Fossil history of Perognathinae begins in the Miocene. Possible close remains have been found in late Pleistocene deposits from Cueva Quebrada, Val Verdo Co., Texas. In central Coahuila recent remains have been found in a cave.
An interesting fact about C. nelsoni is that the hind feet are 30% of the length of the head and body.
Communication in this species has not been reported on in the literature. However, as mammals, these creatures are likely to use some combination of visual, accoustic, tactile, and chemical communication.
Communication Channels: visual ; tactile ; acoustic ; chemical
Perception Channels: visual ; tactile ; acoustic ; chemical
Chaetodipus nelsoni is considered to be a good indicator species for Chihuahuan desert grasslands. Populations are abundant within the home range and there are no current conservation issues concerning C. nelsoni. Chaetodipus nelsoni is listed by CITES nor by IUCN. This species is often the most abundant desert mammal within its range, especially in late August and September.
US Federal List: no special status
CITES: no special status
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: least concern
Nelson's pocket mouse may be considered a house pest since it prefers to live near old stone buildings, this may be a problem in occupied buildings. Also, there is potential for a pest status since it is a granivore, it may get into feed storage areas.
Negative Impacts: crop pest; household pest
Nelson's pocket mouse's seed dispersal may distribute native vegetation leading to more natural habitat. Also, the seed dispersal may lead to more vegetation for grazing livestock.
Nelson's pocket mice play a role in seed dispersal of desert vegetation. They act as a food base for owls and snakes. The burrowing behavior of this species may help aerate soils.
Ecosystem Impact: disperses seeds; creates habitat; soil aeration
Nelson's pocket mice feed almost entirely on seeds of various desert shrubs and grasses. They also eat insects and other parts of plants. Food is transported in external cheek pouches and stored in chambers of the burrow system.
Animal Foods: insects
Plant Foods: leaves; roots and tubers; wood, bark, or stems; seeds, grains, and nuts
Foraging Behavior: stores or caches food
Primary Diet: herbivore (Granivore )
Chaetodipus nelsoni is found in the Chihuahuan Desert of the Mexican Plateau from southeastern New Mexico, to western Texas, to Jalisco Mexico.
Biogeographic Regions: nearctic (Native )
Chaetodipus nelsoni occupies upper and lower Sonoran life zones at 365 to 2,025 m elevation. Habitat between the desert shrub vegetation and pine-oak-juniper woodland zones is preferred. In Durango, the Rio Nazas canyon is a barrier for some species of small mammals, but does not seem to be for C. nelsoni. Steep rocky slopes, sandy flats, and around rock piles and old stone buildings are common habitats for this species. Chaetodipus nelsoni seems to avoid sandy washes.
Range elevation: 365 to 2025 m.
Habitat Regions: temperate ; terrestrial
Terrestrial Biomes: desert or dune ; chaparral
In the Big Bend region of Texas, 25% of subadults and 12% of adults survive from July to July. Based on trapping studies, individual were able to survive in the wild for more than 30 months, although the average life span was obviously less than that. Annual turnover in the population is about 86%.
Range lifespan
Status: wild: 20 to 30 months.
Chaetodipus nelsoni is a long and slim pocket mouse of medium-size. The species is known for having a long crescent tail, external fur-lined cheek pouches, and dark spines on the rump. Spines can best be seen by pressing down the rump skin forcing the spines to stick up.
The ears of Nelson's pocket mice are small and oval. The tail is longer than the head and body. It is sparsely haired at the base, and the terminal half is crested, penicillate, and darker dorsally than ventrally. The front feet are smaller than the hind feet, and all soles are dark.
The pelage is brown on the back and sides, whitish on the belly, and long on the middorsal region. Summer pelage is coarse and dorsally yellowish-brown from a combination of coarse buffy and black hairs. Winter pelage is finer and grayish black. In Texas, pelage is palest in April and increasingly gets darker until September.
Males of this species are slightly larger than females. There is also significant geographic variation in size in this species. In general, animals in the north are larger than those in the south. In the southern portion of the species range, males average 14.7 g (12.0 to 16.5 g) and females 13.8 g (12.5 to 15.5g). In the northern portion of the range, males average 18.5 g (17.0 to 20.0g) and females 17.0 g (15.0 to 18.0). In Texas, males average 16.1 g and females 14.4 g (no ranges available).
