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Hairy-tailed mole
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| Hairy-tailed mole[1] | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Mammalia |
| Order: | Eulipotyphla |
| Family: | Talpidae |
| Tribe: | Scalopini |
| Genus: | Parascalops True, 1894[3] |
| Species: | P. breweri
|
| Binomial name | |
| Parascalops breweri (Bachman, 1842)
| |
| Hairy-tailed mole range | |
| Synonyms[5] | |
| |
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri), also known as Brewer's mole, is a medium-sized North American mole. It is the only member of the genus Parascalops.[1] The species epithet breweri refers to Thomas Mayo Brewer, an American naturalist.
Taxonomy
[edit]Despite inhabiting North America, studies indicate that it is not closely related to the two other North American scalopine moles (Scalopus and Scapanus), but rather to the two Chinese scalopine moles (Scapanulus and Alpiscaptulus). This indicates that the two Chinese moles likely descend from a migration from North America back into Eurasia, where the scalopine moles originated. Some studies have suggested placing Parascalops, Scapanulus, and Alpiscaptulus into a single subtribe Parascalopina.[6]
Appearance
[edit]
This animal has dark grey fur with lighter underparts, a pointed nose and a short, hairy tail.[7] It is about 15 centimeters (5.9 in) in length, including a 3-centimeter-long (1.2 in) tail, and weighs about 55 grams (1.9 oz).[7] Its front paws are broad and spade-shaped, specialized for digging.[8] It has 44 teeth. Its eyes are covered by fur and its ears are not external.[8] Its feet and snout are pinkish, but become white in older animals.[7] Several adaptations to living primarily underground can be seen in the hairy-tailed mole. Its pelage is very dense and silky, and its feet are broad, flat, and heavy.[8] Moles rely very little on their eyesight and have very small optic nerves.[9] To accommodate its lack of vision, the hairy-tailed mole has sensitive whiskers and hairs on the tip of its nose and feet to feel its surroundings.[8]
Habitat
[edit]It is found in forested and open areas with dry loose soils in eastern Canada and the northeastern United States.[2] Since it is a fossorial mammal, it needs moist but well-drained soil so that it can dig easily.[7] The hairy-tailed mole prefers deciduous and coniferous woods, oldfields, and roadsides.[7][2]
Behavior
[edit]The hairy-tailed mole is cathemeral.[7] Since it lives primarily underground in shallow tunnels it can forage throughout the day and will also forage on the ground's surface at night.[7] The hairy-tailed mole is more active near the surface during warmer summer months and digs deeper underground in the cooler fall and winter months.[7]
This mole spends most of its time underground, foraging in shallow burrows for insects and their larvae and earthworms.[2] It emerges at night to feed. It is active year-round. Predators include owls, foxes and large snakes.[10]
This animal is mainly solitary except during mating in early spring.[10] The female has a litter of 4 to 5 young in a deep burrow.[7][2] This mole may live 3 to 4 years.[10]
Diet
[edit]Hairy-tailed moles are insectivores and have been shown to starve if vegetable matter is the only food source available.[10] The hairy-tailed mole's diet is mostly grubs, earthworms, beetle larvae, slugs, and ants, particularly when other food sources are not available.[2][10]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Hutterer, R. (2005). "Order Soricomorpha". In Wilson, D.E.; Reeder, D.M (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 301. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
- ^ a b c d e f Cassola, F. (2017) [errata version of 2016 assessment]. "Parascalops breweri". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016 e.T41469A115188181. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T41469A22322790.en.
- ^ True, Frederick W. (1894). "Diagnoses of New North American Mammals". Proceedings of the United States National Museum. 17 (999): 242. doi:10.5479/si.00963801.999.241.
- ^ Bachman, J. (1843). "Observations on the Genus Scalops, (Shrew Moles,) with Descriptions of the Species found in North America". Boston Journal of Natural History. 4 (1): 32–34.
- ^ Hallett, James G. (1978). "Parascalops breweri". Mammalian Species (98): 1–4. doi:10.2307/3503954. JSTOR 3503954. S2CID 253940042.
