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Western mouse

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Species of rodent

Western mouse
Scientific classificationEdit this classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Order:Rodentia
Family:Muridae
Genus:Pseudomys
Species:
P. occidentalis
Binomial name
Pseudomys occidentalis
Tate, 1951[2]

Thewestern mouse orwalyadji (Pseudomys occidentalis) is a species ofrodent in the familyMuridae. Once widespread across a larger range, it has become restricted to around ten reserves of remnant bushland inSouthwest Australia and declared near threatened by extinction. They are small and robust mice that live in burrows in sandy soil, venturing out at night to forage in nearby area.

Taxonomy

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Amurine species that was first described byGeorge H. H. Tate in 1951,[2] using specimens obtained in 1930.[3]Theholotype is a skin and skull of a young adult collected atTambellup by J. Baldwin, with Tate referring to a second specimen with a damaged skull as slightly larger.[4]

Assigned to a diverse and poorly resolved genus,Pseudomys, the describing author allied the species to a subgeneric classification asGyomys.[2]

The term walyadji is used to refer to the species, but this word does not appear in a literature review ofNoongar language names for mammals of the region.[5]

Description

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This mouse is roughly 10 centimeters long, not counting its tail, which may be up to 14 centimeters in length. It weighs an average of 34 grams. It has a soft, fine, dark gray and yellowish buffpelage that is interspersed with blackguard hairs. The feet are white.[6][3]

The species is distinguished by the aquiline profile of nose, and its long tail.The range of measurements for the head and body combined is 88 to 110 millimetres, exceeded by the tail's length of 120 to 140 mm.The hind feet ofPseudomys occidentalis are 24 to 28 mm, relatively long for the genus, with interdigital pads that are larger than the terminal pads. The proportion of the pads and lack of granulation over the surface of the hind foot distinguishes the species from the ash-grey speciesPseudomys albocinereus.They have two pairs of inguinal teats. The weight range of the species is 30 to 55 grams.[7]

Behaviour

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The subterranean nests have a single entrance, a shaft that connects to a network 200 to 300 millimetres below the ground. The main tunnel has a nest site at the opposite end of a loop, two to three metres from the entrance, with a network of other loops extending as annexes to the central tunnel. The site may be occupied by up to ten individuals.[1]

Distribution and habitat

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The distribution range once extended across Southwest Australia and into the arid interior, this became restricted to a few areas near the Ravensthorpe Range, atFitzgerald River National Park, and several isolated populations in the southernwheatbelt.[7]

This mouse lives inloamy soils in areas that have not been burnt recently, and not known at any location that has been subjected to fire in the preceding 30 to 50 years.[1] The terrain has climax vegetation, especially the desert quandongSantalum acuminatum andsedge-like plants.[6]The substrate of the ecological communities in which they are known to remain is sandy or sandy-clay soil that is often intermixed with gravel.Plant genera associated with their remnant sites areEucalyptus,Acacia,Isopogon,Allocasuarina andMelaleuca, and the vegetation of their habitat is highly variable, including open woodlands, low and tall shrubland, mallee and heath in open to dense arrangements of plants.[3]

After being identified in 1951, the species was known by five specimens until the region's survey and collection of mammals was begun by the state's museum in 1971.[3]

Conservation

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The conservations status of the species was assessed as near threatened in 2016, with a declining population in an area of occupancy less than 200 km2. The fragmented populations inhabit remnants of its preferred habitat, estimated from earlier surveys to be greater than 10 and a decline less than 30% in three generations.Loss of habitat and an anthropogenic climate change is expected to impact upon the species population trajectory.[1]

References

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  1. ^abcdBurbidge, A.A.; Woinarski, J. (2019)."Pseudomys occidentalis".IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.2019 e.T18553A22398121.doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-1.RLTS.T18553A22398121.en. Retrieved11 November 2021.
  2. ^abcTate, G. H. H. (1951). "Results of the Archbold Expeditions. No. 65. The rodents of Australia and New Guinea".Bulletin of the AMNH.97 (4): 183–430 [246].hdl:2246/1060.
  3. ^abcdKitchener, D. (1983). "Western MousePseudomys ocidentalis". InStrahan, R. (ed.).Complete book of Australian mammals. The national photographic index of Australian wildlife. London: Angus & Robertson. pp. 414–415.ISBN 0-207-14454-0.
  4. ^"SpeciesPseudomys occidentalis Tate, 1951 Western Mouse".Australian Faunal Directory.
  5. ^Abbott, Ian (2001). "Aboriginal names of mammal species in south-west Western Australia".CALMScience.3 (4): 438.
  6. ^abPseudomys occidentalis. Western Australia Government.
  7. ^abMenkhorst, P.W.;Knight, F. (2011).A field guide to the mammals of Australia (3rd ed.). Melbourne: Oxford University Press. p. 196.ISBN 978-0-19-557395-4.
  • Musser, G. G. and M. D. Carleton. 2005. Superfamily Muroidea. pp. 894–1531in Mammal Species of the World a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. D. E. Wilson and D. M. Reeder eds. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
Extant species of subfamilyMurinae (Pogonomys–Pseudomys)
Pogonomys
Division
Abeomelomys
Anisomys
Brassomys
Chiruromys
Coccymys
Hyomys
(White-eared rats)
Macruromys
(New Guinean rats)
Mallomys
(Giant tree rats)
Mammelomys
Pogonomelomys
(Rummler's
mosaic tailed rats)
Pogonomys
(Prehensile-tailed rats)
Xenuromys
Pseudomys
Division
Conilurus
Leggadina
Leporillus
(Australian
stick-nest rats)
Mastacomys
Mesembriomys
(Tree rats)
Notomys
(Australian
hopping mice)
Pseudomys
(Australian native mice)
Zyzomys
(Thick-tailed rats)
Pseudomys occidentalis
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