| Alaska Marmot | |
|---|---|
| Conservation status | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Mammalia |
| Order: | Rodentia |
| Family: | Sciuridae |
| Genus: | Marmota |
| Subgenus: | Marmota |
| Species: | M. broweri |
| Binomial name | |
| Marmota broweri Hall & Gilmore, 1934 |
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| Range of Marmota broweri in Alaska. Its range also extends slightly into Canada. | |
The Alaska marmot (Marmota broweri), also known as the Brooks Range marmot[2] or the Browers,[3] is a species of rodent in the family Sciuridae. It is found in the scree slopes of the Brooks Range, Alaska. They eat grass, flowering plants, berries, roots, moss, and lichen.[4] These marmots range from about 54 cm to 65 cm in length and 2.5 kg to 4 kg in weight.[5] Alaska celebrates every February 2 as "Marmot Day," a holiday intended to observe the prevalence of marmots in that state and take the place of Groundhog Day.[6]
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Originally Marmota broweri was perceived as a synonym for M. caligata,[7][8] but this was soon proven false when evidence was found that corroborated M. broweri as a unique species.[9][10][11] Cytochrome b sequences were used to verify that M. broweri as its own distinct species.[11]
Marmota broweri were sometimes hunted by Alaskan natives for food and often harvested by Eskimo hunters for their warm fur (about 20 marmots to make one parka).[12] An Eskimo hunter would spend all summer hunting marmots to make a parka, as it takes about twenty marmot skins to make one parka.[12]
Marmot Day is essentially Alaska's own version of Groundhog Day.[13] Sarah Palin signed a bill in 2009 to officially make every February 2 Marmot Day.[13] The bill, introduced by Senator Linda Menard, said "it made sense for the marmot to become Alaska's version of Punxsutawney Phil, the Pennsylvania groundhog famed for his winter weather forecasts".[13] She didn't expect marmots to have any weather forecasting duties but rather hoped that the state would create educational activities regarding the marmot.[13]
The status of Alaska marmots is not well known due to the difficulties in finding them in their natural habitats.[5] According to IUCN: Red List of Threatened Species ver. 3.1, the Alaska marmot is considered to be a “Least Concern” status signifying a relatively low concern in terms of the dangers they face.[12] Although Alaska marmots may be hunted, their population is stable and not at risk for endangerment.[12] In fact, the Alaska marmot has been declared the least threatened species of marmot.[3]
Alaskan marmots are mammals.[12] They possess a short neck, broad and short head, bushy tail, small ears, short powerful legs and feet, densely furred tail, and a thick body covered in coarse hair.[4] Adult Alaska marmots’ fur on their nose and the dorsal part of their head are usually of a dark color.[12] Their feet may be light or dark in color.[4] M. broweri have tough claws adapted for digging,[4] however the thumbs of their front limbs do not have these claws but flat nails instead.[12] Their body size is highly variable due to hibernation cycles.[14] For males, the average total length is 61 cm and the average weight is 3.6 kg.[2] Adult females are slightly smaller, having an average length of 58 cm and 3.2 kg.[2]
The retina of the eye of Alaska marmots is entirely lacking of rods, making their night vision quite poor.[3] They also lack the fovea of the eye, making their visual acuity much worse than other rodents.[3] The location of their eyes makes their field of vision very wide, sideways and upward.[3] All of their teeth will grow throughout their lifetime, resembling sharp rodent incisors.[12] There is a single pair of incisors in each jaw.[3]
In terms of global distribution, the Alaska marmot is nearctic.[5] Current distribution of the Alaska marmot include the Brooks Range, Ray Mountains, and Kokrines Hills.[15] They exist in the mountains that lie north of the Yukon and Porcupine rivers in central and northern Alaska.[5] However, there have been reports of Alaska marmots in the Richardson Mountains in the northern Yukon Territory but these sightings have not yet been confirmed.[5][16]
Alaska marmots are found scattered throughout Alaska as small colonies each consisting of various families.[17] Their locations have been documented in the Brooks Range from Lake Peters to Cape Lisburne and Cape Sabine that lies westward.[18] There have been sightings of marmots near rivers in the Northern Baird mountains and in the Mulik Hills.[19] They have also been sighted near copter Peak in the DeLong Mountains.[20] Species have also been secured south of the Brooks Range in the Spooky Valley and in the Kokrines Hills.[5]
The Alaska marmots live in polar habitats including the terrestrial tundra and mountain biomes.[12] They are located at elevations of about 1000 m to 1250 m.[12] They are often found in boulder fields, rock slides and outcrops, terminal moraines, and Talus slopes [4] in Alpine tundra with herbaceous forage.[5] They are often found on mountain slopes surrounding lakes, and are found less commonly away from a lake.[21] To create their shelter Alaska marmots burrow into permafrost soil containing tundra vegetation, and within ten meters a rocky ledge serves as an observation post.[12] Alaska marmots live in relatively permanent winter dens that serve as a marmot colonies’ shelter for at least twenty years.[3] A colony is essentially several individual family burrows built in close proximity to one another.[4] Their dark fur serves as a mild camouflage in their rocky environments.[12] Wind is also very important to a Alaska marmot's habitat and climate because it removes annoying mosquitoes.[4] If there are large amounts of mosquitoes in the area due to a lack of wind, marmots will actually remain in their dens until the climate changes and the number of mosquitoes decrease.[12]
