Leafy Disturbances

Leaves: at this time of year the woody plants are bare of leaves, and last summer’s weather-beaten foliage covers the forest floor in all directions. Is there anything we can learn about the lives of animals from this seemingly mute carpet? The answer is a resounding yes! In the photo below we see a well-used deer trail. The dry, undisturbed leaves on either side contrast with the darker, disturbed texture in the trail. Even when it’s compressed, deciduous leaf litter is harder to walk on than pre-existing trails, so deer often create runs between bedding and feeding areas.

It’s not as easy to detect deer tracks if they’re not on well used trails. The next photo shows an individual deer track, orientated toward the right. The hoof pressed down into the leaf litter and the outer rims left curved depressions on the top layer of leaves. But if you just were hiking along, would this print attract your attention? Probably not. To find individual deer prints it helps to study areas where the animals have spread out from obvious trails into feeding or bedding areas.

Fall is mating season for whitetail deer, and back then the males were spending most of their time trying to attract females. Bucks made scrapes on the ground and left their scent at the site by depositing urine in the scrape. They also left their olfactory signature by rubbing their foreheads and faces on overhanging branches. The signs of these mating rituals often last into spring. In the photo below (taken a few weeks ago) you can see a scrape just below an overhanging branch still bearing a few leaves.

A close-up of the scrape has a weathered look but still shows signs of deliberate disturbance.

Deer aren’t the only animals that clear leaves. Turkeys sweep leaves aside as they search for insects and other edible tidbits beneath the leaf litter. In the photo below debris lies on top of the leaves at the bottom and lower right, showing that the turkey stood facing the upper left as it tossed the leaves backward. By using both of its feet the bird created a roughly triangular cleared patch.

But turkey feeding scrapes aren’t always triangular. In the next photo you see one that’s more irregularly shaped. There can be a lot of variation in the shape of the cleared area and the amount of displaced debris.

Buck scrapes and turkey scrapes can be quite similar, but there are ways to tell them apart. First, deer mate exclusively in the fall, so buck scrapes discovered in the spring will show signs of several months of weathering. Turkeys make feeding scrapes in all seasons, so at this time of year they range from fresh to weathered in appearance. Both of the turkey scrapes shown above are relatively recent, while the buck scrape in the preceding photos had been created about five months earlier.

Another difference between deer and turkey scrapes is their distribution. An individual buck usually makes a limited number of scrapes, almost always associated with overhanging branches, in an area he is patrolling. Turkeys usually feed in groups, and they go wherever the eating is good, so turkey scrapes are likely to be more numerous and scattered more irregularly.

Squirrels also disturb leaves. The next image shows a cleared area at the base of a tree. When I found this I wondered if it was the result of frequent use as a take-off spot by squirrels.

To check, I looked at the bark above the cleared spot (shown in the next photo) and saw that the moss and outer bark had indeed been abraded. I’m attributing this to squirrels, the most common tree climbers, but I can’t entirely eliminate the possibility that it was a raccoon. Other climbing animals are unlikely because they are less likely to climb one tree repeatedly.

Like turkeys, squirrels search for buried nuts and insects, especially in the spring when stored food supplies may have run out. Both red and gray squirrels obtain these items by digging small holes. In the next photo you see a dig made by a squirrel. Debris from the hole can be seen below and to the right, so the squirrel must have been facing the upper left as it dug.

Here’s another image of a squirrel dig, this time in a layer of pine needles. If the buried object was a nut or acorn the hole usually retains a firm impression of the object. In the digs shown in both photos the bottoms of the holes were loose and irregularly shaped, so the food items were probably insects.

Deer also dig at leaf litter in search of nuts and acorns. White oak acorns are consumed by many animals and birds, so they disappear soon after they drop. The higher levels of tannins in red oak acorns make them less palatable, so they mostly lie uneaten on the ground until soaking rains leach the tannins out. But once they’re more digestible red oak acorns are sought out by many animals, including deer. Where red oaks are the predominant oak species, areas of churned up leaves like those in the next photo (taken last December) can be found in late fall and winter. You can see fragments of acorn shells and meats the deer dropped as they chewed.

