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Winter
coats
Reports in the press of daffodils and forsythia
flowering in Yorkshire gardens, magnificent hazel catkins glowing
yellow along the Addingham by-pass, and everyone saying we haven't
had a proper winter. That was last week. As I write, the weather
forecasters warn us that proper winter is about to hit us and it's
time to get out those little used overcoats! Wild animals which
are active throughout the winter are already in theirs. As well
as developing thicker coats, many show marked variation in colour
during this season. Roe deer, common in and around Ilkley, change
from chestnut brown in summer to a dark greyish brown, passing like
ghosts through the leafless trees of our local woods. Squirrels,
also, have darker pelage and longer ear-tufts - markedly so in red
squirrels. But one of our commonest mammals can show a much more
dramatic change.
Some stoats, those feisty little relatives of the badger and the
otter, change from light brown to snowy white. It's quite rare to
see a stoat in ermine nowadays, but they do turn up in our WNS records
from time to time, indeed one was reported last year. In the harder
winters of the past, it must have been a useful adaptation for an
animal which has to hunt down its prey of rabbits or voles whatever
the weather, and which itself is potential prey for birds like buzzards
or eagles. It would be virtually invisible against a covering of
thick snow or hoar frost. It must be a great disadvantage now, a
bright white form will be super-obvious on muddy fields and grey-brown
moorland. Presumably, as climate change accelerates, animals with
this particular genetic inheritance will be selected out and all
our stoats will remain brown.
The other British mammal which assumes white for winter is the
mountain hare. In Wharfedale we are familiar with the brown hare,
but its cousin, the mountain hare, is duskier, smaller and has much
shorter ears. Seeing one crouched down grazing, you might mistake
it for a large buck rabbit, but, when it moves off, there is no
mistaking those long legs and that graceful loping gate, so different
from the rabbit's flustered scoot. Most people have only seen mountain
hares on the Scottish highlands like the Cairngorms where its white
winter coat gives it perfect camouflage from circling eagles and
its large furry feet provide it with efficient snowshoes. There
is, however, a thriving population living on the Derbyshire moorland
just south of Sheffield. I remember hearing a talk by a Sheffield
naturalist who described how he and fellow naturalists do an annual
count of hares each New Year - walking in long lines across the
rough moorland terrain recording each hare flushed out and carefully
noting the degree of white and brown in its coat.
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