Western heather vole
Kingdom
Phylum
Subphylum
Class
Order
Family
Subfamily
Genus
SPECIES
Phenacomys intermedius
Weight
30-50
1.1-1.8
goz
g oz 

The western heather vole (Phenacomys intermedius ) is a small vole found in western North America. Until recently, the eastern heather vole, (Phenacomys ungava ), was considered to be a subspecies.

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These animals are similar in appearance to the meadow vole. They have short ears and a short thin tail which is paler underneath. Their long soft fur is brownish with silver grey underparts. They are 14 cm long with a 3.5 cm tail and weigh about 40 g.

They are found in alpine meadows, open shrubby areas, dry forests with shrubs below to provide cover and tundra regions, usually near water, in British Columbia, the Yukon and the western United States. In summer, they live in burrows and, in winter, they tunnel under the snow. They store food for later use year-round.

They feed on plant leaves and berries in summer and plant bark and buds in winter, also seeds and fungi. Predators include owls, hawks and carnivorous mammals.

The female vole has 2 or 3 litters of 2 to 9 young in a nest made from grasses.

They are active year-round, and are crepuscular.

The population of this animal has been reduced in some parts of its range because of clearcutting of forests.

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Distribution

Geography

Western heather vole habitat map
Western heather vole habitat map
Western heather vole
Attribution-ShareAlike License

Mating Habits

PREGNANCY DURATION
22 days
BABY CARRYING
4.58

References

1. Western heather vole Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_heather_vole
2. Western heather vole on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/42636/115197827

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