If there’s a heavy, wet snowpack in late winter that compresses the leaves, deer feeding areas may be hard to recognize by the time spring arrives. But after winters with little snow like the one we just had, the signs are evident. A few weeks ago I went back to the area where the photo above was taken to see what it looked like. In the photograph below you can see that the leaves still lie loosely in piles and windrows. There aren’t any acorn fragments to be seen–if the deer weren’t interested enough to gather them up they would have been eaten by other animals like squirrels, mice, raccoons, crows, foxes, or even fishers. You’re not likely to find fresh evidence of deer foraging for acorns because the fall crop has been mostly consumed.

Areas where the leaves were not churned up by deer (or turkeys) look very different. Fall rains and the little snow we did have were enough to flatten autumn’s leaf fall into a smooth-looking mat like the one pictured below.

Some places cleared of leaves are more mysterious . Is this the work of a deer? Or a turkey? Actually, neither.

When you see the same spot in the more distant shot shown below, you’ll see what moved the leaves: water. The close-up above comes from the area in the lower left quadrant of the distance shot below. During a heavy rain, water flowed down the trail on the right and spilled over the edge into the leaves. As the water rushed downhill it made channels in the leaves and moved them into heaps along the edges.

Leaves have stories to tell, and to understand them we need to get familiar with undisturbed leaf litter. Once we begin to pay attention to leaves, and to places that depart from the unaltered baseline, we’ll have a whole new window into the lives of animals.

The Marvels and Mysteries of Deer Tracks

When we think of deer tracks what usually comes to mind are heart-shaped prints like the one shown in the photo below. The paired toes together form the overall shape, and the pointed ends of the toes point forward. In tracks like the one in the photo, the ridge that runs front to back between the toes may be as important for identification as the toes themselves. In fact, the tell-tale ridge may still be visible even when most other track details have been destroyed by weathering or melting.

The specialized feet of deer are very different from those of their ancient five-toed ancestors. The two large toes that make up the print in the photo above are analogous to the third and fourth fingers of our hand, but the toe bones (analogous to our finger bones) are highly modified and are enclosed in tough, protective structures. There are two smaller toes, the dewclaws, which are analogous to our index and pinky fingers and sit higher up on the back of the leg. The innermost toe (analogous to our thumb) was completely lost in the course of evolution. You can see the arrangement of the large primary toes and the smaller dewclaws in the next photo of the front feet of a deer.

Photo from Deeryproof

Deer hooves are superbly adapted for running and jumping. Their keratinaceous outer sheathing combines with resilient internal tissues to cushion the feet against impact. The dewclaws don’t touch the ground most of the time, but with faster movement or on softer surfaces they can make contact to provide more support. In the next photo you see tracks made by a deer moving toward the right on a relatively soft substrate at a slow gallop. There’s a front print on the left and a hind print on the right. In each track the marks made by the dewclaws sit behind the impressions of the large main toes. (You’ll notice that the dewclaws of the front foot are angled to the sides while those of the rear foot are pointed more to the front.) The feet of deer are small relative to the animal’s size and bear more weight per unit area compared to non-hoofed mammals. This is why deer tracks show up on surfaces that are too firm to reveal the traces of most other animals (a serendipitous side-effect for trackers). It’s also why deer tracks are usually deeper than the tracks of animals like coyotes and bobcats, and why deer are generally less stealthy than mammalian predators.

You can see from the photo above that the two large toes are not always held tightly together the way they are in the first image. Sometimes a “four-toed” deer print can take on a bizarre appearance. In the next photo you see a hind track which has a resemblance to the bounding pattern of a squirrel. The tips of the large toes appear rounded because their points pushed downward under the soil surface.

Here’s an image of the front track of a rapidly accelerating deer in which only the marks of the dewclaws and the tips of the large toes registered.

Even when the dewclaws don’t touch the ground the two main toes may be separated, as in the photo below of a hind foot. Deer can exert muscular control over their toes and are able to spread them when they need more support or stability.

Here’s another shot of a rear track, again with the toes separated.

In the next photo you see some deer tracks I found on a seldom used railroad line. The animal had first walked through some mud and then travelled along the railroad track. It stepped carefully on the ties, and wherever it stepped it left muddy impressions. In the photo the direction of travel is from top to bottom, and what you see are the edges of the hooves printed in mud on the wooden ties. There are two tracks partly superimposed, the front print a little ahead of (below) the rear print.

