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WANTED: a mouse catcher for St Kilda.

The ideal candidate should possess a head for heights and a good level of fitness in order to carry heavy equipment over steep and precipitous terrain.
A mouse catcher is wanted to find these beasts - the St Kilda Field Mouse - on the remote Scottih Island
The unpaid voluntary jobs is for five weeks commencing March 5 and is to assist an Edinburgh University study of the St Kilda field mouse. It is expected that the successful person will be a bio-science student wishing to broaden their experience and add to their CV. Transport to and from Benbecula, food and lodgings will be provided.

The live capture of the mice is part of a three year study of the archipelago's native field mouse.

The St Kilda Field Mouse is unique to the islands, which are owned and cared for by the National Trust for Scotland. Although field mice are common through the UK, the ones on St Kilda are unusual for several reasons, the most notable being that they are nearly twice the weight of their relatives on the mainland and have different hair colouration on their belly. They also live in unusual conditions, in that they have almost no predators on the islands and share the grass and herb food supply with only one other mammal, the diminutive Soay sheep.

Another subspecies of mouse unique to the islands, the St Kilda House Mouse, became extinct shortly after the evacuation of the archipelago in 1930.

While the St Kilda Field Mouse has been known about for many years, almost nothing is known about its numbers, habits or life cycle. The PhD study intends to uncover the manner in which these creatures live in order to understand how much they differ from mainland mice and to better conserve them in the future. Tom Black has been appointed to carry out the research and will travel to St Kilda in November to begin work on the mice.

See also:
St Kilda's rats
A summary of Scotland
Owner fined over mouse  droppings

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