All Species Animalia

Marmota vancouverensis Swarth, 1911 is a animal in the Sciuridae family, order Rodentia, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Marmota vancouverensis Swarth, 1911 (Marmota vancouverensis Swarth, 1911)
Animalia

Marmota vancouverensis Swarth, 1911

Marmota vancouverensis Swarth, 1911

Marmota vancouverensis, the Vancouver Island marmot, is an endemic rare marmot that has recovered after severe population decline.

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Family
Genus
Marmota
Order
Rodentia
Class
Mammalia

About Marmota vancouverensis Swarth, 1911

Distinguishing Phenotype

Marmota vancouverensis has a phenotype typical of marmots, but can be distinguished from other marmots by its chocolate brown fur and contrasting white patches.

Endemism and Evolutionary History

It is the only marmot species endemic to Vancouver Island, and is thought to have evolved rapidly after the Cordilleran ice sheet retreated approximately 10,000 years ago.

Species Differentiation

It differs from other marmot species in morphology, genetics, behaviour, and ecology.

Adult Body Length

Adult Vancouver Island marmots typically measure 65 to 70 centimetres from nose tip to tail tip.

Seasonal Weight Variation

Their body weight shows very large seasonal variation. An adult female that weighs 3 kilograms when she emerges from hibernation in late April can reach 4.5 to 5.5 kg by the time hibernation begins in late September or October.

Adult Male Weight

Adult males can be even larger, reaching weights of over 7.5 kg.

Hibernation Mass Loss

On average, marmots lose around one-third of their total body mass during the six-and-a-half month winter hibernation period.

Habitat and Rarity Cause

Marmota vancouverensis lives above 1000 metres elevation in south- to west-facing meadows, and limited available habitat is believed to be the main cause of this species' rarity.

Survey History

Surveys for this marmot have been carried out on Vancouver Island since 1979.

Historical Population Decline

Starting in the 1980s, the species experienced an 80% to 90% population decline, leaving only 32 wild adults by 2006.

Population Recovery Efforts

Since 2006, the population has started to increase thanks to an ongoing restoration program for this unique Canadian species.

2021 Population Status

As of fall 2021, just over 250 wild marmots existed across 25 colonies: 25 colonies are split between two metapopulations, with one additional isolated colony at Steamboat Mountain.

Photo: (c) Adam Taylor, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Adam Taylor · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Mammalia Rodentia Sciuridae Marmota

More from Sciuridae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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