Authors note: I wrote this piece on life under the snow a few years
ago when we were having a wild winter on the Cape. Now in 2015 history
seems to be repeating itself and then some. I thought, then, maybe it
would be appropriate to print this again and let you know about the
party going on down there! Pat 3/5/15 where, even in TX if feels like
it is in the teens today!
With
all the groaning so many of us are doing about this endless winter, it
seems a good idea to point out a few creatures that are doing the dance
of joy. Bring on the snow! May it last until May! For some, life in
the Subnivian zone is sublime!
.
And
what is the Subnivian zone? It’s simply the area between the ground
and the top of the snow-an area of “free-for-all” for the likes of
voles, mice, and shrews. Just think of the protection they gain within
the tunnels they dig there. The temperature stays fairly constant, as
it might in an igloo. The wind doesn’t bother them but most of all, the
Hawk and the Owl and all others who place them on the “Friday Night
Special” menu, can’t see them.
I am sure I have
shared with you before how, as the snow begins to melt here, you can
clearly see the tunnels that wind back and forth over the fields. Today
I came across one shaped like a large valentine. Obviously no one has
equipped these critters with a GPS or a Surveying kit to plot the
straight line. Theirs is a meandering path that takes them to where
grass may still be found, or whatever food source they are after. Under
the cover of snow, mice and their like can feel free to chew away on
the bark of young trees. If you come upon a tree in spring that is
mysteriously missing its bark at the bottom, you can be pretty sure that
is what happened.
The tunnels do provide some
security, more than just having to “run for your life” all the time, but
the prey weren’t left without a few tricks of their own. Owls and
fox, coyote and weasels all have excellent hearing and they can hear the
party going on down there. Perhaps you have seen pictures of a fox or a
coyote leaping in the air to pounce on the ground, with the hope of
trapping the vole in the collapsed tunnel.
Bernd
Heinrich in his book “Winter World” says that, owls, upon hearing the
sound, dive-bomb down with their feet curled and can punch a hole in
even the crustiest snow. Then, grabbing with their talons, they usually
find the, not-so-safe-after-all, vole. But before you take pity on the
poor vole, let me remind you that it can have up to 18 litters a year,
with 5 young in a litter and those, are able to reproduce in a months
time!Eh Gad! Be thankful the occasional fox or coyote can still rout
them out.
Another pro-snow animal is the Ruffed Grouse.
Of
course, its preference is for soft snow that has recently fallen and
has some depth. To stay warm through the night, and stay out of the
storm by day, they blast head first into the snow and disappear in a
puff of flakes. They then tunnel a little way under and set up a nice,
well-insulated igloo for themselves where they are warm and out of harms
way The only trick here is that snow may melt and then ice over in
cooling temperatures making it a lot harder to ”poof” your way out
again. Also, one must assume they only try this with soft snow or they
would be in line with many of our NFL players with some serious
concussions.
Now,
does any of that make you feel better? Not every living thing is
groaning about the forecast. And when the snow in your area finally
does begin to melt, you too can go look for “Where the Wild Things
Were”. Possibly even finding out your yard wasn’t quite as tame as you
may have thought it was.
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