Hazel dormouse explained

The hazel dormouse or common dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius) is a small dormouse species native to Europe and the only living species in the genus Muscardinus.[1]

Distribution and habitat

The hazel dormouse is native to northern Europe and Asia Minor. It is the only dormouse native to the British Isles, and is therefore often referred to simply as the "dormouse" in British sources, although the edible dormouse, Glis glis, has been accidentally introduced and now has an established population in South East England. Though Ireland has no native dormouse, the hazel dormouse was discovered in County Kildare in 2010,[2] [3] and appears to be spreading rapidly, helped by the prevalence of hedgerows in the Irish countryside.[4]

The United Kingdom distribution of the hazel dormouse can be found on the National Biodiversity Network website. A 2020 study found that hazel dormice in Britain have declined by 51% since 2000. Woodland habitat loss and management and a warming climate are seen as material threats to their future status.[5]

Habitat

According to English Nature's Dormouse Conservation Handbook, hazel dormice are "particularly associated with deciduous woodland" but also inhabit hedgerows and scrub.

Dormice seldom travel more than 70 m from their nest.[6]

Description

The hazel dormouse can reach a body length of about and a length of about if you consider the tail as well. It is 6cmto9cmcm (02inchesto04inchescm) long with a tail of 5.7cmto7.5cmcm (02.2inchesto03inchescm). It weighs 17g20g, although this increases to 30to just before hibernation. This small mammal has reddish brown fur that can vary up to golden-brown or yellow-orange-brown becoming lighter in the lower part. Eyes are large and black. Ears are small and not very developed, while the tail is long and completely covered with hair.

It is a nocturnal creature and spends most of its waking hours among the branches of trees looking for food. It will make long detours rather than come down to the ground and expose itself to danger. The hazel dormouse hibernates from October to April–May.

Behaviour

Starting from the onset of colder weather (October or November), the hazel dormouse will hibernate in nests on the ground, at the base of old coppiced trees or hazel stools, under piles of leaves, or under log piles, as these situations are not subject to extreme variations in either temperature or humidity. Dormice are almost completely arboreal in habit but much less reluctant to cross open ground than was thought even recently. When it wakes up in spring (late April or early May), it builds woven nests of shredded honeysuckle bark, fresh leaves, and grasses in the undergrowth. If the weather is cold and wet and food is scarce, it saves energy by going into torpor; it curls up into a ball and goes to sleep. The hazel dormouse, therefore, spends a large proportion of its life sleeping, either hibernating in winter or in torpor in summer.

An examination of hazelnuts may show a neat, round hole in the shell. This indicates it has been opened by a small rodent, e.g. the dormouse, wood mouse, or bank vole. Other animals, such as squirrels or jays, will either split the shell completely in half or make a jagged hole in it.

Further examination reveals the cut surface of the hole has toothmarks which follow the direction of the shell. In addition, there will be toothmarks on the outer surface of the nut, at an angle of about 45 degrees to the cut surface. Woodmice and voles bite across the nutshell leaving clear parallel toothmarks from inside to outside. Woodmice also leave toothmarks on the outer surface of the nut but voles do not.

Diet

The hazel dormouse requires a variety of arboreal foods to survive. It eats berries and nuts and other fruit with hazelnuts being the main food for fattening up before hibernation. The dormouse also eats hornbeam and blackthorn fruit where hazel is scarce. Other food sources are the buds of young leaves, and flowers which provide nectar and pollen. The dormouse also eats insects found on food-source trees, particularly aphids and caterpillars.

Plants of value to dormice

Threats

Protection status

The hazel dormouse is protected by and in UK under the Wildlife and Countryside Act.[15]

Evolutionary history

The oldest fossils of the genus Muscardinus date to the Serravallian stage of the Middle Miocene approximately 13.8 to 11.6 million years ago in what is now Spain. The oldest fossils of the modern species date to the Early Pleistocene.[16]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Mitchell-Jones, A. J. . Amori, G. . Bogdanowicz, W. . Kryštufek, B. . Reijnders, P.J.H. . Spitzenberger, F. . Stubbe, M. . Thissen, J.B.M. . Vohralik, V. . Zima, J. . amp . 1999 . The atlas of European Mammals . Academic Press . London . 484.
  2. Marnell . Ferdia . Donoher . Daniel . Emma . Sheehy . Colin . Lawton . 2013 . First confirmed record of Hazel Dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius) in the wild in Ireland . Irish Naturalists' Journal . 33 . 1 . 77–78 . ResearchGate.
  3. News: Ahlstrom . Dick . 16 July 2013 . The dormouse makes first appearance in Ireland . Irish Times.
  4. News: Mooney . John . 8 September 2013 . Rare UK dormouse moved to Ireland . Sunday Times.
  5. News: Robyn. Vinter . Hedgerow highway will keep dormice thriving in the Yorkshire Dales . 18 April 2020 . The Guardian . London, UK . 18 April 2020.
  6. Paul Bright, Pat Morris & Tony Mitchell-Jones, The Dormouse Conservation Handbook (2nd ed.: English Nature, 2006), p. 13.
  7. Feeding on the edge: the diet of the hazel dormouse Muscardinus avellanarius (Linnaeus 1758) on the northern periphery of its distributional range . Mammalia . 77 . 2 . 149–155 . Rimvydas . Juškaitis . Laima . Baltrunaite . 2013 . 10.1515/mammalia-2012-0086 . 84754901 . 28 June 2020.
  8. http://ptes.org/index.php?cat=110 Hedgerows for Dormice
  9. Web site: Trust . Woodland . Hazel Dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius) . 2023-02-03 . Woodland Trust . en-GB.
  10. Verbeylen, Goedele. "How small should the entrance be? Is it possible to let common dormice Muscardinus avellanarius enter nest boxes and exclude other species." (2017): 35-39.
  11. Book: Moffat, Ruth . THE STATUS OF THE HAZEL DORMOUSE(Muscardinus avellanarius) IN WARWICKSHIRE, COVENTRY & SOLIHULL IN 2016 . Warwickshire Dormouse Conservation Group . 2017 . 6 . en.
  12. Web site: New report reveals Britain's hazel dormice decline . National Biodiversity Network Trust . 20 November 2019 . 8 November 2021.
  13. Book: Maclean, Norman . Silent Summer: The State of Wildlife in Britain and Ireland . 2010-05-20 . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-51966-3 . en.
  14. Web site: The State of Britain's Dormice 2019 . People’s Trust for Endangered Species . 8 November 2021.
  15. http://www.ptes.org/files/284_dormouse_nat_eng_fact_sheet.pdf Dormouse: European protected species
  16. Garcia-Ibaibarriaga . Naroa . Arrizabalaga . Álvaro . Iriarte-Chiapusso . María-José . Rofes . Juan . Murelaga . Xabier . July 2015 . The return to the Iberian Peninsula: first Quaternary record of Muscardinus and a palaeogeographical overview of the genus in Europe . Quaternary Science Reviews . en . 119 . 106–115 . 10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.04.017. 2015QSRv..119..106G . 10810/65159 . free .