If the tracks in the previous photo are hard to understand, the next image may help. There’s a front track (at the upper left) and a rear print (at the lower right), and the direction of travel is toward the upper left. The firm sandy base prevented the deer’s hooves from sinking in, and the thin covering of loose sand recorded the track details nicely. The outer rims of the hooves show as curved grooves in the sand, but the inner parts of the hooves barely touched the surface.

Tracks like these are sometimes misidentified as bird tracks, so beware! In fact it’s important to always be fully engaged–even with deer tracks–because, as the preceding photos show, they don’t always conform to our expectations. Every once in a while, among all the typical prints, you may find some that are surprising or puzzling. If you spend some time on these, you’ll gain a deeper understanding of deer tracks, both the common ones and the not so common ones.

Cottontail Rabbits

Familiar animals can be just as interesting as less common ones, and the cottontail rabbit ranks as one of our most familiar–and interesting–creatures. In the photo below (direction of travel from right to left) we see it’s characteristic Y-shaped bounding pattern: two rear tracks even with each other and widely spaced, and two front tracks behind the rear ones, more narrowly spaced with one leading the other. The right front print (the first foot to come down) lies at the right side of the photo and the left front print (the second foot to come down) lies to its left. Farther to the left you see the rear prints which form the diverging branches of the Y. I found these tracks on a highly developed barrier island on the New Jersey coast, probably not a place you would expect to find cottontails. But these animals manage to survive and flourish not just in rural and undeveloped areas but also in city parks, suburban communities, and busy commercial zones.

Although the pattern shown above is very common, it’s not the only four-print arrangement you’ll see. Sometimes a rabbit’s front feet come down together, and when this happens the prints are even with each other and pressed tightly together. Bounding squirrels make groups similar to those of rabbits, but the spacing of the front tracks is different. Whether the front prints are even with each other (the most common arrangement) or whether one leads the other, there is almost always a gap between the two prints. In the photo below the rabbit tracks are in the lower left and the squirrel tracks are at the upper right.

The tracks in the photo below were made by a cottontail bounding in deep snow (direction of travel from bottom to top), and the toes are splayed out in both front and rear tracks. Tracks like these are sometimes mistaken for snowshoe hare tracks because of their larger size.

The feet of both cottontails and snowshoe hares can spread when increased support is needed, but there’s a drastic difference between the two animals. The maximum width of a cottontail’s hind print is about 2 1/2 inches, while a snowshoe hare’s rear track can reach a width of more than 5 inches. The photo below shows a rabbit’s rear foot (seen from the bottom) in a splayed position. Note that the rear foot has only four toes.

In the photo above you can see the thick fur which covers the bottom of the rear foot of the cottontail, and the front foot is just as furry. This is why the outlines of the toes in rabbit tracks are blurry, especially in snow. The next photo shows the right front print of a cottontail (facing to the right) in mud that had dried to a perfect consistency for recording fine details. The toes are visible but not sharply defined, and the texture of the fur can be seen in and around the toe impressions. This photo also shows all five toes clearly–yes, there are five toes on the front foot of the rabbit. But counting toes can be difficult because there are also some pads which look like toes.

To help sort this out I’ve marked the toes and two of the pads in the next photo. The innermost toe is marked Toe 1, following the convention of numbering from the inside of the foot. It’s smaller than the others and often fails to register in tracks. The other four toes are larger and tipped with substantial claws, and the toe arrangement as a whole is asymmetrical.

If you’ve ever had a run-in with a rabbit’s foot you know that, in spite of the furry covering, the sharp claws can dig in quite effectively. Sometimes the claws are the only parts of the foot that make impressions, as in this photo of the right and left rear tracks of a rabbit in a hurry (direction of travel toward the upper right).

In addition to tracks, rabbits leave many other signs of their presence. You may find stems bitten off at an angle like the multiflora rose in the photo below. These angled cuts are characteristic of rabbit browsing and they arise from the anatomy of the rabbit’s jaws.

In the next photo you see the lower jaw of a cottontail with an added line representing a stem or twig. As it takes the stem between its upper and lower incisors, the rabbit positions the stem so that one end passes through the gap between its incisors and its molars. This biting technique results in an angled cut. Deer don’t have upper incisors so instead of making a clean bite, a deer grasps the stem between its lower incisors and its horny upper palate and pulls or jerks to make a rough break.

Cottontails also feed on the bark of young trees and shrubs. Their chews have a rough appearance, with bites penetrating to varying depths, as in the staghorn sumac stem shown below. Chews made by other bark feeders (beavers, porcupines, voles, and occasionally squirrels) are much neater and more consistent in depth of penetration.