- ^ Chen, Zhong-Zheng; He, Shui-Wang; Hu, Wen-Hao; Song, Wen-Yu; Onditi, Kenneth O; Li, Xue-You; Jiang, Xue-Long (2021-01-08). "Morphology and phylogeny of scalopine moles (Eulipotyphla: Talpidae: Scalopini) from the eastern Himalayas, with descriptions of a new genus and species". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 193 (2): 432–444. doi:10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa172. ISSN 0024-4082.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Reid, Fiona (2006). A field guide to mammals of North America (The Peterson field guide series) (4th ed.). New York, New York: Houghton Mifflin Company. pp. 387–388. ISBN 978-0-395-93596-5.
- ^ a b c d "North American Mammals: Parascalops breweri: Image Information". naturalhistory.si.edu. Archived from the original on 2018-06-25. Retrieved 2016-12-08.
- ^ Leitch, Duncan B.; Sarko, Diana K.; Catania, Kenneth C. (2014-09-01). "Brain Mass and Cranial Nerve Size in Shrews and Moles". Scientific Reports. 4 6241. Bibcode:2014NatSR...4E6241L. doi:10.1038/srep06241. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 4150104. PMID 25174995.
- ^ a b c d e "Parascalops breweri (hairy-tailed mole)". Animal Diversity Web. Retrieved 2016-12-08.
Hairy-tailed mole
View on GrokipediaTaxonomy
Classification
The hairy-tailed mole bears the scientific name Parascalops breweri (Bachman, 1842), first described by naturalist John Bachman based on specimens collected from Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts.[4][5] This name honors Thomas Mayo Brewer, an American ornithologist and naturalist, and originally appeared as Scalops breweri in Bachman's publication in the Boston Journal of Natural History.[4] In modern taxonomy, P. breweri is placed within the following hierarchy: Kingdom Animalia, Phylum Chordata, Class Mammalia, Order Eulipotyphla, Family Talpidae, Subfamily Talpinae, Genus Parascalops, and Species breweri.[6] The genus Parascalops was established by Frederick William True in 1894 to accommodate this species, distinguishing it from other North American moles based on morphological features such as the hairy tail and dental structure.[5] Parascalops breweri remains the sole species in the genus, rendering it monotypic with no recognized subspecies.[7] Historical synonyms for the species include Scalops breweri, Talpa caudata, Talpa longicaudata, and Talpasorex longicaudata, which have been resolved through subsequent taxonomic revisions to consolidate under P. breweri.[4] These earlier names reflect initial classifications within the genus Scalops before the recognition of distinct scalopine traits. Parascalops shows close affinities to Asian scalopine genera such as Scapanulus and Alpiscaptulus.[8]Phylogenetic relations
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) belongs to the subtribe Parascalopina within the tribe Scalopini of the subfamily Talpinae, a grouping proposed based on shared morphological and molecular traits that also includes the Asian species Scapanulus oweni (Gansu mole) and Alpiscaptulus leucura (Tibetan mole).[8][9] This subtribe is distinguished from other Scalopini by features such as the orientation of the ectotympanic bone and specific postcranial adaptations for fossorial locomotion.[9] Molecular analyses using multi-locus datasets (including 19 nuclear and two mitochondrial genes) place Parascalops breweri as the sister taxon to Scapanulus oweni, indicating an early divergence from other North American talpines such as Scalopus (eastern mole) and Scapanus (western moles) within the Talpinae evolution.[10] This positioning suggests closer phylogenetic ties to Eurasian scalopines, with the split between North American and Asian Parascalopina lineages estimated at approximately 16 million years ago during the mid-Miocene.[10] Morphological evidence from cranio-dental and humeral characters further supports this separation, highlighting Parascalops as basal within Scalopini relative to the more derived Scalopus–Scapanus clade.[9] Both molecular and morphological data consistently support the distinctness of Parascalops from the star-nosed mole (Condylura cristata) in the tribe Condylurini and the shrew mole (Neurotrichus gibbsii) in the tribe Neurotrichini, with no shared recent common ancestry beyond the broader Talpinae subfamily.[10][9] These separations are evidenced by differences in ectotympanic angle, subarcuate fossa depth, and caudal vertebral morphology.[9] The fossil record of Parascalops is limited, with the earliest known relatives appearing in the late Miocene, such as Parascalops grayensis from the Gray Fossil Site in Tennessee, representing a primitive scalopine form but not a direct ancestor to the modern species.[11] Pleistocene fossils of P. breweri itself have been reported from cave deposits in the northeastern United States, but no unambiguous direct ancestors have been identified, underscoring the genus's ancient divergence within talpid evolution.[5]Description
Physical characteristics
