An Experimental Test of Facotrs Attracting Deer Mice into Buildings

Authors

  • Amy J. Kuenzi Department of Biology, Montana Tech of the University of Montana, Butte, MT
  • Richard Douglass Department of Biology, Montana Tech of the University of Montana, Butte, MT

Keywords:

deer mice, buildings, test, hantavirus, sin nombre virus, Montana

Abstract

Deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) are the principal reservoir host of Sin Nombre virus (SNV). Deer mice use a wide variety of habitats including peridomestic settings in and around human dwellings, their presence in and around homes has been implicated as a risk factor for acquiring Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome. Deer mice are believed to enter buildings in order to gain access to a variety of resources including food, bedding material, and better thermal microclimates. However, no one has experimentally tested which factors influence mice use of buildings. We conducted experiments using small simulated buildings to determine the effects of two factors, i.e., food and bedding material, on mouse activity in these buildings. We also examined if these effects varied with time of year. We found that deer mice entered our buildings regardless of the presence or absence of food or bedding. However, the amount of activity in buildings was affected by what they contained. We found significantly higher indices of activity in buildings containing food compared to both empty buildings (control) and buildings containing bedding material. Time of year did not affect activity in buildings.

Published

2024-02-20

Issue

Section

Biological Sciences - Terrestrial Ecosystems [Articles]