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By Dr Mark Hampton MIEEM in Conservation on 9th Jan 2011 6:00
This article appeared in Pitchcare Magazine
Issue 34 - December / January 2010 / 2011
This is the time of year many of our animal species have bedded down for the winter. Species of mammals, reptiles and amphibians have gone into complete winter hibernation.
One such species of mammal is the dormouse. The common dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius), despite its name, is now very rare, and has been declining generally across the UK. Most populations are found in southern England and South Wales. It has become extinct in many places, including much of north England and the Midlands.
Two species of dormice occur in the UK, the native common or hazel dormouse and the introduced edible dormouse.
The edible dormouse (Glis glis) was introduced to the UK in 1902 by Lord Rothschild, and is now a minor pest species. It is restricted to the Chilterns and is locally quite devastating to forestry practices, by stripping bark and eating new growth. This species looks more like a small squirrel, being between 14 and 20cm long, with a bushy tail and weighing up to 250g.
The native UK dormouse is fully protected under both UK and European law, and is a UK biodiversity action plan priority species. Therefore, it is illegal to disturb dormice and to impact on their breeding sites and resting places. This is particularly relevant for scrub clearance and bramble bashing in the winter, when dormice are hibernating on or near the ground.
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Young dormice are generally born between May and October. Each litter consists of three to five young. The gestation period is around twenty-three days and, when the young are born, they weigh only 3-4g. A newly born dormouse is both blind and naked, and it is not until around thirteen days old that the young dormouse is fully furred, although it is still blind. It is not until eighteen days old that a young dormouse can see. At twenty-four days old, the young animal is fully formed but a greyer colour than the adult and, by thirty days, it is able to leave the nest.
Read more articles in Conservation, by Dr Mark Hampton MIEEM or from January 2011.
Read more articles from Issue 34 - December / January 2010 / 2011