Pack Rats
Submitted via email from Lori Paul (and Shirley Stroup).
Imagine, our local rodents and their
multi-generational collections of tin foil balls, coins, paper clips,
pen caps, pieces of colored glass, lego blocks, and the occasional
house key, may provide scientific data in the future. One species'
lost bits are another species' treasure.
Dusky Footed Woodrats or Packrats (Neotoma fuscipes) are the small,
local rats that you may see around the Chaney Trail area, especially
at dusk or at night (or when your cat brings one home as a gift). They
are not "city rats," but a species native to the Altadena foothills
that lives outside, though they may invade garages, attics, and even
the engine compartments of vehicles... wherever they find warmth,
shelter, and a safe location for their bulky nests and stashes of
collected treasures. Unlike Norway rats (so called "sewer rats"),
the packrat has huge ears and "ink drop" eyes, a rather large head for
its body, a very long tail, and is usually light buff color to pure
white underneath. They are not aggressive and do not transmit
dangerous disease.
See PHOTO at:
http://www.enature.com/flashcard/show_flash_card.asp?recordNumber=MA0083
Pack Rat Piles: Rodent rubbish provides ice age thermometer
Katie Greene / Science News
For a person, life as a pack rat is one of obsessively collecting,
say, newspapers, computer parts, food containers, or maybe all of
these. But a literal pack rat gathers plant fragments, bone bits,
fecal pellets, and even, occasionally, eyewear.
"A friend of mine lost his glasses to a pack rat," says Kenneth Cole
of the U.S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff, Ariz. In the September
Geology, Cole and a colleague report that pack rats' fossilized
collections, secreted away for millennia in caves and rocky overhangs,
can improve the portrait of global temperatures at the end of the last
ice age.
Known as the Younger Dryas, this portion of the ice age lasted from
about 12,900 to 11,600 years ago. Temperatures in Europe, Greenland,
and the North Atlantic Ocean during this time averaged 10 deg C below
today's average temperatures. Scientists have relied on many lines of
evidence to reconstruct climate trends. Layers of ice and sea
sediment, for example, indicate precipitation and atmospheric
composition.
These techniques can't be used everywhere, however. So, in the arid
deserts that surround the Grand Canyon, Cole and Samantha Arundel of
Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff have turned to pack rats'
fossilized collections, or middens.
In their study, the researchers found that Younger Dryas winters in
the region around the Grand Canyon averaged as much as 8.7 deg C cooler
than winters there do today. That's about 4 deg C below previous
estimates.
Cole and Arundel revealed the local ice age climate by considering the
unique temperature gradient of the Grand Canyon along with clues from
pack rat scat and fossilized pieces of a plant called Utah agave that
turn up in middens.
"If you walk down the canyon," Cole explains, "it's like walking from
Oregon to Las Vegas." That temperature trend was also present during
the last ice age. Cole and Arundel reasoned that if they could
determine an ancient temperature within the canyon, they could
extrapolate to the temperature at the rim and in the surrounding area.
That's where the Utah agave comes in. It can't grow where temperatures
fall below 8 deg C. Assuming that the pack rats have a limited range,
when the researchers found agave in a midden within the Grand Canyon,
they proposed that the location had been above this temperature.
To determine whether an agave-containing midden had originated during
the Younger Dryas years, the researchers applied radiocarbon dating to
fecal pellets in the same midden. From the location of Younger Dryas
middens containing agave and the known temperature gradient, the
scientists could infer the ice age temperatures around the canyon.
"This is remarkable detail that more or less matches, in timing and
magnitude," the temperature changes found from studying layers of ice
in Greenland, comments Julio Betancourt of the U.S. Geological Survey
in Tucson. Betancourt notes, however, that the data from pack rat
middens are "messy and subject to large uncertainties" because
radiocarbon techniques can pinpoint a date only to within roughly 100
years.
Nevertheless, Cole predicts that the new temperatures will be used in
computer simulations to give researchers a better global picture of
past temperatures and perhaps to project temperatures into the future.