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The effect of habitat geology on calcium intake and calcium status of wild rodents
Authors:R. F. Shore  R. J. Balment  D. W. Yalden
Affiliation:(1) Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Monks Wood Experimental Station, N.E.R.C., Abbots Ripton, PE17 2LS Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, UK;(2) Department of Physiological Sciences, The University, M13 9PT Manchester, UK;(3) Department of Environmental Biology, The University, M13 9PT Manchester, UK
Abstract:Summary Calcium is essential for normal physiological function, reproduction and growth in mammals but its distribution in the natural environment is heterogeneous. Spatial variation in calcium soil content is especially marked in the Peak District, United Kingdom, where both calcium-rich limestone and calcium-poor gritstone rock types occur. Wood mice Apodemus sylvaticus (L) and bank voles Clethrionomys glareolus (Schreber 1780) from limestone areas had significantly higher calcium concentrations in stomach contents and in faeces compared with their counterparts from gritstone areas. Calcium status was assessed from serum calcium concentration, femur weight, ash content of the body, calcium concentration in the femur and body ash. There was no significant difference in serum calcium concentration, femur calcium concentration and body ash calcium concentration between animals from the limestone and the gritstone. However, on the limestone, bank voles, but not wood mice, had significantly heavier femora and a greater proportion of ash in the body compared with their gritstone counterparts.
Keywords:Wood mouse  Bank vole  Calcium  Femur  Ash
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