Daily activity patterns of Mohave ground squirrels in a camera trapping study

We conducted a regional camera trapping study in 2021 to assess the distribution of the Mohave ground squirrel (Xerospermophilus mohavensis; MGS) that resulted in 2,754 detection events. Here we analyze temporal and environmental factors influencing MGS activity, as well as some aspects of our metho...

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Main Authors: Barbara M. Leitner, Philip Leitner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: California Department of Fish and Wildlife 2025-05-01
Series:California Fish and Wildlife Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.wildlife.ca.gov/2025/05/20/daily-activity-patterns-of-mohave-ground-squirrels-in-a-camera-trapping-study/
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author Barbara M. Leitner
Philip Leitner
author_facet Barbara M. Leitner
Philip Leitner
author_sort Barbara M. Leitner
collection DOAJ
description We conducted a regional camera trapping study in 2021 to assess the distribution of the Mohave ground squirrel (Xerospermophilus mohavensis; MGS) that resulted in 2,754 detection events. Here we analyze temporal and environmental factors influencing MGS activity, as well as some aspects of our methodology. During 8-day operational periods in two sessions at 55 study sites (total n = 550 cameras), first detections of MGS at individual cameras were most numerous on days 1 and 2, but first detections continued through Day 8 during both sessions. On a daily basis, 99% of all MGS detections began at least 2 hours after sunrise and 98% ended at least 1 hour before sunset. Temperatures recorded by unsheltered trail cameras were an unreliable measure of shaded air temperature. However, data from two weather stations were comparable over a large area and were adjusted based on elevation to estimate air temperatures at nearby study sites. MGS detections were numerous during the warmest daily temperatures throughout the study, underscoring the importance of closing live-traps during warm weather to ensure animal safety. Detections were lower on relatively cool days, especially in early spring. Collectively, these results illustrate the critical importance of ambient temperature to MGS activity patterns and, by extension, their energy budget. Although no comparisons showed significant differences, a test of bait presentation suggested that peanut butter had no particular benefit as an MGS attractant. Activity patterns demonstrate that bait tubes are effective attractants for at least one week. Although MGS activity at cameras can be quantified in various ways, the most comparable metric across investigations is simply presence or absence.
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spelling doaj-art-f672caa00b5b4bcca17461ebc202422a2025-06-30T16:47:52ZengCalifornia Department of Fish and WildlifeCalifornia Fish and Wildlife Journal2689-419X2689-42032025-05-01111210.51492/cfwj.111.9Daily activity patterns of Mohave ground squirrels in a camera trapping studyBarbara M. Leitner0https://orcid.org/0009-0005-3100-7509Philip Leitner1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5042-6358Leitner Biological ConsultingLeitner Biological ConsultingWe conducted a regional camera trapping study in 2021 to assess the distribution of the Mohave ground squirrel (Xerospermophilus mohavensis; MGS) that resulted in 2,754 detection events. Here we analyze temporal and environmental factors influencing MGS activity, as well as some aspects of our methodology. During 8-day operational periods in two sessions at 55 study sites (total n = 550 cameras), first detections of MGS at individual cameras were most numerous on days 1 and 2, but first detections continued through Day 8 during both sessions. On a daily basis, 99% of all MGS detections began at least 2 hours after sunrise and 98% ended at least 1 hour before sunset. Temperatures recorded by unsheltered trail cameras were an unreliable measure of shaded air temperature. However, data from two weather stations were comparable over a large area and were adjusted based on elevation to estimate air temperatures at nearby study sites. MGS detections were numerous during the warmest daily temperatures throughout the study, underscoring the importance of closing live-traps during warm weather to ensure animal safety. Detections were lower on relatively cool days, especially in early spring. Collectively, these results illustrate the critical importance of ambient temperature to MGS activity patterns and, by extension, their energy budget. Although no comparisons showed significant differences, a test of bait presentation suggested that peanut butter had no particular benefit as an MGS attractant. Activity patterns demonstrate that bait tubes are effective attractants for at least one week. Although MGS activity at cameras can be quantified in various ways, the most comparable metric across investigations is simply presence or absence.https://journal.wildlife.ca.gov/2025/05/20/daily-activity-patterns-of-mohave-ground-squirrels-in-a-camera-trapping-study/bait attractantcaliforniacamera trapdaily activitymohave ground squirrelmojave deserttemperaturetrail cameraxerospermophilus mohavensis
spellingShingle Barbara M. Leitner
Philip Leitner
Daily activity patterns of Mohave ground squirrels in a camera trapping study
California Fish and Wildlife Journal
bait attractant
california
camera trap
daily activity
mohave ground squirrel
mojave desert
temperature
trail camera
xerospermophilus mohavensis
title Daily activity patterns of Mohave ground squirrels in a camera trapping study
title_full Daily activity patterns of Mohave ground squirrels in a camera trapping study
title_fullStr Daily activity patterns of Mohave ground squirrels in a camera trapping study
title_full_unstemmed Daily activity patterns of Mohave ground squirrels in a camera trapping study
title_short Daily activity patterns of Mohave ground squirrels in a camera trapping study
title_sort daily activity patterns of mohave ground squirrels in a camera trapping study
topic bait attractant
california
camera trap
daily activity
mohave ground squirrel
mojave desert
temperature
trail camera
xerospermophilus mohavensis
url https://journal.wildlife.ca.gov/2025/05/20/daily-activity-patterns-of-mohave-ground-squirrels-in-a-camera-trapping-study/
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AT philipleitner dailyactivitypatternsofmohavegroundsquirrelsinacameratrappingstudy