THE MAMMALS
STREATOR WOOD RAT. Neotoma fuscipes streatori Merriam
Field characters.Form
and size about those of House Rat, but tail shorter than head and body
(fig. 13); tail round, closely haired, not bushy (fig. 12b);
pelage soft and smooth; ear rather large, rounded. Head and body 7-1/4
to 8-1/4 inches (183-209 mm.), tail 6-1/2 to 7-1/2 inches (165-191 mm),
hind foot about 1-1/2 inches (35-38 mm.), ear from crown 1 to 1-1/4
inches (24-32 mm.), weight 7-1/4 to 8-3/4 ounces (206-247 grams).
Coloration brownish gray with a general overlay of black hair tippings;
whole under surface of body, under side of tail, and upper surface of
feet, white.
Workings.Nests or
'houses,' 2 to 3 feet high, conical in shape, composed of twigs, leaves,
chunks of wood, etc.; placed on ground beneath brush plants or trees,
or, less often, on horizontal branches of oak trees at height of several
feet from ground. Droppings: Cylindrical, about 3/8 inch long and
1/8 inch in diameter, scattered in and about nest, or at intervals along
runways.
Occurrence.Common
resident chiefly in Upper Sonoran Zone and lower part of Transition
Zone, on west slope of Sierra Nevada. Recorded from Snelling and
Pleasant Valley eastward to floor of Yosemite Valley. Lives in mixed
stands of trees and brush, occasionally among rocks. Chiefly
nocturnal.
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Fig. 12. Tails of (a) Alexandrine
Roof Rat, (b) Streator Wood Rat, and (c) Gray Bushy-tailed
Wood Rat. One-half natural size.
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The Streator Wood Rat is well known to residents of
the foothill country of east-central California. The animal itself is
seldom seen, but evidence of its presence in the form of large nests or
'houses' is to be observed in many places. This animal is often referred
to as 'pack rat' or 'trade rat' by reason of its propensity for carrying
articles from place to place in and about cabins or camping places.
The Streator Wood Rat is close to the house rat in
size, the length of body and the weight being about the same in the two;
but the wood rat's tail is shorter than its head and body, while the
reverse is true of the roof rat. The pelage of the wood rat is rather
short, with no conspicuous coarse over-hairs; it is dense and even, and
feels soft to the touch. The coloration above varies from blue gray in
the younger animals to sandy brown in adults. Very large males become
suffused with reddish or huffy brown, particularly on the sides of the
body. On the whole under surface of the body and tail at all ages the
fur is pure white. Although streatori is grouped with the
brown-footed wood rats, its feet are pure white, as is also the lower
half of its tail. The tail of the Streator Wood Rat is well haired and
hence quite different in appearance from the scaly tail of the roof rat;
but the hairs on the tail of streatori are short and closely
laid, with no long hairs on the sides of the tail as in the Bushy-tailed
Wood Rat. (See figs. 12b, 13.)
The Streator Wood Rats are active chiefly by night,
so that sight of one is seldom obtained. Most of our information
relating to the rats themselves was gained by setting traps baited with
rolled oats near nests or other places which showed signs of recent
occupancy by the animals. The individuals taken for specimens were all
trapped during the night-time. Only three of the animals were noted
abroad during the daytime and on each occasion the rat was in view for
but a few seconds. At El Portal, in early December, one was seen to run
into a brush pile on the hill above the river; near Cascades in November
a wood rat appeared while one of our party was 'squeaking' at a Winter
Wren; and near Coulterville an adult wood rat was frightened from its
nest while one of our party was dismantling the structure.
The 'round-tailed' wood rats are active throughout
the year, so far as we know; trapping at any season is likely to produce
specimens. In Yosemite Valley tracks of the Streator Wood Rat were seen
in snow on the Yosemite Falls Trail on December 9 (1914). In midwinter,
when snow covers the exterior of the rock slides on the Valley walls,
the wood rats are able to run about in comfort and safety in the spaces
between and beneath the granite blocks.
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Fig. 13. Streator Wood Rat. Photographed
from fresh specimen trapped near foot of Yosemite Falls trail in
Yosemite Valley, November 22, 1915. About 1/3 natural size.
