As far as traveling, maybe during the rearing of the young but why would it be any different any other time?
Lack of water for longer periods than 3 months (drought)
Lack of prey due to lack of prey habitat (measurable)
Lack of overhead protective cover (measurable)
Increase in owls & hawks
A virus
You might find some clues & reasons in the Habitat Suitability Indexing study.
One thing I learned by working the HSI study is that the length of travel of male mink isn’t miles & miles but it is several times longer than the females. If male mink’s travel were very many miles, they would backfill where mink had been trapped/killed quite quickly but I proved on my waterways during & after the Prj that certainly wasn’t/isn’t the case!
I had quite the argument with a trapper from WI about this very thing and he professed that his mink sets just kept right on producing steadily. I tested is theory for 2 years by leaving my BEs in for a little over 2 months AFTER I’d caught mink between night 3 & night 9 on average. 2 years in a row I never caught another mink during the two 7-week periods!
During the mink study and when the DNR & EPA required I repeat my catch performance on a specified stretch of the “river of concern”. I couldn’t find mink sign at any of the previous catch locations (3 weeks later) which were my primary set locations where I figured to quickly make catches. I had to set the secondary locations that I’d located during the initial scouting still showing sign. I hadn’t set them since the primary locations I determined to be better odds of making for quicker catches. I never caught another mink at the set locations where I’d caught the original quota BUT I caught the new imposed quota at the secondaries!!!!!