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) is a medium-sized mole with a total length ranging from 139 to 174 mm, including a head-body length of approximately 110–140 mm and a tail length of 23–36 mm.[12] Adults weigh between 40 and 67 g, with an average mass of about 55 g; males are slightly larger than females, averaging 54.5 g compared to 47.5 g for females.[12][3] The body is stout and cylindrical, adapted for a fossorial lifestyle. The pelage is dense and velvety, appearing shaggy in texture, with coloration ranging from dark gray to black dorsally and slightly lighter gray or silvery gray ventrally.[12][3] The tail is short and fully haired with coarse, dense fur, distinguishing it from related species with more naked tails.[3][13] The snout is elongated, tapered, and mobile, featuring lateral crescent-shaped nostrils and a hairless, fleshy tip that is pinkish in hue; it lacks the fleshy tubercles seen in some other moles.[12][2] The eyes are small, reduced, and concealed beneath fur, indicating vestigial vision, while external ear pinnae are absent, with auditory reception occurring through concealed ear openings.[12][3] The dental formula is 3/3, 1/1, 4/4, 3/3, totaling 44 teeth, which are robust and adapted for crushing invertebrates.[5] The hind feet are small, measuring 17–21 mm in length, while the forefeet are enlarged and paddle-like, approximately 18–22 mm wide, with broad, stout claws oriented outward for efficient digging.[12][2]Morphological adaptations
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) possesses hypertrophied forelimbs with a robust humerus and large, scoop-like claws specialized for excavating soil during burrowing.[12] These forelimbs are rotatable or reversible, enabling efficient backward digging without the need to turn the body in confined tunnels.[14] The skin on the body is loose and flexible, which prevents soil particles from adhering during tunneling activities and allows greater maneuverability underground.[5] The skull features an elongated rostrum with reinforced nasal bones, adaptations that support soil probing and withstand the mechanical stresses of subterranean navigation.[12] Powerful jaw muscles further equip the mole for handling and consuming prey encountered in burrows.[5] Sensory adaptations include reduced eyes, reflecting diminished reliance on vision in dark environments, alongside enhanced olfactory capabilities and tactile sensitivity provided by vibrissae on the snout and the hairy tail, which acts as a probe for detecting burrow contours and obstacles.[12] The snout is densely covered with Eimer's organs, specialized mechanoreceptors that detect vibrations and textures in the soil for prey location and environmental sensing.[15] Physiologically, the hairy-tailed mole maintains a high metabolic rate to sustain continuous burrowing and foraging activity, with measurements indicating rates elevated relative to body size among mammals.[16] This species also exhibits tolerance to low oxygen levels prevalent in sealed burrows, supporting prolonged underground existence without frequent surfacing.[17]Distribution and habitat
Geographic range
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) is endemic to eastern North America, with its northern range limit in southern Quebec and Ontario in Canada.[5] Its distribution encompasses much of the northeastern United States, including New England states such as Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and [Rhode Island](/page/Rhode Island), as well as New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, and Delaware.[12] Further south, the range follows the Appalachian Mountains into West Virginia, Virginia, eastern Kentucky, eastern Tennessee, western North Carolina, northern South Carolina, and reaches its southernmost extent in northern Georgia.[1] To the west, the range extends across southern Ontario into eastern Ohio and adjacent areas near the Great Lakes.[5] However, it is notably absent from the coastal plains of the southeastern United States and the prairie regions surrounding the Great Lakes, where unsuitable open habitats predominate.[12] Within the Appalachian region, its occurrence is patchy, with populations more continuous in the northern and central portions but sporadic and rarer toward the southern extremes.[1] Elevational distribution varies across its range but generally spans lowlands to montane zones, reaching up to 1,950 m in the Great Smoky Mountains, where it occupies higher-elevation forests.[1]Habitat preferences
