The Secret Lives of Voles

Unless you own a cat with an inclination toward hunting, you’ve probably never seen a vole. These little rodents prefer to lead their lives out of sight, spending their time hidden in thick grass, tunneling in forest leaf litter and humus, or sheltering beneath the snowpack. They are sought out by many predators, but their secretive habits and prolific rates of reproduction allow them to thrive.

There are a number of vole species, and they all have chunky bodies, short legs, and stubby ears, like the meadow vole pictured in the photo above. As the name suggests, grassy fields and meadows are the domain of meadow voles. They’re also known as meadow mice or field mice, although wild mice (white-footed and deer mice) differ from voles in their lifestyles and dietary habits. Another common vole species is the woodland vole (also called the pine vole), which prefers forests but also frequents orchards. Voles are not to be confused with moles, which are insectivores, not rodents.

When conditions are right, voles do reveal their presence to us. In winter this can happen when the snow forms into icy crusts which the small creatures can’t penetrate. In the next photo the hard crust was covered by a shallow layer of new snow, and voles (probably woodland), could only bulldoze their way through the softer top layer. Why the meandering pattern of grooves? The animals may have been searching for food, or for cavities leading to underground spaces. Woodland voles are more fossorial than meadow voles and often dig tunnels in the upper layers of forest soils.

When winter snows accumulate, voles find safety and plenty to eat under the snowpack. Meadow voles range throughout snow covered fields, creating runs that they use repeatedly as they search for food. The evidence of their travels shows up after the snow melts as grooves in the flattened grass thatch like those in the next photo.

The diet of meadow voles is diverse but usually includes grasses. Cut sections of grass like the ones in the next photo are often found after the snow disappears.

Another kind of evidence to be found in newly exposed vole tunnels and feeding areas is vole scat, which consists of tubular pellets like those in the central part of the next photo.

The construction of subnivean runs involves the removal of dirt and plant material from active runways, and once winter is past these appear as windrows of debris. The ones in the photo below were made by a meadow vole. Woodland voles leave similar piles of dirt and humus on the forest floor.

When the snow is deep voles are able to access an additional food source, the inner bark of woody plants. Large chews made by voles can be seen on the white pine in the next photo–this would have happened when the animals were safely hidden by deep snow. The thin layer of living cambium cells is the only nutritious part, and fragments of the inedible outer bark sometimes accumulate below the chews.

Tiny tooth marks, like the ones on the buckthorn stem in the next photo, can sometimes be seen.

In the warmer months vole sign is harder to find, but if you wander slowly through grassy fields and meadows you may make some interesting discoveries, especially when vole populations are high. Small openings like the one in the photo below are the first clue to the presence of the shy creatures.

Vole runs are usually completely hidden by the covering of grass and thatch, but if you spread the grasses backward from an opening, you’ll expose the corridors used by the voles.

If you’re very alert as you walk through a field, you may find a meadow vole nest. I found the one shown below in mid-May, so it was only partially hidden by new grass growth. Later in the season they’re much harder to find.

In the next photo you see another unoccupied nest that I opened to show the finely divided fibrous lining. Winter nests like this one are well insulated against the cold. Exits to the tunnel network can be seen at the upper left and the lower right.

Vole populations go through cycles of abundance and scarcity, and when numbers are high, changes in behavior may bring the animals into the open. During a population boom you may–if you stand very quietly–catch a glimpse of a vole as it pops out of a tunnel. But whether or not you ever have that experience, there’s always evidence of the presence of these animals to be found if you know what to look for.

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