White-ankled mouse

Species of mammal

White-ankled mouse
Conservation status

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Cricetidae
Subfamily: Neotominae
Genus: Peromyscus
Species:
P. pectoralis
Binomial name
Peromyscus pectoralis
Osgood, 1904

The white-ankled mouse (Peromyscus pectoralis) is a species of rodent in the family Cricetidae. It is found in Mexico and in New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas in the United States.[1]

The white-ankled mouse is commonly found in coexistence with the brush mouse and Texas mouse (P. boylii and P. attaweri, respectively). Often, the sympatric overlap in characteristics between these species makes it difficult to identify a specific species. The most distinguishing feature of the white-ankled mouse, and the one most used to identify the species, is the baculum of males (Hooper 1958). The tip of the white-ankled mouse's baculum is long and cartilaginous, whereas the tips of brush and Texas mice are short and rounded (Clark 1952 and Hooper 1958).

Description

White-ankled mice have three distinct pelages in their life cycles: juvenile, subadult, and adult. Two molt phases (post-juvenile and post-subadult) are necessary for the distinct pelages in each phase of their lives (Hoffmeister 1951).

In Texas, the white-ankled mouse differs from the Texas mouse by having shorter hind feet, white ankles, paler color, and a more defined bicolor tail. The white-ankled mouse differs from the Brush mouse by having smaller molar teeth, white ankles, and shorter hair on the end of the tail (Clark 1953 and Hooper 1958).

Distribution and habitat

Because of the physical similarities between the white-ankled mouse and other mice species, the white-ankled mouse is often misidentified. In New Mexico, for example, many of the distribution ranges of the white-ankled mouse were based on misidentified museum specimens. Upon both further review of these specimens and an experiment involving live traps, the actual distribution of the white-ankled mouse in New Mexico was expanded by 225 km north-northwest (Geluso 2004).

When studying the microhabitats of these coexisting mice, it was discovered that the Texas mouse utilizes trees and the white-ankled mouse does not (Etheredge 1989). In an experiment that removed the Texas mice from these cohabitated microhabitats, the white-ankled mice still did not use the trees. These findings suggest the microhabitats on the white-ankled mouse are inherently selected rather than a result of interspecific competition (Mullican 1990).

The white-ankled mouse is partial to rocky and bushy terrains within a variety of habitats: deserts, grasslands and woodlands(Kilpatrick 1971 ).

Diet

White-ankled mice have been known to feed on a variety of seeds, including hackberries, acorns, juniper berries, and cactus fruit (Davis 1966 and Alvarex 1963).

