[HN Gopher] The Waning Reign of the Muskrat
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       The Waning Reign of the Muskrat
        
       Author : Thevet
       Score  : 94 points
       Date   : 2024-05-07 05:34 UTC (1 days ago)
        
 (HTM) web link (hakaimagazine.com)
 (TXT) w3m dump (hakaimagazine.com)
        
       | trollerator23 wrote:
       | I thought this was about the other Muskrat
        
         | pvarangot wrote:
         | Same, I got a pack of cigarettes ready to read the apologist
         | comments.
        
         | incangold wrote:
         | Went straight to the comments instead of the article and was
         | surprised to discover that:
         | 
         | "They'll invite themselves to live in beaver dams and make for
         | a vaguely tolerated roommate that helps patch up walls and
         | stuff. They're not as good at the big picture stuff as
         | beavers."
        
       | philk10 wrote:
       | We have a regular muskrat visitor at our pond in Michigan every
       | March, I haven't worked out where it goes the rest of the year
        
       | bitxbitxbitcoin wrote:
       | Interesting that there is no mention of the invasive nutria
       | perhaps outcompeting them especially in brackish waters.
        
         | pfdietz wrote:
         | I believe muskrats are declining outside of areas with nutria
         | as well.
        
       | jncfhnb wrote:
       | Sad. These guys are really cute. They'll invite themselves to
       | live in beaver dams and make for a vaguely tolerated roommate
       | that helps patch up walls and stuff. They're not as good at the
       | big picture stuff as beavers.
        
       | james_david wrote:
       | The author, Brandon Keim, is a favorite of mine. If you like this
       | piece, his book Eye of the Sandpiper is worth checking out.
       | 
       | https://brandonkeim.net/sandpiper
        
         | bayouborne wrote:
         | https://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/9781501707728/the-...
        
       | UniverseHacker wrote:
       | My son was required to do a report on muskrats for school
       | recently, and both him and I knew nothing about them, and were
       | shocked by how little info their is- trying to find basic info
       | about them online is really hard, they are certainly pretty much
       | ignored by people. Ultimately, we were able to find reported
       | sightings in iNaturalist, and were able to find them in the wild,
       | active at dusk. It was a magical experience for both of us.
        
       | more_corn wrote:
       | I thought this was going to be an article about the decline of
       | the cult of Elon.
        
       | nsguy wrote:
       | Anecdotally we used to see them all the time around here
       | (Vancouver, BC area) in ponds and sloughs but I haven't seen one
       | in a while.
        
       | geye1234 wrote:
       | Read this too quickly and thought I would be finding out the
       | details of rifling, breech loading, etc.
        
         | giardini wrote:
         | They are supposed to be tasty eating.
        
       | LightBug1 wrote:
       | That shade!
        
       | pvaldes wrote:
       | Nice animal in US, but a cute pest in Europe. Biologists must
       | keep killing them to avoid their expansion to new areas. Was
       | removed from UK but is not so easy in the continental areas.
       | 
       | The local populations can be decimated by diseases like
       | Tularemia. Foxes also kill a lot.
        
       | itsanaccount wrote:
       | I live on tens of acres of wetlands. Two 1/4acre ponds, front is
       | a marsh.
       | 
       | The muskrat damage constructed pond shores, but what they create
       | is a low maybe 1 foot deep shoulder where their holes erode dirt
       | onto the pond slope, which is excellent for wildlife. Its the
       | area herons stalk for prey and fish breed. In my case my ponds
       | are very secure with mud banks, so not being worried about leaks
       | I decided to leave the muskrat. They are very cute. That was a
       | few years back.
       | 
       | One spring I found 3-4 bodies washed up, possibly from Tularemia.
       | More moved back in, and the spring we went from 2 to 6
       | individuals, and all the plants started to disappear. The reading
       | I did said muskrat are very much a meta-population like the
       | article mentions. In absence of predators, they will eat a place
       | bare until it can no longer feed them and then migrate.
       | 
       | Close to the house I've now adopted a slow reduction with a rifle
       | (non-lead rounds) to offset my imbalance of protecting them from
       | predators. The pond shore damage hasn't stopped so they're still
       | there but it has slowed enough to have time to get out with a
       | wheelbarrow and fix the holes. Plants are doing fine.
       | 
       | In a similar balance I shot a pair of extremely large snapping
       | turtles two years ago after learning large snappers have no
       | predators, and we now have a new population of tiny turtles (~4
       | different species so far). I'm never happy to kill anything, but
       | hopefully in these two cases I'm performing my steward role
       | adequately.
        
       | gerbyzation wrote:
       | Grew up in the Dutch countryside with it's polders, water mills,
       | dykes and extensive network of water. Muskrats thrive in this
       | sort of area, but are rather not welcome as unmanaged they'd pose
       | a thread to life with their tunnelling of watersides and dykes.
       | When I was a kid my dad used to work for the government
       | department responsible for curbing the population of muskrat -
       | known as "muskrat-catchers". Joined him occasionally on his treks
       | through the countryside to check all the traps and cages so this
       | brings up some childhood memories. Surprising topic to come
       | across on HN!
        
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