Whether it’s bark, twigs, or buds, a rabbit has to ingest a lot of fiber to get at the nutritious living cells in the cambium or in the tiny leaf initials inside buds. The animals boost the nutrition they get from their food by processing it twice. After passing through most of the digestive system, waste is diverted to the caecum where it is fermented to produce additional nutrients. This material is eliminated, usually at night, as clusters of soft globs called caecotropes. We seldom see this kind of fecal matter because the rabbit eats it immediately. After passing through the digestive system again, the waste is eliminated as pellets like the ones in the next photo.

These pellets are dry and fibrous, and are normally scattered irregularly where rabbits feed and move about. Unlike the rounded cylindrical pellets of deer, rabbit pellets are shaped like slightly flattened spheres. Cottontails are now shifting to their summer diet of grasses, forbs, and flowers, but the final result will be pellets similar to those produced from woody food.

The cottontail rabbit is a thoroughly interesting creature with some impressive tools for survival. By observing its tracks and trails as well as chews, scat, and other sign, we can appreciate a creature that is beautifully adapted to its environment.

Looking On The Bright Side

The leaves are down, and the colorful spectacle of autumn is behind us. The forest has gone from a kaleidoscope of color to a narrow spectrum of browns and grays. But wait, what’s that pale streak glinting among the tree trunks? If you look closely you can see it in the center of the featured photo. Moving closer we can see that it’s a buck rub, bright wood laid bare by a hormone-driven male deer. This is rutting season for whitetail deer, and the bucks are roaming the landscape seeking receptive does. They leave their calling cards on living trees–anything from very young saplings to substantial trunks 8 inches or more in diameter. To make a rub the animal lowers its head and rakes its antlers up and down against the stem. Rough areas around the bases of the antlers work like files to abrade the outer bark down to the light colored sapwood.

The photo below is a close-up of the rub in the first photo. Rubs are usually between one and four feet above the ground, and their edges are often rough or stringy. Gouges made by the short tines near the antler bases are often present–look for them just above the debarked area. The brightness of the freshly exposed wood is what attracts our attention, and it may do the same for deer. But buck rubs also carry scent messages, deposited when the animal rubs its forehead against the newly bared surface. We’re not equipped to detect these chemical signals, but to a visiting doe they convey a wealth of information about the age, health, and even individual identity of the rub maker.

The light colored areas in the photo below have also been denuded of bark, but this wood was exposed by feeding rather than by rubbing. A porcupine climbed these yellow birch trees and chewed through the outer bark to get at the cambium, the living cells that produce both bark and wood during the growing season. There’s no mistaking this example for a buck rub, but porcupine chews are sometimes found close enough to the ground to be confusing. In both cases the light wood stands out against the bark, but there are several clues that distinguish rubs from chews.

Instead of a smooth surface, wood that has been exposed by porcupine feeding is textured by tooth grooves, and the margins are more irregular, as in the photo below. The tooth marks are just deep enough to reach the nutritious tissue, and are organized with a neatness that speaks of feeding efficiency. Along the margins of chews there are often tooth marks instead of the stringy fibers that mark the edges of rubs.

Beavers, like porcupines, rely on the cambium of woody plants for much of their winter diet. Being larger than porcupines, beavers’ wider incisors give their chews a more robust appearance. And rather than climb to access food, beavers bring the food down to their level by felling trees. The beaver that felled the log in the photo below stood on its back feet to feed, anchoring its upper incisors in the bark and drawing its lower incisors upward to scrape up the cambium. It moved systematically along the log, leaving the row of shallow upper incisor digs in the bark and the longer lower incisor marks below them. Like the porcupine, the beaver penetrated just deep enough to scrape up the nutritious cambium.

Not all bark chewers show this kind of efficiency. The sumac stem below was chewed by a rabbit, and its ragged appearance contrasts with the more orderly work done by beavers and porcupines. Rabbits only feed on small stems, and their chews show varying depths of penetration with projecting splinters of bark and wood. Like beavers they are limited to what they can reach from the surface they’re standing on, but if there’s a deep snow pack or heavy snow that bends branches down, rabbit chews can be found in some surprising places.