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Usually the wood rats obtained for specimens were
trapped close to nests, but in one instance an immature individual was
taken in a trap set on the ground beneath chaparral in a place where no
evidence of wood rat activity was to be seen. At El Portal there were
indications that the wood rats were using the trails made by the brush
rabbits through and beneath the greasewood chaparral. These rats have
regular paths or trails of their own, especially along the walls of
narrow ravines. These paths are kept more or less bare of leaves,
evidently by the frequent passage of the animals over them. At Dudley
the rail fences through dense chaparral were being used regularly as
highways; the lower rails were chosen rather than the uppermost one,
doubtless on the principle of "safety first." At Kinsley, droppings of
wood rats were found in the farthest recesses of a cave some 50 feet
from its entrance. Animals living there would have to seek territory for
foraging altogether outside the cave.
The most conspicuous feature in the life history of
the Streator Wood Rat is its propensity to build houses. These
structures are usually conical in shape and measure from 18 inches to 3
feet in height, having the same or a slightly greater diameter at base.
A majority of the houses are built on the ground, among or beside brush
plants, but seldom far away from such trees as live oaks and willows.
Sometimes the nests are placed on horizontal branches in oak trees at
heights of as much as 15 feet above the ground. Less often the animals
live among the rocks, and then the shape of the house or nest is
accommodated to the crevices available between adjacent slabs or
boulders. Now and then the structure is heaped around a downed tree, as
described below; and in one case a nest was found in the hollow trunk of
a living black oak.
The usual wood rat nest is only a pile of various
sorts of material of such kinds as can be accumulated from the near
vicinity of the site. Within there is a nest chamber of varying size and
proportions. The houses sometimes have underground retreats or
passageways, as through a hollow tree root, so that in time of danger
the wood rat can escape from the nest without appearing on the surface
of the ground until it is some distance away. Entering into the
composition of different houses in the Yosemite foothills we found the
following materials: twigs and green cuttings of Ceanothus cuneatus,
C. integerrinus, buckeye, live oak, golden oak, yellow pine, and
willow, reed stalks, cones of yellow pine, chunks of decayed wood, and,
in one case, stones each weighing several ounces.
On a digger-pine-covered hillside which had been
burned over within a year, near the McCarthy ranch, 3 miles east of
Coulterville, a house of the Streator Wood Rat was found and studied,
June 2, 1915. (See fig. 14.) This structure had been built on and partly
within a rotten log which lay on the ground. There was a thatch of dry
sticks and pieces of bark from the digger pine, and this covering seemed
to have protected the interior of the nest effectively against moisture.
At one end of the log was an entrance to the interior and here was
accumulated a mass of droppings and other debris which the animals had
removed from within the house. Inside the house, partly or completely
inside the log, were no less than four beds or nests proper; only one of
these was occupied when the place was examined. The beds were composed
of shredded wood, dry twigs and grass stems, and some green leaves. In
one place a quantity of fresh young leaves of the golden oak was found.
Three holes led out from the main interior cavity of the house, one of
these going down lengthwise of the log, while the two others went into
the ground.
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Fig. 14. Sketch showing interior
arrangement of nesting quarters of a Streator Wood Rat in a hollow log.
Locality, three miles east of Coulterville, June 2, 1915.
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In one of the beds a very young wood rat was found;
and an adult animal ran out of the same nest as the place was opened up.
No other wood rats were seen nor had any been trapped adjacent to this
log during the few days preceding, so it seems likely that the place was
tenanted by just the two. Part of the interior of the nest contained a
mouldy mass of old droppings and bits of twigs, and fresher droppings
were found about the beds. The animals seem to exercise none of the
precautions for cleanliness observable in some rodents, for example,
pocket gophers. The damp earth beneath one nest abounded in fleas,
though none of these pests were to be seen on the young wood rat which
was found in this nest.
The breeding season of the Streator Wood Rat, to
judge from the capture of strictly juvenile specimens, includes most of
the warm months of the year. Thus, a juvenile animal trapped at Pleasant
Valley on May 19 (1915) points to an early commencement of breeding
activity, possibly in March; whereas an immature specimen captured on
November 24 (1915) near Cascades could not have been born earlier than
September. Trapping in May and June, however, gave evidence that the
greatest amount of breeding activity occurred at about that season. Most
of the females taken then were suckling young, and two nests examined
each held a single young animal. A female collected May 24 at Pleasant
Valley contained one embryo, and another obtained June 1, 3 miles east
of Coulterville, contained 2 small embryos. By late autumn (November),
young born during the current year weigh about 5 ounces (150 grams),
which is about three-fifths the weight of adults.
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