References

  1. ^ a b Linzey, A.V.; Timm, R.; Álvarez-Castañeda, S.T.; Castro-Arellano, I. & Lacher, T. (2008). "Peromyscus pectoralis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2008. Retrieved 5 February 2010.{{cite iucn}}: old-form url (help)
  • Musser, G. G. and M. D. Carleton. 2005. Superfamily Muroidea. pp. 894–1531 in Mammal Species of the World a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. D. E. Wilson and D. M. Reeder eds. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
  • Alavrez, T. 1963. Mammals of Tamaulipas, Mexico. Univ. Kansas Publ., Mus. Nat. Hist. 14:363-473.
  • Clark, W. K. 1952. Isolating mechanisms, competition, and geographic variation of the Peromyscus boylei group in Oklahoma and Texas. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Univ. Texas, 102 pp.
  • Davis, W.B. 1966. The mammals of Texas. Bull. Texas Game and Fish Comm. 41:5-267
  • Etheredge, D.R., M.D. Engstrom, and R. C. Stone. 1989. Habitat discrimination between sympatric populations of Peromyscus attwateri and Peromyscus pectoralis in west-central Texas. Journal of Mammalogy, 70:300-307.
  • Geluso, Keith. "Distribution of the white-ankled mouse (Peromyscus pectoralis) in New Mexico." The Southwestern Naturalist 49.2 (2004): 283–288.
  • Hoffmeister, D. F. 1951. A taxonomic and evolutionary study of the pinon mouse Peromyscus truei. Illinois Biol. Monogr. 21:1-104.
  • Hooper, E.T. 1958. The male phallus in mice of the genus Peromyscus. Misc. Publ. Mus. Zool., Univ. Michigan 105:1-24
  • Kilpatrick, C. W. 1971, Distribution of the brush mouse. Permomyscus boylii, and the encinal mouse, Permoyscus pectoralis, in north-central Texas. Southwestern Nat. 16: 209-220
  • Mullican, Tim R., and John T. Baccus. "Horizontal and vertical movements of the white-ankled mouse (Peromyscus pectoralis) in central Texas." Journal of mammalogy (1990): 378–381.
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Extant species of subfamily Neotominae
Baiomyini
Baiomys
(Pygmy mice)
  • Southern pygmy mouse (B. musculus)
  • Northern pygmy mouse (B. taylori)
Scotinomys
(Brown mice)
  • Alston's brown mouse (S. teguina)
  • Chiriqui brown mouse (S. xerampelinus)
Neotomini
Neotoma
(Pack rats)
  • Subgenus Neotoma: White-throated woodrat (N. albigula)
  • Tamaulipan woodrat (N. angustapalata)
  • Bryant's woodrat (N. bryanti)
  • Nicaraguan woodrat (N. chrysomelas)
  • Arizona woodrat (N. devia)
  • Eastern woodrat (N. floridana )
  • Goldman's woodrat (N. goldmani)
  • Angel de la Guarda woodrat (N. insularis)
  • Desert woodrat (N. lepida )
  • White-toothed woodrat (N. leucodon)
  • Big-eared woodrat (N. macrotis)
  • Allegheny woodrat (N. magister)
  • Mexican woodrat (N. mexicana)
  • Southern Plains woodrat (N. micropus)
  • Nelson's woodrat (N. nelsoni)
  • Bolaños woodrat(N. palatina)
  • Stephens' woodrat (N. stephensi)
  • Subgenus Teanopus: Sonoran woodrat (N. phenax)
  • Subgenus Teonoma: Bushy-tailed woodrat (N. cinerea)
  • Dusky-footed woodrat (N. fuscipes)
Xenomys
  • Magdalena rat (X. nelsoni)
Hodomys
  • Allen's woodrat (H. alleni)
Nelsonia
(Diminutive woodrats)
  • Goldman's diminutive woodrat (N. goldmani)
  • Diminutive woodrat (N. neotomodon)
Ochrotomyini
Ochrotomys
  • Golden mouse (O. nuttalli)
Reithrodontomyini
Peromyscus
(Deer mice)
  • californicus group: California mouse (P. californicus)
  • eremicus group: Cactus mouse (P. eremicus)
  • Burt's deer mouse (P. caniceps)
  • Dickey's deer mouse (P. dickeyi)
  • Eva's desert mouse (P. eva)
  • Northern Baja deer mouse (P. fraterculus)
  • Angel Island mouse (P. guardia)
  • San Lorenzo mouse (P. interparietalis)