Here’s another kind of feeding that might catch your eye in the autumn woods. Woodpeckers worked on this standing dead tree to get at the insects in the outer layers of wood. The beak strikes left pits, partially lifted slivers, and gouges (best seen on the right edge of the tree). This kind of woodpecker work can be located at any height, and may even be found on downed logs, but unlike the previous examples, it only occurs on dead trees.

Here’s a final example of eye-catching brightness. As the weather gets colder, squirrels leave their leafy tree-top dreys and make nests in hollow trees or other protected places. They gather fibrous bark for nest lining, and in the process, leave freshly debarked wood for us to find. The dead, fallen branch in the photo below was stripped of its fibrous inner bark by a squirrel. Although there’s a vague resemblance to a buck rub, the position of the branch and its non-living status indicate squirrel work rather than deer.

When squirrels harvest fiber from woody plants they may leave another clue. In the photo below you can see the paired marks of a squirrel’s incisors. Much of the bark removal is done by pulling up long strips, but occasionally the squirrel leaves a bite mark as it grasps the bark with its teeth.

Squirrel stripping is also found on living stems–I’ve seen it on honeysuckle and red cedar–and these are more likely to be mistaken for buck rubs. But areas shredded by squirrels are often in places a deer wouldn’t be able to reach, higher on a trunk, within multi-stemmed shrubs, or on stems guarded by projecting branches. Deer prefer sites with straight stems and unobstructed approaches, and any small branches or twigs are usually broken off by the vigorous action of making a rub.

I love this time of year–the leaves are down, and I can see for greater distances through the trees. Many signs of animal activity are hidden by fallen leaves, but others have become more visible. And every once in a while a bright patch shining among the duller tones draws me in and opens up a new and interesting discovery.

Feet Tell the Story: Family Resemblances Among Small Rodents

The smaller the creature, the tinier the feet–and the less often we’re able to see the kind of detail that we’re accustomed to seeing in the tracks of larger creatures. So I was delighted a few weeks ago to find these beautifully revealing chipmunk tracks. The one that first caught my eye was the right rear print that lies off by itself in the lower right part of the photo. The much larger rear print of a gray squirrel lies above it, and at least two other chipmunk tracks are visible among the unrelated disturbances in the upper part of the photo. The chipmunk’s right front print sits in the left part of the frame midway between top and bottom, and its left rear print can be seen above the squirrel track. The left front print isn’t obvious but a few small depressions suggest that it lies above the right front in the upper left quadrant of the photo. The chipmunk was moving toward the right.

The two right prints of the chipmunk show excellent detail, so I’ve focused in on them in the photo to the left. The toes and claw marks are visible, four of each in the front track (at the upper left) and five in the rear track (at the lower right). Behind the toes you can see the grouped depressions that make up the middle pads of both the front and rear tracks. For such a small creature those tracks are exquisite.

Why do I get so excited about such stuff? The finely formed details of animal tracks contain such energy and elegance that I just love to look at them. But beyond that, track details can reveal an animal’s affinities, in this case the affinities between chipmunks and other small rodents. The gray squirrel tracks in the next photo (moving toward the top of the frame, rear prints above and front prints below) help to illustrate the important features shared by this group. In the rear prints the central three toes lie close together and point forward, while the inner and outer ones sit farther back and are angled to the sides. The four toes of the front prints are spread more or less evenly. The middle pads of both front and rear feet are made up of four depressions, arranged in a crescent in the rear and a more triangular shape in the front. In the front print the heel pads, located just behind the middle pads, show as small paired depressions.

There are lots of rodents, and some have foot structures that depart from the characteristics I just described. But our most common small rodents–including one even smaller than a chipmunk–are surprisingly consistent in showing this suite of features. It took perfect mud to register the details in these white-footed mouse tracks (heading toward the top of the photo), but the family resemblance comes through clearly. The numbers and arrangements of the toes are the same, and the middle pads of both front and rear prints are similar to those of the chipmunk and the squirrel. You can even see the heel pads, albeit slightly smeared, in the front tracks!

Family resemblances can extend to the gait level as well, and they certainly do here. Widely placed rear prints and more narrowly placed front prints, positioned behind the rear ones, represent a typical pattern for bounding or jumping small rodents. Of course this pattern changes when different maneuvers are required, and even at a steady bound the four tracks aren’t usually as perfectly placed as the ones in the snow photo of the gray squirrel. But both gait patterns and track details are useful clues to the identities of our most common small rodents.