. Animal competitors; profit and loss from the wild four-footed tenants of the farm. Zoology, Economic. 100 ANIMAL COMPETITORS a family, but never by a colony. Wood-rats are social and visit back and forth from one house to another until well-worn trails often connect the houses and lead to the feeding grounds. The food of these ani- mals is mainly seeds, berries, and many kinds of green foliage. AVhere the houses are located near the edges of fields, grain, fruits, and vegetables are sometimes. FIELD-NEST OF BAILEY'S WOOD-KAT. From Warren's "Mammals of ; By Permission of G.


. Animal competitors; profit and loss from the wild four-footed tenants of the farm. Zoology, Economic. 100 ANIMAL COMPETITORS a family, but never by a colony. Wood-rats are social and visit back and forth from one house to another until well-worn trails often connect the houses and lead to the feeding grounds. The food of these ani- mals is mainly seeds, berries, and many kinds of green foliage. AVhere the houses are located near the edges of fields, grain, fruits, and vegetables are sometimes. FIELD-NEST OF BAILEY'S WOOD-KAT. From Warren's "Mammals of ; By Permission of G. P. Putnam's Sons. Photo by H. W. Nash. eaten or carried away and stored up for food, but fortunately the rats are never sufficiently numerous to do serious damage. Their houses are easily de- stroyed and the occupants captured by a few min- utes' work with a shovel, or the rats can readily be trapped or poisoned. They frequently enter cabins. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Ingersoll, Ernest, 1852-1946. New York Sturgis&Walton company


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License: Licensed
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1913