campesino
Clima
3308.08 Tecnología del Control de Roedores
2502.02 Climatología Aplicada
Description
Summary:[EN] BACKGROUND: The common vole has invaded the agroecosystems of northwestern Spain, where outbreaks cause important crop damage and management costs. Little is yet known about the factors causing or modulating vole fluctuations. Here, we used 11 years of vole abundance monitoring data in 40 sites to study density-dependence and weather influence on vole dynamics. Our objective was to identify the population dynamics structure and determine whether there is direct or delayed density-dependence. An evaluation of climatic variables followed, to determine whether they influenced vole population peaks. RESULTS: First- and second-order outbreak dynamics were detected at 7 and 33 study sites, respectively, together with secondorder variability in periodicity (2–3 to 4–5-year cycles). Vole population growth was explained by previous year abundance (mainly numbers in summer and spring) at 21 of the sites (52.5%), by weather variables at 11 sites (27.5%; precipitation or temperature in six and five sites, respectively), and by a combination of previous abundance and weather variables in eight sites (20%). CONCLUSIONS: We detected variability in vole spatiotemporal abundance dynamics, which differs in cyclicity and period. We also found regional variation in the relative importance of previous abundances and weather as factors modulating vole fluctuations. Most vole populations were cyclical, with variable periodicity across the region. Our study is a first step towards the development of predictive modeling, by disclosing relevant factors that might trigger vole outbreaks. It improves decisionmaking processes within integrated management dealing with mitigation of the agricultural impacts caused by voles.