  • Mesquite mouse (P. merriami)
  • False canyon mouse (P. pseudocrinitus)
  • hooperi group: Hooper's mouse (P. hooperi)
  • crinitus group: Canyon mouse (P. crinitus)
  • maniculatus group: Deer mouse (P. maniculatus)
  • Northwestern deer mouse (P. keeni)
  • Black-eared mouse (P. melanotis)
  • Oldfield mouse (P. polionotus)
  • Santa Cruz mouse (P. sejugis)
  • Slevin's mouse (P. slevini)
  • leucopus group: White-footed mouse (P. leucopus)
  • Cotton mouse (P. gossypinus)
  • aztecus group: Aztec mouse (P. aztecus)
  • Gleaning mouse (P. spicilegus)
  • Winkelmann's mouse (P. winkelmanni)
  • boylii group: Brush mouse (P. boylii)
  • Texas mouse (P. attwateri)
  • Nimble-footed mouse (P. levipes)
  • Tres Marias Island mouse (P. madrensis)
  • White-ankled mouse (P. pectoralis)
  • Chihuahuan mouse (P. polius)
  • Schmidly's deer mouse (P. schmidlyi)
  • Nayarit mouse (P. simulus)
  • San Esteban Island mouse (P. stephani)
  • truei group: Pinyon mouse (P. truei)
  • Perote mouse (P. bullatus)
  • Zacatecan deer mouse (P. difficilis)
  • Osgood's mouse (P. gratus)
  • Northern rock mouse (P. nasutus)
  • melanophrys group: Plateau mouse (P. melanophrys)
  • Puebla deer mouse (P. mekisturus)
  • Marsh mouse (P. perfulvus)
  • furvus group: Blackish deer mouse (P. furvus)
  • Maya mouse (P. mayensis)
  • El Carrizo deer mouse (P. ochraventer)
  • megalops group: Brown deer mouse (P. megalops)
  • Zempoaltepec (P. melanocarpus)
  • Black-tailed mouse (P. melanurus)
  • mexicanus group: Mexican deer mouse (P. mexicanus)
  • Big deer mouse (P. grandis)
  • Guatemalan deer mouse (P. guatemalensis)
  • Naked-eared deer mouse (P. gymnotis)
  • Stirton's deer mouse (P. stirtoni)
  • Yucatan deer mouse (P. yucatanicus)
  • Chiapan deer mouse (P. zarhynchus)
Reithrodontomys
(New World
harvest mice)
  • Guerrero harvest mouse (R. bakeri)
  • Short-nosed harvest mouse (R. brevirostris)
  • Sonoran harvest mouse (R. burti)
  • Volcano harvest mouse (R. chrysopsis)
  • Chiriqui harvest mouse (R. creper)
  • Darien harvest mouse (R. darienensis)
  • Fulvous harvest mouse (R. fulvescens)
  • Slender harvest mouse (R. gracilis)
  • Hairy harvest mouse (R. hirsutus)
  • Eastern harvest mouse (R. humulis)
  • Western harvest mouse (R. megalotis)
  • Mexican harvest mouse (R. mexicanus)
  • Small-toothed harvest mouse (R. microdon)
  • Plains harvest mouse (R. montanus)
  • Small harvest mouse (R. musseri)
  • Nicaraguan harvest mouse (R. paradoxus)
  • Salt marsh harvest mouse (R. raviventris)
  • Rodriguez's harvest mouse (R. rodriguezi)
  • Cozumel harvest mouse (R. spectabilis)
  • Sumichrast's harvest mouse (R. sumichrasti)
  • Narrow-nosed harvest mouse (R. tenuirostris)
  • Zacatecas harvest mouse (R. zacatecae)
Onychomys
(Grasshopper mice)
  • Mearns's grasshopper mouse (O. arenicola)
  • Northern grasshopper mouse (O. leucogaster)
  • Southern grasshopper mouse (O. torridus)
Neotomodon
  • Mexican volcano mouse (N. alstoni)
Podomys
  • Florida mouse (P. floridanus)
Isthmomys
(Isthmus rats)
  • Yellow isthmus rat (I. flavidus)
  • Mount Pirri isthmus rat (I. pirrensis)
Megadontomys
(Giant deer mice)
  • Oaxaca giant deer mouse (M. cryophilus)
  • Nelson's giant deer mouse (M. nelsoni)
  • Thomas's giant deer mouse (M. thomasi)
Habromys
(Deer mice)
  • Chinanteco deer mouse (H. chinanteco)
  • Delicate deer mouse (H. delicatulus)
  • Ixtlán deer mouse (H. ixtlani)
  • Zempoaltepec deer mouse (H. lepturus)
  • Crested-tailed deer mouse (H. lophurus)
  • Schmidly's deer mouse (H. schmidlyi)
  • Jico deer mouse (H. simulatus)
Osgoodomys
  • Michoacan deer mouse (O. banderanus)
Taxon identifiers
Peromyscus pectoralis