| Lemmings are small rodents, closely related to the common field
mouse of more southern climes, these tundra mice inhabit the vast
treeless areas of northern Canada and Alaska. They are best known
for their lemming years when they reach high numbers over large
areas of the Arctic and Sub-arctic. These large populations recur
every three to four years and because many other animals depend on
lemmings for food their impact is a dominant feature of animal life
on the tundra.
They resemble small guinea pigs in overall proportions, having
very short tails and small ears. When full grown they are about
five to six inches long and weigh about two or three ounces.
Lemmings are active all year and don¹t hibernate in winter,
instead, they burrow under the snow, taking advantage of the
insulation. When the air temperature is -60 F, the temperature
under a 24 inch layer of snow may be as high as +20 F. Their
winter nests, constructed of finely shredded grass, resemble hollow
balls of hay and when the snow melts in spring are very
conspicuous.
Their winter coats are longer and denser than their summer coats
and the shortness of their legs, ears and tail minimize heat loss
from body extremities. During the summer lemmings build their
nests underground in tunnel systems which they dig in the soil as it
thaws. Three species of lemmings inhabit Alaska tundra, the brown
lemming (Lemmus sibiricus), collard lemming (Dicrostonyx
torquatus), and the northern bog lemming (Synaptomys borealis)
. The collard lemming has also been called the varying lemming
because, unique among rodents, it changes color to adapt to winter¹s
white environment. The reproductive rate of lemmings is very high.
Breeding usual occurs from March to September, although in some
years, lemmings breed all year round, except for brief periods
during the spring melt and autumn freeze. This year-round breeding
seems to presage a population peak.
One of the most widespread misconceptions about lemmings is that
they regularly commit mass suicide to relieve their overpopulation
problems. Rather than some orchestrated migration to the sea (most
lemmings live too far from the ocean to make this possible!) a
number of factors contribute to an abrupt decrease in their
numbers. The cycle of predator numbers increases in direct response
to lemming abundance. For example, Arctic foxes, weasels, and Snowy
Owls kill lemmings in large numbers and show population changes
paralleling the lemmings. Also, lemmings exhaust their food supply
when they become very abundant, and die of starvation and
malnutrition. The fact that crowding and stress is detrimental to
the health and survival of an individual lemming has been
documented (as it has in many other species as well) resulting in
hormonal imbalances and increased aggressiveness. Individuals
seldom live more than a year or two in the wild and with the high
reproductive rate, a complete turnover in the entire lemming
population can occur in a year or two.
Like most other small rodents at birth, young lemmings are blind,
deaf, wrinkled and pink and weigh less than 4 grams. They develop
quickly and are weaned between the second or third week of life.
Juvenile males typically mature at about five weeks of age. One
female in captivity bore six litters in twenty-two weeks, but in the
wild females probably bear litters every sixty-seven days through
spring and summer.
Lemmings feed primarily on plants such as grasses, sedges, seeds,
willow bark, bearberry and cottongrass. Insects and meat may be
eaten when available and there is some evidence that lemmings are
cannibalistic when food is scarce.
One of the native names for lemmings is kilangmiutak, which means
one-who-comes-from-the-sky. The legend of lemmings falling
from the sky is common from the eastern Canadian Arctic to western
Alaska, and is also found in Scandinavia. It probably arose because
of the sudden appearance of lemmings when the snow melts in the
spring of a peak population year.
Though lemmings themselves are not of direct economic importance,
their importance to the web of life on the tundra is dramatic and
enduring, sustaining owls, foxes, wolves, wolverines, weasels, mink,
and marten through the winter. A population decline will certainly
effect the economics of the trapping industry but will also produce
an increase of Snowy Owl sightings in the northern states of
the Lower 48 to the delight of many bird enthusiasts. In addition,
these burrowing animals help aerate the soils and fertilize the
earth with their droppings. Time after time, the tundra will bustle
with activity for a brief period before the respite that comes when
the lemming-year passes. |