Related Items
Encarta Search
Search Encarta about Lemming

Advertisement

Windows Live® Search Results

  • Lemming - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Lemmings are small rodents, usually found in or near the Arctic, in tundra biomes. Together with the voles and muskrats, they make up the subfamily Arvicolinae (also known as ...

  • lemming - Definitions from Dictionary.com

    Definitions of lemming at Dictionary.com. ... any of various small, mouselike rodents of the genera Lemmus, Myopus, and Dicrostonyx, of far northern regions, as L. lemmus, of ...

  • Arctic Studies Center

    Lemming Synaptomys spp. Lemmings are small mouse-like animals that live in the tundra. In summer they are brown, but in winter they are all white.

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results
Also on Encarta

Lemming

Encyclopedia Article
Find | Print | E-mail | Blog It
Multimedia
Collared LemmingCollared Lemming

Lemming, mouselike arctic rodent characterized by a small, short body that is about 13 cm (about 5 in) long, with a very short tail. Lemmings are tan above and light gray, mixed with tan, below. The head is round, with small ears concealed by fur and with a stubby, hairy snout. The legs are short. The animals live in extensive burrows near the water, feed on vegetation, and build nests out of hair, grass, moss, and lichen. The female produces several broods a year, each of which contains about five young.

The species occurring in North America is the brown, or true, lemming; the blackfooted lemming is a variety of the same species. The Norway lemming appears in the cultivated fields of Norway and Sweden during the course of the periodic mass migrations for which it is famous. When overpopulation of Norway lemmings leads to a scarcity of food and overcrowding of habitat, many thousands of the animals migrate in search of food. The migrators swim lakes and rivers, cross mountains, and eat all vegetation in their path. Eventually, some reach the sea; attempting to swim it as if it were a river, they are drowned. This phenomenon of mass migration and drowning is relatively infrequent, although population fluctuations occur every three or four years. Other lemming species do not migrate in this way.

Scientific classification: Lemmings belong to the family Muridae. The brown, or true, lemming is classified as Lemmus trimucronatus. The Norway lemming is classified as Lemmus lemmus.



Find
Print
E-mail
Blog It


More from Encarta


© 2008 Microsoft