Sunday, October 25, 2020

The Final Tally

We have been keeping a close tally on all the British mammal species for which we have seen either the animal themselves, field signs of, or heard on a bat detector, so here is our final tally:

1. Badger; 2. Woodmouse; 3. Muntjac Deer; 4. Fox; 5. Mole; 6. Water vole; 7. Field vole; 8. Roe Deer; 9. Otter; 10. Hedgehog; 11. Common pipistrelle bat; 11. Soprano pipistrelle bat; 13. Brown long-eared bat; 14. Noctule bat; 15. Leislers bat; 16. Serotine bat; 17. Rabbit; 18. Brown rat; 19. Grey seal; 20. Greater horseshoe bat; 21. Grey squirrel; 22. Bank vole; 23. Brown hare; 24. Harvest mouse; 25. Common shrew; 26. Dormouse; 27. Pygmy shrew

Personally I'm hugely proud of that record with two young children and hopefully we can reach our target for fundraising on behalf of the Mammal Society. If nothing else, it's given them something to focus on over the past few months and perhaps given, at least Turtle, a small insight into the work their mum does!


If you are interested in supporting Turtle & Seahorse, and through them the Mammal Society please click here for our fundraising page - thank you.






The last push

 I knew we were leaving finding our last seven species right up to the last minute, but I had a cunning and (hopefully) fool-proof plan... I scheduled a job involving Longworth trapping of small mammals at a site where last year we found a plethora of species to finish on a Saturday morning, meaning I could take along at least one willing helper!

On the way into site Turtle herself noticed a brown hare nestled into the stubble and new shoots of the winter wheat, getting our day's tally off to a fine start. We had 60 live-capture traps to check in addition to three small-mammal camera trap boxes, and in the days before had already had four separate species.

We were not disappointed! Turtle was soon off, happily finding the trap points, collecting in the traps and pointing out the distinguishing features for each of the animals we caught. We had a flurry of field voles to begin with, shortly followed by bank voles and woodmice in the traps.


We were also confident that there were harvest mice on site and with the help of a colleague soon found an abandoned nest which was later confirmed by siting a live harvest mouse on one of the small mammal camera traps. With the addition of common shrew and a brief glimpse of a pygmy shrew on camera, and evidence of dormouse from another site, we calculate our final total to be a healthy 27 different species with one whole day to spare!

According to Turtle, this was THE BEST DAY EVER!  High praise indeed for having got her up super-early on the first day of holidays to get wet and muddy chasing after little critters!

If you are interested in supporting Turtle & Seahorse, and through them the Mammal Society please click here for our fundraising page - thank you.