The Norway lemming has a dramatic three- to four-year
population cycle, in which the species' population periodically rises to unsustainable levels, leading to high mortality, which causes the population to crash again. The Norway lemming spends the winter in nests under the snow. When the spring thaws begin and the snow starts to collapse, they must migrate to higher ground, where the snow is still firm enough for safety, or, more commonly, to lower ground, where they spend the summer months. In autumn, they must time their movement back to sheltered higher ground carefully, leaving after alpine snow cover is available for their burrows and nests, and before the lowlands are made uninhabitable by frost and ice. When the seasons are particularly good (short winters without unexpected thaws or freezes, and long summers), the Norway lemming population can increase exponentially; they reach sexual maturity less than a month after birth, and breed year-round if conditions are right, producing a litter of six to eight young every three to four weeks. Being solitary creatures by nature, the stronger lemmings drive the weaker and younger ones off long before a food shortage occurs. The young lemmings disperse in random directions looking for vacant territory. Where geographical features constrain their movements and channel them into a relatively narrow corridor, large numbers can build up, leading to social friction, distress, and eventually a mass panic can follow, where they flee in all directions. Lemmings do migrate, and in vast numbers sometimes, but notion of a deliberate march into the sea is false. According to genetic research, the Norwegian lemming survived the
Pleistocene glaciation in western Europe, inhabiting various
refugia which were not covered by ice. Alternatively, some researchers have contended the Norwegian lemming populations had arisen from ancestors of the present-day
brown lemming (
L. sibiricus), moving in after glaciers receded. The Novaya Zemlya lemming, which could represent either a subspecies of
L. lemmus, or a population of
L. sibiricus with
mtDNA introgression from ancient hybridization with
L. lemmus, supports the former theory. == The "Novaya Zemlya lemming" ==