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) primarily inhabits deciduous and mixed forests across its range in eastern North America, favoring environments with loose, well-drained soils that facilitate burrowing.[12] It shows a strong preference for sandy loam or loamy substrates rich in organic matter, which provide the necessary texture for tunneling, while avoiding heavy clay soils that become compacted and difficult to excavate.[18][19] Waterlogged or permanently wet areas are also unsuitable due to poor drainage, as are rocky terrains with hard-packed ground that hinder digging.[20][21] Beyond forests, this species is commonly found along forest edges, in old fields, meadows, grassy roadsides, and even suburban lawns where ample leaf litter and humus layers accumulate, offering protective cover and foraging opportunities near the surface.[12][22] These microhabitats typically support a depth of at least 30 cm of friable soil, essential for constructing shallow feeding tunnels that average 10–20 cm deep during active periods.[19] The presence of thick humus from decaying vegetation further enhances suitability by maintaining soil moisture without saturation.[20] Seasonally, habitat use shifts with temperature and soil conditions; in summer, moles exploit shallow burrows close to the surface for easier access to prey, whereas winter prompts relocation to deeper tunnels reaching up to 45 cm to evade frost.[12][21] This species tolerates moderate human disturbance, persisting in agricultural fields and developed edges as long as core soil and vegetation requirements are met.[22]Behavior
Activity patterns
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) exhibits a cathemeral activity pattern, remaining active in short bursts throughout the 24-hour cycle without true hibernation or torpor, though surface activity ceases during prolonged freezing temperatures. Subterranean activity peaks during daylight hours, while aboveground foraging often occurs at night, with overall rhythms influenced by food availability and soil conditions.[23][20][24] Primarily fossorial, the species constructs extensive networks of shallow feeding tunnels, typically 10–20 cm deep and 37–45 mm wide by 25–32 mm high, which form irregular surface ridges visible in soft, moist soils. Deeper permanent tunnels extend 25–45 cm belowground, leading to nest chambers 25–41 cm deep and up to 15 cm in diameter; these systems can persist for up to 8 years and span 15–25 m in diameter during winter. Molehills, averaging 15 cm in diameter and 7.5 cm high, are more frequent in wet conditions as ejection points for excavated soil.[23][24][12] In terms of locomotion, hairy-tailed moles are awkward aboveground, traveling at speeds up to 9 m/min but often slower due to their specialized forelimbs. They are capable swimmers in streams and flooded areas, propelling themselves with all four feet in a burrowing-like motion. Home ranges for adults average 0.018–0.045 ha (based on winter diameters of 15–24 m), expanding slightly in summer, with minimal overlap among individuals owing to their solitary nature; individuals emit quick, harsh squeaks during encounters with conspecifics.[23][24][12]Social structure
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) exhibits a primarily solitary lifestyle, with adults maintaining exclusive home ranges throughout most of the year, except for brief overlaps during the mating season when males enter females' tunnel systems.[2][20] Home ranges typically measure 15–24 m in diameter, and while they may overlap between adults and juveniles in summer, individuals generally avoid prolonged contact outside of reproduction.[2] This solitary behavior aligns with the species' subterranean habits, where each mole constructs and defends its own network of tunnels for foraging and nesting.[25] Communication among hairy-tailed moles relies on a combination of vocal, tactile, and chemical signals to maintain territorial boundaries and facilitate limited social interactions. Vocalizations range from harsh guttural sounds to quiet squeaks, which serve to deter intruders and signal during encounters.[2] Chemical cues are produced by specialized glands on the chin, throat, wrist, and abdomen that secrete an odorous yellowish substance, particularly active during the breeding period to mark territories and possibly influence mate attraction or repulsion.[2] Tactile communication may occur through physical contact in tunnels, though details remain limited. Interactions between individuals are infrequent and typically non-aggressive, reflecting the species' solitary nature; however, territorial disputes can arise, leading to chasing or brief confrontations.[2] Juveniles, weaned at around one month, disperse shortly thereafter—often via subterranean routes but occasionally aboveground—to establish independent territories and avoid competition with adults.[20][26] The species never forms colonies or social groups, maintaining low-density populations that average about 3 individuals per hectare in typical habitats, though densities can reach 25–30 per hectare in optimal conditions with abundant food resources.[2][25]Reproduction
Breeding biology
