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Mice
Harvest
Mouse*
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House
Mouse*
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Wood
Mouse or Long-tailed Field Mouse - This "wild" mouse is widespread
and abundant, but mainly nocturnal. It occasionally comes into houses in
winter.
Yellow-necked Field Mouse - This is similar to the Wood Mouse but
has been found at just one site in our area - in Chorley Borough, Lancashire.
Harvest
Mouse - this tiny mouse occurs in a very few sites across Lancashire.
House
Mouse - This species travelled with Man from central Asia in the New
Stone Age and has been with us ever since.
Vole

Bank Vole*
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Field
Vole*
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Bank
Vole - This is a widespread and abundant small mammal in our area.
It tends to frequent hedges and woodland.
Field
Vole - This vole is also widespread and abundant but prefers long grassland.
Water
Vole - This species has been in marked decline nationally. Peculiarly,
in Britain it is associated with watercourses and ponds, but is much more
of a "land-lubber" in continental Europe. Though the species is widespread
in our area it is only locally common. Current survey work suggests that
the Lancashire Plain may support a national stronghold. It's the subject
of a Species Action Plan at UK and Lancashire levels.
Further
information on Water Voles can be found here
Rats

Black
Rat*
Brown
Rat -There's probably one within fifty metres of where you're sitting!
The species arrived from Asia in the eighteenth century, probably on ships,
and has since ousted the Black Rat and become a major pest.
Black
Rat - This species had arrived in Britain from Asia by the fifth century
and spread rapidly, becoming a pest. It is now extinct thanks to unsuccessful
competition with the Brown Rat, though temporary re-introductions probably
occur in major ports like Liverpool.
Shrews,
Moles and Hedgehogs

Hedgehog*
Common
Shrew & Pygmy Shrew - These tiny mammals are widely distributed and
active in daylight hours but rarely seen, though their high-pitched squeaks
may often be heard.
Water
Shrew - This species is generally associated with watersides, though
one has been reported from a coal-shed in Bolton!
Common
Mole - This species is fairly widespread, though it avoids urban areas.
It is best known for the molehills produced by its excavations, though
it is sometimes seen above ground in early summer as young moles are driven
from their mothers' burrows and set off to establish tunnel-systems of
their own.
Hedgehogs
- This species is widespread in gardens and a frequent casualty on roads.
Dormice
The
Common or Hazel Dormouse is probably extinct in our area. It used to occur
in coppiced woodlands around Silverdale in the very north of Lancashire.
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