Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 11, No. 2, August, 1938
Muskrats in Crater Lake
National Park
By Ralph E. Huestis, Ranger Naturalist, 1937
On June 12, 1937, Ranger Bernie Hughes
brought in a muskrat killed in the vicinity of the dining room at Park
Headquarters. The specimen, an immature female, was put up and the
skull, somewhat damaged in taking the specimen, was preserved. Since
then, rangers have reported two other specimens; one observed dead in a
small creek four miles from the west entrance of the park, and another
killed on the road near Godfrey's Glen. In all cases these animals were
found a considerable distance from a body of water of any appreciable
size.
Neither Anthony (1935) nor Bailey
(1936) list muskrats in or near the park. The latter author says: "They
have not been taken in the Klamath or Pit River Valleys nor in Summer,
Abert, or Warner Lake Valleys, although these great lakes and tule
marshes seem admirably adapted to their requirements and very similar to
the Malheur Lakes were they abound." (1) One the other hand a number of
Crater Lake National Park rangers either resident in or very familiar
with the district assert positively that the region of the Upper Klamath
Lake abounds in muskrats, and that large numbers have been skinned and
marketed in recent years. It is suggested in reconciliation of these
opposed statements that muskrats taken in the Klamath region represent
the descendants of escaped animals recently introduced in the region for
purposes of fur farming, and that the specimens seen in the park are
immigrants from the Upper Klamath Lake. If inquiry shows this to be the
explanation, the taxonomic position of park muskrats will be
problematical because commercial animals may be from various sources.
The muskrat, Ondatra zibethica,
(Fiber zibethicus,
according to Bailey) should make an interesting addition to the park
fauna if it is able to establish itself. It is a large rat with
relatively small ears and eyes, and thick dark brown fur. The long,
almost naked tail is laterally compressed. The fore feet are small but
the hind feet are relatively large, the toes being slightly webbed at
their bases and supplied with heavy lateral fringes of bristles. The
tail and hind feet are thus highly adapted to swimming. As in many
rodents there are four toes on the fore feet and five toes on the hind
feet.
In still water muskrats build large
dome-shaped houses, the bases of which are submerged. Entrance is from
underneath. In streams or in lakes with steep banks they burrow in from
under the water, inclining their tunnels upward to a nesting room which
they hollow out above water line. Their food consists of bulbs, roots,
leaves, tubers, or other portions of plants which grow adjacent to our
in the water. The name muskrat comes from the fact that certain glands
produce a musky secretion.
The muskrat has been one of the most
important fur-bearing animals on the continent famous for its fur trade.
The writer remembers seeing as a boy, in Edmonton, Alberta, the greatest
shipment of raw furs ever brought in from the Mackenzie River country.
In this shipment, pictures of which were common in Canadian press
releases at the time, the muskrat skins outnumbered all others combined,
and formed a pile on the floor of the skating rink approximately six
feet high and some thirty feet in diameter.
Catches in all parts of Canada and the
United States have been much reduced in recent years. The future supply
of these valuable furs will probably have to be produced by artificial
propagation which may very well be the cause of this addition to the
fauna of Crater Lake National Park.
1) Bailey, Vernon, The Mammals
and Life Zones of Oregon,
North Amer. Fauna, No. 55, U.S.D.A., Bur. of Biol. Sur., 1936,
p. 215.