About Abrothrix olivaceus (Waterhouse, 1837)
The olive grass mouse (Abrothrix olivaceus) is a small rodent with a total length of approximately 17 cm (6.7 in). Its upper body is greyish-brown, sometimes showing a slight yellowish tint around the snout, while its underparts range from pale to mid-grey. This species is distributed across northern and central Chile, the westernmost fringes of Argentina, southern Chile, and Patagonia; this range includes larger offshore islands and the islands of Tierra del Fuego. Because it occurs on Hornos Island, it is recognized as the southernmost land mammal in the world. Its habitat varies across its range: in Patagonia it lives in arid bushy steppes; further north it occurs in forests of Nothofagus, Saxegothaea, and bamboo; and in other areas it can be found in tussocky grassland, marshes, and wet meadows. The olive grass mouse is mostly diurnal. In grassy habitats, it constructs runways and builds grass nests in grass tussocks, among plant roots, or under rocks. It is capable of both climbing and digging, and in Chile it sometimes uses burrows dug by other mammals such as the coruro (Spalacopus cyanus). Its diet consists of berries, seeds, shoots, leaves, fungi, and small invertebrates. It breeds during spring and summer, and average litter size is five young. Under favorable conditions, including El Niño years, its populations can increase dramatically. Outbreaks of this species sometimes happen. This mouse is preyed upon by barn owls (Tyto tyto), lesser horned owls (Bubo magellanicus), various other birds, and foxes. It also acts as a host for the acanthocephalan intestinal parasite Moniliformis amini. In 1990, the bamboo species Chusquea valdiviensis experienced a mass seeding event across over a million hectares of this bamboo in southern Chile, where all plants flowered at the same time and then died. The huge volume of seeds produced was followed by a large population increase of the rice rat Oligoryzomys longicaudatus, and a smaller population increase of the olive grass mouse. These rodent population increases are caused by greater fecundity, higher juvenile survival rates, and an extended breeding season. Because many bamboo seeds remained inside the flowering spikelets for a full year, additional rodent population peaks took place in subsequent years.