When people think of rodents, the first things that spring to mind are often negative.
For millennia, humans have lived alongside rodents but often viewed them as pests, due to their habit of raiding food and crop supplies. Yet some are loved and even kept as pets, recognised for their playful and intelligent character.
Rodents are widely misunderstood, and they vary greatly in behaviour and appearance. Some have confusing names, like the hazel dormouse, which isn’t a mouse at all. And brown rats were given the scientific name Rattus norvegicus, but they originated from Asia and not Norway!
We have 18 species of rodent in the UK, including the voles, squirrels, dormice and true mice. The largest native rodent is the Eurasian beaver, which, with a weight of up to 30kg, is almost 20 times heavier than the red squirrel, our second largest fully native rodent. Of those 18 species, four of them are mice: another widely misunderstood group of mammals.
Mice play a key role in the natural environment; from distributing plant seeds to being prey for animals like owls and foxes. When small rodent populations are low, the number of their predators falls dramatically too. Mice have short life spans in the wild, with an average of just one year. Population sizes can vary with weather conditions and food availability.
None of our true mice hibernate and must feed throughout the year, so there is potential to spot any of them at any time. But even though some mice are more common than others, they can all be hard to spot!