Biology:Pebble-mound mouse

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Pebble-mound mouse
Scientific classification
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Pebble-mound mice
Species
  • Pseudomys calabyi
  • Pseudomys chapmani
  • Pseudomys johnsoni
  • Pseudomys patrius

Pebble-mound mice are a group of rodents from Australia in the genus Pseudomys. They are small, brownish mice with medium to long, often pinkish brown tails. Unlike some other species of Pseudomys, they construct mounds of pebbles around their burrows, which play an important role in their social life.

There are four complementarily distributed species of pebble-mound mice in northern Australia. Their distribution appears to be limited by climatic conditions and the availability of pebbles and is thought to be the result of early Pleistocene dispersal across areas that are now inhospitable to pebble-mound mice. None of the four species is endangered.

Taxonomy

Pebble-mound mice also known as field mice comprise four species, which have complementary distributions across northern Australia.[1] The four species are as follows:

  • Western pebble-mound mouse (Pseudomys chapmani), Pilbara region (northern Western Australia), first described in 1980.[2]
  • Central pebble-mound mouse (Pseudomys johnsoni), from the Kimberley region of northernmost Western Australia through the central Northern Territory into westernmost Queensland,[1] first described in 1985. The western populations were previously thought to be a separate species, P. laborifex, described in 1986,[3] but the two are very closely related and are now considered to form a single species.[4] Kimberley Mouse (Pseudomys laborifex) is still considered to be a unique species by the Western Australian Museum as of March 2015.
  • Kakadu pebble-mound mouse (Pseudomys calabyi), northern Northern Territory, first described in 1987. It was first described as a subspecies of P. laborifex, but later recognized as a distinct species.[2]
  • Eastern pebble-mound mouse (Pseudomys patrius), eastern Queensland, first described in 1909. It was associated with the delicate mouse (Pseudomys delicatulus) for many decades and recognized as a pebble-mound mouse only in 1991.[5]

Pebble-mound mice are currently classified within the genus Pseudomys, a diverse group that includes morphologically and behaviorally disparate species.[6] The four pebble-mound mice form a cohesive group supported by behavioral, morphological, and molecular similarities and may deserve recognition as a separate genus.[7]

Description

Pebble-mound mice are small, mouse-like animals, about 12 to 15 grams (0.42 to 0.53 oz) in mass.[1] The upperparts are brownish, from grey-brown in some Kakadu pebble-mound mice to yellow-brown in the eastern pebble-mound mouse. The underparts are white and are sharply demarcated from the upperparts except in the eastern pebble-mound mouse. The tail ranges from about as long as the head and body in the Kakadu pebble-mound mouse to much longer in the western pebble-mound mouse. It is brown or grey above and white below in the central pebble-mound mouse and uniformly pinkish brown in the other species.[8] Pebble-mound mice are morphologically readily recognizable[9] and share a pseudogene that is absent in other groups. They are unique among murid rodents in exhibiting mutations in the ZPc gene that change the protein sequence.[10]

Distribution and habitat

Pebble-mound mice are found in areas with suitable amounts of available pebbles across tropical Australia.[1] They occur in areas with hot summers and mild winters, with precipitation mainly during the summer. They generally live in open, rocky areas with the vegetation dominated by Eucalyptus trees, but the distributions of the Kakadu and eastern pebble-mound mice also includes areas with denser vegetation and that of the western pebble-mound mouse is dominated by Acacia instead.[11] The distribution of pebble-mound mice is limited by suitable climate and by the availability of pebbles. Competition with other rodents is unlikely to play a major role.[12] The distribution of pebble-mound mice, especially the western pebble-mound mouse, is slowly shrinking because of expanding arid areas, leading to fragmentation of their habitat.[13]

Currently, the western and eastern pebble-mound mice are each separated from the central and Kakadu pebble-mound mice by large swathes of unsuitable, sandy habitat. These areas may have been bridges by rocky habitats until the early Pleistocene, suggesting that the current distribution of pebble-mound mice dates at least from that period.[14]

Behavior

Low vegetation on orange soil, with a mound of pebbles in the centre.
A mound of the western pebble-mound mouse, center foreground, among Triodia hummocks in the Pilbara region of Western Australia.

