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A quantitative survey of the fleas associated with the gray-tailed vole, Microtus canicaudus Miller

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Title A quantitative survey of the fleas associated with the gray-tailed vole, Microtus canicaudus Miller
Names Robbins, Richard George (creator)
Krantz, G. W. (advisor)
Date Issued 1975-05-22 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1976
Abstract A study of the population dynamics and ecology of the fleas
associated with the gray-tailed vole, Microtus canicaudus Miller, was
conducted on three sites surrounding the city of Corvallis, Oregon.
Over a period of 12 months, 22,641 adult and larval fleas representing
three families and eight species were recovered from 428 voles and
256 nests. Catallagia charlottensis (Baker) 1898 was by far the most
abundant flea species, followed by Atyphloceras multidentatus (Co Fox)
1909, Hystrichopsylla occidentalis Holland 1949, Peromyscopsylla
selenis (Rothschild) 1906, Nosopsyllus fasciatus (Bosc d'Antic) 1801,
Monopsyllus wagneri (Baker) 1904, Corrodopsylla curvata (Rothschild)
1915, and four specimens of an unidentified Rhadinopsylla. On all
sites, flea populations experienced spring and early winter peaks
followed by drastic summer and midwinter declines. The summer
decline was especially severe and at this time fleas were generally
confined to subterranean nests. This cycle did not correspond with
that of the vole itself which bred principally from spring to fall, producing
only an occasional litter during the winter months.
Fluctuations in flea populations were positively correlated with
humidity and negatively correlated with temperature. Indices of
extensity and intensity were computed for each flea species, and data
were collected concerning the pattern of flea distribution on the body of
the gray-tailed vole. Contingency tests were employed to determine
whether flea infestations were dependent on particular host attributes,
such as sex, size, age and physiological condition. Yearly sex ratios
were computed for the seven most abundant fleas and monthly ratios
for the two principal species. Finally, negative binomial distributions
were fit to the observed frequency distributions of Atyphloceras
multidentatus, Catallagia charlottensis and fleas collectively on 377
comparable voles.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Fleas
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/43888

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