The breeding season of the hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) occurs from late March to early April, aligned with the onset of spring warming in its northeastern North American range.[12][2][27] This timing ensures reproductive activities coincide with increasing soil temperatures and food availability following winter dormancy. Females typically breed annually, producing one litter per year, reflecting their solitary lifestyle outside of brief breeding associations.[12][26] Males exhibit heightened activity during the breeding period, emerging aboveground to search for receptive females and enlarging existing tunnels to connect burrow systems.[12][26] Testes enlarge significantly (to approximately 12 mm × 7 mm) from March through mid-May, facilitating sperm production, and males use prominent scent glands to signal availability.[12] Copulation results in the formation of a copulatory plug from coagulated prostatic fluid, which may help ensure paternity by blocking subsequent matings. The vaginal orifice of females, normally sealed by skin, opens only during this season to permit mating.[26] While associations are transient and males provide no post-mating care, the system allows for potential multiple pairings, though evidence suggests limited polyandry.[12] Gestation lasts 4 to 6 weeks following mating, with ovulation triggered by copulatory stimuli in this induced ovulator species.[12][2] Females construct spherical nests, measuring 15–20 cm in diameter, lined with dry leaves and grass for insulation and moisture control; these are situated 20–50 cm underground in secure burrow chambers.[26][5] This reproductive strategy supports efficient energy allocation in a species adapted to short, intense breeding windows amid variable temperate conditions.[27]Development of young
The hairy-tailed mole produces a single litter per year, typically consisting of 2–6 young (average 4–5), born in April or May following breeding in late March and early April. The newborns are altricial, born hairless with closed eyes and averaging 10.1 g.[27][12] Maternal care is provided solely by the female, who nurses the young for 3 to 4 weeks in a subterranean nest. The young open their eyes at approximately 14 days of age and begin tunneling activities around 21 days.[27] Weaning occurs at about 4 weeks, after which the juveniles continue to grow rapidly; sexual maturity is attained at 10 to 11 months the following year.[5] Juveniles disperse from the natal burrow at 5 to 6 weeks of age, establishing their own territories. Juvenile mortality is high, estimated at 50 to 70%, mainly due to predation and starvation during this vulnerable period.[27] Overall survival to adulthood remains low, which supports the species' short generation time of roughly one year.[5]Diet and foraging
Food sources
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) maintains an insectivorous diet dominated by invertebrates, which comprise 70-80% of its food intake by volume.[20] Earthworms from the family Lumbricidae serve as the principal prey item, accounting for approximately 34% of dietary volume and occurring in 84% of examined stomach contents.[5] Additional key prey encompass beetle larvae and grubs (family Scarabaeidae), ants (family Formicidae), slugs (class Gastropoda), centipedes (class Chilopoda), millipedes (class Diplopoda), and miscellaneous small arthropods including spiders.[5] Insect larvae represent about 24% of the diet by volume and appear in 60% of stomachs, while adult insects contribute 16% and are present in 54%.[5] Dietary composition exhibits seasonal variation, with ants consumed when other insects are less available, alongside consistent year-round consumption of earthworms.[29] These moles occasionally consume small amounts of plant material such as rootlets, but they cannot survive on it alone and require animal protein to meet their nutritional demands.[5] Hairy-tailed moles ingest approximately 50% of their body weight in food each day to sustain their high metabolic rate.[30][31] Grubs and larvae provide critical energy reserves for their fossorial activities.[32]Foraging techniques
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) primarily relies on tactile cues for locating prey underground, employing specialized vibrissae on its snout, forefeet, and behind the eyes to detect vibrations produced by moving invertebrates in the soil. These sensory structures, including Eimer's organs densely distributed on the rostrum, enable precise identification of prey through touch and seismic signals, allowing the mole to follow earthworm burrows and trails efficiently.[15][5] The species' distinctive hairy tail also functions as a tactile sensor, helping to detect soil vibrations and obstacles during backward movement in tunnels, further aiding prey pursuit.[5] In tunnel foraging, the mole excavates shallow subsurface runs (typically 5–15 cm deep) using its broad, paddle-like forelimbs to push soil aside and expose hidden prey, often creating a network of interconnected burrows for systematic searching. Excess soil is ejected in ridges or mounds at the surface, while captured prey may be consumed immediately or stored live in dedicated cache chambers branching off main tunnels to sustain periods of high energy demand.