Pebble-mound mice are the only mammals to create mounds of small stones around their burrows. The mice carry the pebbles in their mouths in a radius of 3 to 5 m (9.8 to 16.4 ft) around the nest and move them into location with their forelimbs. Mounds may cover areas of up to 10 m2 (110 sq ft) and include up to 50 kg (110 lb) of pebbles, concentrated near burrow entrances, above burrows, and against trees. Because resources are sparse, home ranges tend to be relatively large and may be greater than 5 hectares (12 acres).

The function of the mounds may be one of protection against predators. Pebble mounds are at the center of social life at least in the two best-studied species, the western and eastern pebble-mound mice. In western pebble-mound mice, mounds have been found to contain up to 14 individuals, but social groups in eastern pebble-mound mice are smaller. Young animals are raised in the mounds. For unclear reasons, females visit and manipulate different mounds. Females only disperse to adjacent mounds, but males may move longer distances, though they remain in pebbly areas.[15] Male eastern pebble-mound mice may move up to 2 km (1.2 mi) in a single night.[16]

Conservation

The IUCN currently lists three of the four species as "Least Concern" because of their wide distribution and occurrence in protected areas. The population size of the central pebble-mound mouse appears to be stable[17] and while the western and eastern species are declining, their decline is unlikely to be fast enough to qualify for one of the IUCN's other categories.[18] The Kakadu pebble-mound mouse is listed as "Vulnerable" because of its small and declining distribution and because it does not occur in meaningful protected areas.[19]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Breed and Ford, 2007, p. 27
  2. 2.0 2.1 Musser and Carleton, 2005, p. 1455
  3. Musser and Carleton, 2005, p. 1458
  4. Ford and Johnson, 2006, p. 515; Breed and Ford, 2007, p. 27
  5. Breed and Ford, 2007, p. 27; Musser and Carleton, 2005, pp. 1459–1460
  6. Ford, 2006, pp. 119, 121
  7. Breed and Ford, 2007, p. 16; Ford, 2006, p. 131
  8. Menkhorst and Knight, 2001, pp. 186, 188, 190, 194
  9. Ford, 2006, p. 130
  10. Ford, 2006, p. 131
  11. Ford and Johnson, 2006, p. 517
  12. Ford and Johnson, 2007, pp. 518–520
  13. Ford and Johnson, 2007, p. 520
  14. Ford and Johnson, 2007, pp. 520–521
  15. Breed and Ford, 2007, pp. 134–135; Ford and Johnson, 2007, p. 515
  16. Breed and Ford, 2007, pp. 116–117
  17. Aplin and Woinarski, 2008
  18. Burnett and Aplin, 2008; Morris and Burbidge, 2008
  19. Woinarski, 2008

Literature cited

  • Aplin, K. and Woinarski, J. 2008. Pseudomys johnsoni. In IUCN. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Retrieved 10 January 2010.
  • Breed, B. and Ford, F. 2007. Native mice and rats. Australian natural history series. Collingwood, Victoria: CSIRO Publishing, 185 pp. ISBN:978-0-643-09166-5
  • Burnett, S. and Aplin, K. 2008. Pseudomys patrius. In IUCN. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Retrieved 10 January 2010.
  • Ford, F. 2006. A splitting headache: relationships and generic boundaries among Australian murids. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 89:117–138.
  • Ford, F. and Johnson, C. 2007. Eroding abodes and vanishing bridges: historical biogeography of the substrate specialist pebble-mound mice (Pseudomys). Journal of Biogeography 34:514–523.
  • Menkhorst, F. and Knight, P. 2001. A field guide to the mammals of Australia. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 269 pp. ISBN:0-19-550870-X
  • Morris, K. and Burbidge, A. 2008. Pseudomys chapmani. In IUCN. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Retrieved 10 January 2010.
  • Musser, G.G. and Carleton, M.D. 2005. Superfamily Muroidea. Pp. 894–1531 in Wilson, D.E. and Reeder, D.M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: a taxonomic and geographic reference. 3rd ed. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, ISBN:978-0-8018-8221-0
  • Woinarski, J. 2008. Pseudomys calabyi. In IUCN. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Retrieved 10 January 2010.