Body size – prey size relationships in European stoats Mustela erminea: a test case

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Abstract

From the close correlation between the body size of European stoats and the mean size of their vertebrate prey it ought to be possible to predict the body size of European stoats living on a prey fauna of a given size distribution. In New Zealand, stoats of European stock have lived for > 100 yr on a prey fauna containing fewer small and more large vertebrate prey than in Europe. They have become generally larger than their ancestors, as expected – especially the females. The vertebrate prey size index for New Zealand stoats extends the correlation predicted from European data. New Zealand stoats also eat large numbers of native insects. If these are included the local prey size indices are lower but still tend to vary with the substantial local variation in body size of stoats within New Zealand. Recent results from southern Ireland also fit the European correlation, but the few data so far available from Northern Ireland do not. Copyright © 1991, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved

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King, C. M. (1991). Body size – prey size relationships in European stoats Mustela erminea: a test case. Ecography, 14(3), 173–185. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.1991.tb00650.x

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