[33] This strategy minimizes energy expenditure by reusing existing tunnel systems rather than constant new digging, with observed reductions in arthropod densities near tunnels indicating effective predation pressure. Surface activity supplements subterranean foraging, particularly during crepuscular periods at dawn and dusk, when the mole emerges to probe leaf litter and humus layers for invertebrates. It plows through detritus with its snout, digs small conical pits (2–6 cm deep), and pursues fleeing prey over short distances (up to 0.5 m), holding captures with forefeet for manipulation and consumption. Although capable of swimming across streams, such activity is rare and not primarily linked to aquatic prey acquisition.[34] Physiologically adapted for a high-metabolism lifestyle, the hairy-tailed mole exhibits rapid digestion to process frequent meals, with gut transit times supporting near-continuous foraging. Its dentition and saliva facilitate subduing larger earthworms, with toxic saliva that helps immobilize prey. Daily food intake equates to approximately 50% of body weight, often comprising 20–50 individual prey items, with indigestible portions like earthworm clitella rejected to optimize nutrient extraction.[30][31]Conservation
Status and threats
The hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) is classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List, with the most recent assessment conducted in 2016 indicating a stable population across its range.[12] This status reflects its relatively wide distribution and lack of evidence for significant population declines, though ongoing monitoring is recommended due to localized vulnerabilities. In the United States and Canada, the species receives no federal protections under laws such as the Endangered Species Act or the Species at Risk Act.[12] NatureServe assigns it a global rank of G5 (Secure); subnational ranks vary, with most in core northern habitats at S4 (Apparently Secure) or S5 (Secure), such as S4 in Vermont and S5 in New York, but lower in southern peripheral areas, including S3 (Vulnerable) in Tennessee, S1 (Critically Imperiled) in Georgia, and S2 (Imperiled) in South Carolina, reflecting range-edge concerns.[35][12][3] Primary threats to the hairy-tailed mole stem from habitat fragmentation caused by urbanization and agricultural expansion, which replace deciduous woodlands and moist soils with impervious surfaces like roads and buildings, compacting soil and hindering burrowing.[12] Pesticide applications, particularly insecticides, diminish populations of invertebrate prey such as earthworms and insects, indirectly affecting mole nutrition and survival.[36] Secondary poisoning occurs when moles consume contaminated prey exposed to rodenticides, though this risk is mitigated by their primarily subterranean foraging.[36] Predators including owls, hawks, red foxes, and snakes occasionally prey on hairy-tailed moles, particularly during surface excursions, but this does not constitute a major population-level threat due to their fossorial lifestyle and low encounter rates.[12] Occasional trapping for pest control in lawns and gardens poses a localized mortality risk, but it is not widespread.[37] Regarding climate sensitivity, the species may experience northward range shifts with global warming, yet its adaptability—evidenced by behavioral adjustments like deeper tunneling in response to temperature extremes—suggests overall stability under projected changes.[38][12]Population trends
The global population size of the hairy-tailed mole (Parascalops breweri) remains unknown, with no comprehensive estimates available, though it is classified as Least Concern by the IUCN, indicating a stable trend over recent decades.[39][12] Population densities typically range from 1 to 3 individuals per hectare on average, reaching peaks of 25–30 per hectare in prime habitats like moist deciduous forests in the northern portion of the range, while being notably lower in marginal or southern areas where suitable soil and cover are limited.[1][2][5] No significant population declines have been documented, and the species appears to benefit from habitat changes associated with secondary growth forests and regenerating old fields.[22] Monitoring efforts primarily involve live-trapping, burrow sign surveys (such as active tunnels and mounds), and opportunistic captures during broader mammal inventories, though the hairy-tailed mole is understudied overall, especially regarding abundance in peripheral habitats.[1][40] In the wild, individuals typically live 3–4 years, with some reaching up to 5 years under favorable conditions; captive longevity data are lacking.[41][39] Key research gaps persist, including sparse information on potential local population reductions or extirpations along urban edges, where habitat fragmentation could influence distribution.[1]References
- https://www.science.smith.edu/departments/[biology](/page/Biology)/VHAYSSEN/msi/pdf/i0076-3519-098-01-0001.pdf