Tundra vegetation that grows on mountain sides are the primary nutrition source and they include; grasses, forbs, fruits, grains, legumes, and occasionally insects.[2][3] M. bromeri must eat large amounts of the arctic plants because they are low in nutritional value and for preparation of hibernation.[2] Alaska marmots are typically known as omnivores but they have also been described as insectivorous, folivorous, frugivorous, and granivorous.[3]
Common Alaska marmot predators include; wolverines, gray wolves, grizzly bears, and eagles (the main predator for young marmots).[4]
Although dangers of direct human disturbance are minimal, climate dangers pose a real problem.[3] The Alaska marmot is arguably the most sensitive of the 14 Marmot species to anthropogenic disturbances, including climate change.[3]
Marmots enrich soil with uneaten food, nesting material, by their feces, and help to aerate the soil by their excessive digging.[4] They also serve as a minor food source for a variety of predators.[12]
Alaska marmots are very social, living in colonies of up to 50 while all sharing a common burrow system.[3] Marmots typically have their own personal den, while the young live with their mother and the father lives in a nearby den.[12] Especially in large colonies, the Alaska marmots utilize sentry duty rolls that are periodically rotated. A sentry marmot will alert the colony via a two-toned, high-pitched warning call (marmot vocalizations) if there is a predator in the area.[4] The older marmots will defend and keep a lookout for predators while the young play.[12] Solely dirt dug dens provides limited protection, but a den built under rocks and boulders can prevent the risk from large animals, such as Grizzly bears, who can dig marmots out of their dirt dug dens.[12]
M. broweri will mark their territory by secreting a substance from face-glands and rubbing the sides of their face on rocks around their den and various trails.[11] Alaska marmots also enjoy sunbathing and spending a large amount of time in personal grooming.[3]
M. broweri is one of the longer hibernating marmots, being documented to do so up to eight months annually.[3] Alaska marmots accumulate a thick fat layer by late summer to sustain them throughout the winter hibernation.[4] Alaska marmots are active until snow begins to fall, in which they will go to their hibernacula from around September until June.[2] Alaska marmots have special winter dens with a single entrance that is plugged with a mixture of dirt, vegetation, and feces during the entire winter hibernation period.[4] They are built on exposed ridges that thaw earlier than other areas, and the entire colony stays within the den from September until the plug melts in early May.[4] They then resettle in their dens in family units to communally hibernate for the winter.[14] Communal hibernation may be an adapted strategy to reduce metabolic cost while trying to keep their body temperatures above freezing.[22] In order to seal their hibernaculum off from the elements, they will plug their entrance with hay, earth, and stone.[12] During hibernation many of their body functions decrease; body temperature (averages between 4.5 and 7.5 degrees Celsius), heart rates, respiratory rates,[12][14] and metabolic rates. Alaska marmot hibernation is not continuous because they will awaken every three or four weeks in order to urinate and defecate.[3][14] Inside the hibernaculum den, the Alaska marmot has shown long-term hibernation adaptions by their ability to tolerate high CO2 levels and low O2 levels.[23] As an adaption to the artic environment and permanently frozen ground, Alaska marmots breed prior to emerging from the winter den.[4] The Alaska marmots will generally emerge from the den during the first 2 weeks of May.
Male Alaska marmots are polygynous, mating with the monogamous females living on their territory.[12] They are seasonal iteroparous and viviparous breeders that mate once per in the early spring and give birth about six week later with litter sizes ranging from 3 to 8 and an average litter size of 4-5.[12] The male and female Alaska marmots are involved in both raising and protecting the pups in their natal burrow.[12] In both sexes sexual reproductive behaviors are stimulated by odors released from anal scent glands.[12] Before birthing, the female will first close her den off and then she will give birth alone.[12] The Gestation period is about 5–6 weeks.[12] Newly born Alaskan marmots are altricial;[12] hairless, toothless, blind [4] and are quite vulnerable to predators. After about six weeks young marmots have thick, soft fur and they begin to temporarily leave the den.[12] They will go through 3 coats in their first year until their final one, which resembles adult Alaska marmots.[12] They will hibernate and live with their parents at least one year, they will be fully-grown after two years and reach sexual maturity from 2 to 3 years.[4][12] Marmots life span are not known but it is believed to be about 13–15 years.[12]
M. broweri has been reported to have been successfully reared in captivity and reintroduced into the wild (however there have been cases where captive rearing led to high rates of mortality).[3]
The Alaska marmot has ancestry to the Pleistocene epoch.[11] There have been no known fossils of Marmota broweri.[5] However, the M. flavescens fossil recovered from the Late Pleistocene age from the Trail creeks caves on the Seward Peninsula [24] is speculated to be an incorrect identification of the fossil [5] This fossil could be M. broweri.[5]
The evolutionary lineages of the 14 marmot species distributed across the Holarctic are relatively ambiguous.[25] Cytochrome b sequences indicated that M. broweri is most likely related to M. caudata, cenzbieri, marmota, and monax.[25] In support to the cytochrome b results, experimentation involving mitochondrial DNA has suggested that M. broweri is most likely related to M. caudata and M. menzbieri.[3] However, morphological data have linked M. broweri to M. camtschatica.[3] In addition, somatic chromosome analysis of marmots, ecological data and behavioral data have shown that there is a link between M. broweri and M. caligata.[26] The conflicting data pertaining to phylogeny creates inconsistent marmot lineage relationship hypotheses.
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