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Lemmings
 
   
 
SCIENTIFIC CLASSIFICATION
COMMON NAME: lemming
KINGDOM: Animalia
PHYLUM: Chordata
CLASS: Mammalia
ORDER: Rodentia
FAMILY: Muridae
GENUS SPECIES:

There are 4 species of lemmings:

Lemmus lemmus
Lemmus sibiricus
Lemmus trimucronatus
Lemmus amurensis
 
FAST FACTS
DESCRIPTION: Lemmings are gray to brown on their backside and light gray to brown underneath. They are heavily furred and stocky to help them survive the harsh conditions of their environment. They have a short tail and short ears. They have a long and flat claw on the thumb.
SIZE: Head and body length = 10-13.5 cm (3.9-5.3 in.)
Tail length = 18-26 mm (0.7-1.0 in.)
WEIGHT: 40-112 g (1.4-3.95 oz.)
DIET: Sedges, grasses, bark, leaves, berries, lichens, and roots
GESTATION: 16-23 days
LITTER SIZE 1-13 young
NURSING DURATION 14-16 days
SEXUAL MATURITY: 2-3 weeks of age
LIFE SPAN: no data
RANGE: Lemmus lemmus: Norway, Sweden, Finland, Kola Peninsula of extreme northwestern Russia
Lemmus sibiricus: arctic mainland and islands of Russia, except the extreme northwest and northeast
Lemmus trimucronatus: Chukota region of northeastern Siberia, Alaska to Hudson Bay and central British Columbia, southeastern Alberta, Banks and Victoria Islands, Prince of Wales Island, Baffin Island
Lemmus amurensis: eastern Siberia
HABITAT: Alpine and tundra areas
POPULATION: GLOBAL unknown
STATUS: IUCN Least concern
CITES Not listed
USFWS Not listed
 
FUN FACTS
1. Lemmings remain active during the long arctic winter. During this time, they forage in the space between the soil and the snow. While the temperatures are not extremely higher, being under the snow is slightly warmer that being on top of the snow.
 

ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION

Lemming populations fluctuate drastically. Every few years, there are great population booms, causing lemmings to swarm across their range to find food. This may lead them to bodies of water and if they reach the ocean, they may drown. This phenomenon has lead to the myth of mass movement of lemmings jumping off cliffs and into the sea.  Lemming predator populations, such as arctic foxes and snowy owls, may increase as a result of an increase in lemming populations.

Increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide and other gases may lead to an increase in temperature and a decrease in snow ice cover in parts of the true lemmings range. Lemmings eat mosses that grow with snow. They could not move northward since the northern portions of their range are already subjected to global climate change influences.
 

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Nowak, Ronald M. (ed.). Walker's Mammals of the World. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003.
 
Parker, S. (ed.). Grizmek's Encyclopedia of Mammals. Vol. IV. New York: McGraw-Hill Publishing Co., 1990.
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