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Farmers are using the open grassy areas for crops, killing the prairie voles' habitat. The overuse of pesticides is another reason. Plus the prairie vole is a primary food source for many predators. Type your answer here...
Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: MammaliaOrder: RodentiaFamily: CricetidaeSubfamily: Arvicolinae-.-The answer up there is incorrectThat is just the just like its classificationTHIS is what you are looking for:The Meadow Vole (Microtus pennsylvanicus)The Prairie Vole (Microtus ochrogaster)The Long Tailed Vole (Microtus Longicaudus)The Bank Vole (Clethrionomys glareolus)P.S Basically it is all like MicrotusP.P.S No offense to the other answer
Yes the prairie vole will do a lot of damage to corn crops, especially if there is a dense population.
E. Jameson has written: 'Natural history of the prairie vole (mammalian genus Microtus)'
Vale of the Vole has 324 pages.
9*17=153
None. There is no line which can be used as an axis around which you can rotate a vole and get a symmetric outcome.
Yes such as Water voles vole, Bank vole, Field vole, Common vole, Southern vole, European, Pine vole, Tatra voleand probably more.
s a vole a decomposer
A rodent skeleton is not different from a vole skeleton. A vole skeleton is just one of many types of rodent skeleton. That is because voles are a type of rodent.
A bank vole is a species of vole, Latin name Myodes glareolus.
a vole is usually brown..