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what to feed a pet vole

by Robert Hyatt Published 3 years ago Updated 2 years ago
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Feed your pet chickweed, clover, dandelion or other similar green foods when weaning your baby vole off of the milk substitute at nine days old or if you have an adult vole.Sep 26, 2017

What do pet voles eat?

Some of the best vegetables to give your pet vole include broccoli, peas, carrots, sweet parsley, cooked sweet potatoes, squash, bok choy and potatoes. Voles can feed on the roots, stems and leaves of these vegetables.

Can you keep a vole as a pet?

However, it would be a better choice to keep a domestic mouse as a pet, because voles are wild animals and can carry diseases. While voles will make good pets when properly looked after, the following are considerations to have in mind when choosing them for your household:

How do you take care of a vole in captivity?

It nonetheless will take time more time than it does with other domesticated animals for a vole to be accustomed to captivity. Give it time and invest in playtime with the vole. This way, the animal can quickly become accustomed to you and its new environment.

What do Baby voles need to survive in the wild?

I guess since it's a baby rodent it'll require the same thing as many other baby rodents...warmth, water, and plenty of protein. Do your best and follow your instincts...hopefully they'll make it. I've always read about voles but never heard of anyone having them.

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What does a vole like to eat?

Voles are mostly herbivorous, feeding on a variety of grasses, herbaceous plants, bulbs, and tubers. They eat bark and roots of trees, usually in fall or winter. Voles store seeds and other plant matter in underground chambers.

Can you keep a vole as a pet?

While keeping voles as pets may not be detrimental to the population for some species, it is inadvisable. These rodents are wild animals, and do not become accustomed to living in human care like domesticated animals are.

How long can a vole live in captivity?

In the wild, a vole's life expectancy is typically less than half a year, although it is conceivable that it may live for almost three years in captivity. Able to begin reproducing at about three to four weeks old, female voles may birth a litter every month, their 21-day pregnancy resulting in 3 to 6 babies.

Do voles eat grains?

Voles are granivores, meaning grains are their main food source. Since the bird seed in bird feeders is a grain, fallen seeds can be a major attractant for voles.

How do you keep a baby vole alive?

Fill your baby vole's dropper with a milk substitute that is 75 percent Esibilac and 25 percent colostrum so that it gets just a few drops of the substitute every feeding; feed it a few drops of water every feeding as well. Feed the baby every two to three hours during the night and every hour from 6 a.m. to midnight.

How long can a vole live without food?

2-4 daysMice fall in at the low end of the scale Most mice can only last 2-4 days without food, however interestingly enough, they can last quite a while without water as they can usually get enough moisture from the food they consume.

Do voles eat nuts?

Voles thrive on small plants yet, like shrews, they will eat dead animals and, like mice and rats, they can live on almost any nut or fruit.

Is a vole blind?

No, voles are also not blind, though they supplement their poor eyesight using their small body shape and sharp claws to guide them through the soil.

Do voles carry disease?

Voles can bite, and they can carry many diseases including tularemia and rabies.

Do voles eat apples?

1:593:21Essential Step in Vole Control - The Apple Sign Test - YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clipThe areas where the apples are eaten are considered where a vole colony is and this would be awareMoreThe areas where the apples are eaten are considered where a vole colony is and this would be aware you to group your VOC control bait stations in groups of three to control that vole colony.

Do voles eat lettuce?

It's very interesting that the vole chose to carry away most of the lettuce leaves rather than to eat them in situ. The few clips I've captured of these creatures eating grasses and weeds (not shown here) show it only eating in situ, and never running off with a meal.

Do voles eat fruit?

Voles eat plants, grass, fruits, carrion, and seeds. These omnivores are very opportunistic when finding and consuming foods, eating a variety of plant matter and even other dead rodents when they need sustenance.

How do you take care of voles?

Follow these tips to enjoy a healthy, vole-free yard:Remove vegetation. Voles don't like to feed out in the open. ... Protect young trees. Voles love to gnaw on the trunks of young trees. ... Use live traps. ... Use natural repellants. ... Contact a professional pest management company. ... Vole Poisons. ... Repellents. ... Traps.More items...•

Do voles bite humans?

