Woodrat Manual



Woodrat Facts

  1. Woodrat Mountain Oregon
  2. Woodrat Manual Car
  3. Woodrat Manual Model
  4. Woodrat Mountain Paragliding Competition

A fully illustrated manual with setup instructions and examples of popular joints is included with every purchase. A Bit of This, A Bit of That To create beautiful traditional joinery, you only need a Router Boss, plunge router, and the right bits. Woodrat, (genus Neotoma), any of 20 species of medium-sized North and Central American rodents. Some species are commonly known as “packrats” for their characteristic accumulation of food and debris on or near their dens. The WoodRat 900 now has a new improved channel and sliding bar, with more tee slots for added functionality. It also features new aluminium fences, also with extra t-slots. It comes with a full manual, raising plate, alu guide rails, centre liner, flightpath sticker and parallelogram - everything you need to get jointing. This video is an intro to the WoodRat, it's setup & maintenance. If you are considering to buy a dedicated router jig, like a dovetail jig, then maybe one of. WoodRat WR5 Manual 9 The WoodRat® has patents and patents pending worldwide. Patent No.4 995 435 / Australian Patent No.609826 UK Patent No.036 22 51 / German Patent No.38 80 138.8 The WoodRat® emblem is a registered Trade Mark This Manual is copyright and no part may be reproduced in any medium whatsoever.

Scientific Name:

Neotoma SPP. meaning 'rodent that cuts with its teeth'

Color:

Ranges – brown, gray, black

Weight:

10-16 ounces; same size as Norway Rat

Length:

7 inches

Tail Length:

7 inches; shorter than the body

Body:

Thick, rounded body; professionals describe as a 'giant hamster'; very long, soft, fine fur

Woodrat Manual

Ears:

Large ears

Eyes:

Bulging black eyes

Lifespan:

3 years

Woodrat Mountain Oregon

Droppings:

½ inch long; oval shaped; found in piles

Signs of Woodrat Damage

Droppings, gnaw marks, and urine odor are just a few signs of Woodrat activity.

Droppings

Droppings are the most commonly encountered evidence of rodent activity. Even a small rat infestation can produce literally thousands of droppings in a short period of time.

An adult woodrat typically produces 40 to 50 droppings per day. These fecal pellets are usually dark-colored, 1/2 inch in length, and oval shaped.

Gnaw Marks

Evidence of recent gnawing is an excellent sign for determining the presence of Woodrats.

Woodrats tend to gnaw on wooden structures such as corners, floor joists, and wall studs. When Woodrats gnaw holes into cartons and boxes, the holes typically measure about 2 inches in diameter and contain rough, torn edges.

Collection Habits

Woodrats are also called Packrats because they will collect various objects they encounter during their night forays. They are particularly attracted to shiny or bright objects. Thus, they collect pieces of glass, cans, mirrors, coins and jewelry.

Woodrats are also called 'traderats' because of the stories associated with them stealing keys, wedding rings and such at campsites. Evidently, the rats will drop whatever they are carrying at the time they encounter a new 'attractive' object.

In this manner, sticks have been traded for wedding rings and berries for car keys. It is important to note that this attraction to new objects is in sharp contrast to the fear of new objects of the Roof & Norway rats.

Names
Dusky-footed woodrats (Neotoma fuscipes) and San Francisco dusky-footed woodrats (Neotoma fuscipes annectens) are named for their sooty-gray feet. The species name, fuscipes, comes from “fusc“, meaning dusky/sooty, and “pes” , meaning feet (like “ped”), so “fuscipes” means “dusky-footed”. Pronounce “fuscipes” like “fu’-skip-ease”. “Neo” in latin means new and “toma” is “to twin” or “to split”. “Neotoma” is a playful dual pun on the woodrat’s choppers that snip wood in two pieces so easily, and the fact they look like Rattus rats of Europe, but in the “New” World.

Woodrats’ instinct to gather food and sticks also sometimes drives them to pick-up shiny objects, too, which is why they’re also called packrats and trade rats.

Range and Habitat
Neotoma fuscipes is native to oak woodlands and chaparral throughout the Coast Ranges, from Central California into Oregon. Neotoma fuscipes annectens is the regional subspecies of San Francisco and the Santa Cruz Mountains and foothills. Because of this limited range it is a California Subspecies of Special Concern with local protections.

