Vole
Related Category: Vertebrate Zoology
name for a large number of mouselike
rodents, related to the
lemmings. Most range in length from 3
1/2 to 7 in. (918 cm) and have rounded bodies with gray or brown coats, blunt muzzles, small ears concealed in the long fur, and short tails. They are found in a wide variety of habitats. Of the approximately 70 vole species, over 40, distributed throughout North America, Eurasia, and North Africa, are classified in the genus
Microtus. These voles typically make runways under dense vegetation or shallow burrows in the ground. They feed chiefly on grasses but also eat bark, leaves, seeds, and insects. They are known in North America as field mice or meadow mice (the Old World field mice are not voles). Like lemmings and various other small rodents, these voles periodically undergo population explosions which cause them to swarm over the countryside. Of similar distribution are the five species of red-backed voles, genus
Clethrionomys, which spend much of their time in shrubs and bushes. Species of the North American genus
Phenacomys nest in trees and are known as tree mice or lemming mice. The sagebrush vole,
Lagarus curtatus, is found in the W United States. Other
Lagarus species, found in S Russia and Mongolia, are misleadingly called steppe lemmings. The water vole,
Arvicola, of Europe and W Asia, is a large, semiaquatic vole, somewhat resembling the closely related
muskrat. Voles are classified in the phylum
Chordata, subphylum Vertebrata, class Mammalia, order Rodentia, family Crecetidae. See also
mouse.