They do have teeth, but it is rare for them to bite a human. They can, however, be a danger to humans and pets through their urine and feces that can harbor and spread some very serious diseases. They are also known to bring parasites onto properties that can be a problem for pets.

Do voles have rabies?

Voles can bite, and they can carry many diseases including tularemia and rabies.

Can u keep a mole as a pet?

Although there are a large variety of breeds, all moles have most of their basic traits in common. Moles are mammals and live in elaborate tunnel systems created with their excellent digging abilities. Known commonly as a garden pest, moles are not good pets and often die quickly in captivity.

Description of The Vole

Interesting Facts About The Vole

Habitat of The Vole

  • There are few habitats that voles cannot survive in. They have adapted well to a human-centric world, and can even live in cities and urban areas, as well as farms and pastures. Some of their primary habitats include meadows, and other open areas. When open grassy fields or meadows are not available, they are happy to accept pastures. The habitat preference varies based on the …
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Distribution of The Vole

  • The many different species of voles can range across much of the world. In fact, there are few places that you can’t find voles! A variety of species can reside across Eurasia, and India, as well as Australia, North America, and more. There are even species that live in the Arctic tundra, though they do not inhabit Antarctica.
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Diet of The Vole

  • As discussed above, when given the choice, voles prefer to eat plants. However, they are not strictly herbivores. They will also feed on carrion when they come across it, as well as seeds, nuts, and berries. Grasses and flowering plants make up a large portion of their diet. Other food sources include flowers, fruits, fungi, insects, snails, bark, ...
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Vole and Human Interaction

  • Humans and voles interact frequently, though humans do not realize it as much as the voles do. Because they are so small, these rodents go unnoticed most of the time. Humans kill or trap them for destroying crops, or getting into animal feed. Humans also threaten some species through habitat destruction. While many species have booming populations, some species, or subspecie…
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Vole Care

  • The primary concern with keeping these creatures is providing an appropriate diet. A variety of fresh greens are the best choice for these rodents, rather than a diet aimed at domesticated mice. The occasional fruits, veggies, seeds, and insects make good treats. The exact care requirements vary species by species, some species are social and must live with other voles. Regardless of t…
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Behavior of The Vole

  • With 155 different species, behavior varies dramatically. Some species are diurnal and active during the day, and others are nocturnal and only active at night. Many species are social, and live in groups, while others are solitary or even territorial. Many vole colonies can grow to be very large, as vole families can produce many offspring per year.
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Reproduction of The Vole

  • Most species of voles can produce anywhere between 5 and 10 litters in a single year. The gestation period is just 3 weeks long, and the average litter produces up to 10 young. Those offspring reach sexual maturity and can reproduce within a month of birth. A single pair can have up to 100 offspring in a single year! This means that an unchecked population can grow drastica…
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General Biology

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The meadow vole is most often found in extensive grassy or weedy areas such as old fields and moist hillsides with heavy ground cover. However, stream and pond banks, orchards, pastures, hay fields, and fence rows also provide suitable habitat for meadow and woodland voles. Meadow voles occasionally invade lawns, garde…
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Description of Damage

  • Voles may cause extensive damage to orchards, ornamentals, and tree plantings by gnawing on the bark of seedlings and mature trees (girdling). They eat crops outright and also cause damage by building extensive runway and tunnel systems through crop fields. Underground, woodland voles may consume small roots, girdle large roots, and eat bark from t...
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Legal Status

  • Voles are classified as nongame mammals and are protected. However, they can be controlled when causing damage.
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Damage Control

  • The preferred vole damage control techniques vary with the size of the population. When populations are low and damage is not extreme, exclusion or trapping may be the most economical means of avoiding damage. Large populations causing extensive damage may warrant the use of repellents and toxicants. If the property owner does not feel he or she can pro…
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Acknowledgments

  • Portions of this fact sheet were adapted from Prevention and Control of Wildlife Damage, a two-volume manual edited by Scott E. Hyngstrom, Robert M. Timm, and Gary E. Larson and published by the University of Nebraska's Cooperative Extension Division, USDA APHIS-ADC, and the Great Plains Agricultural Council's Wildlife Committee. Partial funding for the development of this fact …
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