Appearance and Size
Dusky-footed woodrats have brown-gray fur, a white chest, and sooty-gray tops on their feet and sometimes face. The tail is about equal to their 8–10-inch body length and lightly haired—not as naked, long and tapered as Rattus sp., such as the black rat. While similar superficially, they’re not closely related to European Rattus rats, but are genetically closer to deer mice (Peromyscus spp.).

Don’t Mix Them Up
While similar superficially, woodrats are not closely related to European Rattus rats, but are genetically closer to deer mice (Peromyscus spp.). Woodrats are cleaner than European rats, partly because they’re herbivores, partly because they live solo, but also because they live more cleanly, and have outside latrines where they “poop on the stoop,” instead of inside the house.

What They Eat
Woodrats eat leaves, flowers, buds, berries, seeds, nuts, acorns and fungi that they forage and collect at night, and store in larders in their houses for future meals. Some plants are “aged” to reduce toxins and bitter flavors. Other collected plants, such as bay laurel leaves, help reduce fleas, mites and other parasites in the larders, house, and on the woodrat itself. Favorite foods include poison oak, toyon, coffeeberry, coast live oak, and bay laurel.

Who Eats Them
Predators include coyotes, bobcats, owls, and badgers (but no badgers are at Edgewood).

Life and Behavior
Solo but social, adults generally live alone in houses, but are social and live in neighborhoods. Loosely matriarchal, the females choose mates, sometimes the same male year to year. Males will cede houses to females, and senior females generally occupy the best houses. Typically they just have one litter per year of 2–3 pups, which often ride around on Mom’s belly. Pups stay with Mom for as much as a year, and woodrats can live 6 to 8 years (if not caught by a predator, such as an owl, snake or coyote!). Males disperse furthest, usually less than 500 feet, and daughters tend to stay nearer to Mom, and may even inherit the house from her. Both often look for abandoned “starter houses” when they disperse. Woodrat urine and poop can sometimes contain Hantavirus, so leave their houses alone.

Keystone Builders with Live-in Buddies
Woodrats build fortress-style “stick houses” around hollow trees, logs, rock piles, and the like. The structures have a central nest chamber, larders for vegetation and nut storage, and multiple tunnels, entrances, exits and latrines. Houses protect them from weather and predators, and maintain a consistent habitat for living and long-term food storage. Woodrats sometimes maintain multiple houses, and move among them to forage more broadly. Great climbers, they also occasionally build houses up in trees. Woodrats are a keystone species for their houses, which are relied upon by numerous live-in species, including mice, lizards, snakes, salamanders, frogs, crickets, beetles, and millipedes.

Woodrat Manual Car

FAQs

Woodrat Manual Model

Where at Edgewood am I likely to see woodrats?
Since woodrats are nocturnal, hikers rarely see the animal. The most obvious signs of woodrats are their stick houses, easily visible from trails through scrub or woodlands. In 2014, one Friends of Edgewood docent counted 345 woodrat houses visible from the the Exercise Loop (Sylvan Trail, Franciscan Trail, Baywood Glen Trail)! Houses are especially easy to see in oak woodlands in late fall and winter, after poison oak and other deciduous shrubs have lost their leaves.

What other signs should I look for?
Watch for fresh twigs on the ground, nipped off with a pruning shears-like cut. Woodrats snip and store seasonally, heaviest in fall before winter, and often climb trees and bushes and snip a bunch to then collect off the ground over multiple nights.

Learn More…
Series on Woodrats by Ken Hickman, found atNature of a Man

Marianchild, K. 2013. Secrets of the Oak Woodlands: Plants and Animals among California’s Oaks. Heyday Press.

Woodrat Mountain Paragliding Competition

References

Linsdale, J.M. and Tevis, L.P. 1951. The Duskcy-footed Wood Rat: a record of observations made on the Hastings Natural History Reservation. UC Press.

Atsatt, S.R. and Ingram, T. 1983. Adaptation to oak and other fibrous, phenolic-rich foliage by a small mammal, Neotoma fuscipes. Oecologia 60: 135–142.

Jameson Jr., E.W. and Peeters, H.J. 2004. Mammals of California. UC Press.

Laudenslayer Jr., W.F. and Fargo, R.J. 2002. Small Mammal Populations and Ecology in the Kings River Sustainable Forest Ecosystems Project Area. (This has many excellent citations in the References section.)

Information from wildlife researcher and Friend of Edgewood, Ken Hickman, 2014. Appended by Friends of Edgewood docents.

All images on this page were taken via licensed camera trap at Edgewood County Park and Natural Preserve by Ken Hickman.