Total length of males and females averages about 180 mm; hind foot length is 21 mm; ear length 8 mm.
Chaetodipus nelsoni is sympatric and parapatric with other Chaetodipus species. Chaetodipus nelsoni is generally larger in size, and has more noticeable rump spines than other members of the genus. Also, the distal ends of the rump spins are dark ventrally and pale dorsally. There are no elongate rump hairs, and soles of hind feet are dark.
Characteristic rump spines may not be prominent in young and molting individuals. Young C. nelsoni hind feet have white subauricular spots and dusky plantar surfaces compared to other species.
Range mass: 12.0 to 16.5 g.
Range length: 180 to 181 mm.
Other Physical Features: endothermic ; heterothermic ; bilateral symmetry
Sexual Dimorphism: male larger
The main predators of C. nelsoni are the western diamondback rattlesnakes, great horned owls, and barn owls. Ectoparasites include chiggers.
In Durango, dark volacnic soils around the Guadiana lava fields are common. The C. nelsoni here has a distinctly blackish back and buffy colored bellies. Individuals from center of lava fields are darker than those from the outer edges of the lava fields. Individuals in adjacent pale soils are lighter in color. These differences in coloration with habitat are apparently related to decreasing the visibility of these mice.
Known Predators:
Anti-predator Adaptations: cryptic
Chaetodipus nelsoni breeds seasonally from February to August. Information on the specifics of the mating system of this species is not available.
The length of the breeding season is approximately 5 months. In Texas, breeding begins in February and the peak of pregnancy is reached in March. Average litter size is about three, with a range of one to five young. This species has a gestation period of 30 days. Young grow rapidly and leave the nest in approximately four weeks. The annual turnover in the population is about 86%.
Nests are located in the burrows, and consist of shredded grasses.
Members of this species appear to reach reproductive maturity quite young. Females still having subadult pelage were often found to be pregnant or to have placental scars, indicating that they had previously had a litter. Males reach sexual maturity before they reach adult size.
Breeding interval: It is likely that these animals can produce a litter approximately once per month during the breeding season.
Breeding season: The breeding season spans from Februaryto August, with a peak in March
Range number of offspring: 2 to 4.
Average number of offspring: 3.2.
Average gestation period: 1 months.
Average weaning age: 4 weeks.
Key Reproductive Features: iteroparous ; seasonal breeding ; gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual ; fertilization ; viviparous
Average gestation period: 30 days.
Average number of offspring: 3.68.
Details on the parental behavior of this species have not been recorded. As in all mammals, the female cares for the young, providing them with milk, grooming, and protection. The young are probably altricial, and they do not leave the nest for about four weeks. Male parental behavior has not been reported in these animals.
Parental Investment: no parental involvement; altricial ; pre-fertilization (Protecting: Female); pre-hatching/birth (Provisioning: Female, Protecting: Female); pre-weaning/fledging (Provisioning: Female, Protecting: Female); pre-independence (Protecting: Female)
Nelson's pocket mouse (Chaetodipus nelsoni) is a species of rodent in the family Heteromyidae.[2] It is found in Mexico and in New Mexico and Texas in United States.[1] It is named in honor of the American naturalist Edward William Nelson.
Nelson's pocket mouse is a medium-sized, long-tailed pocket mouse growing to a total length of 180 mm (7.1 in) including a tail of 102 mm (4.0 in). The external cheek pouches are lined with fur, the ears are small and oval in shape and the body is slender. The front feet are small while the hind feet are larger, and the fur on the rump contains numerous dark-tipped, grooved spines. The color of the back and sides is brown, the hairs having a dark gray base, a grayish-fawn centre and black tips. There is a pale area round the eye. The underparts are whitish with a narrow fawn line separating the color zones. The tail has sparse hairs on the front half and a crest of hairs on the back half which has a tufted tip.[3] It closely resembles the lined pocket mouse (Chaetodipus lineatus) but that species lacks the stiff spines on the rump.[4]
Nelson's pocket mouse is endemic to western Texas, south eastern New Mexico and central and northern Mexico. It is present in the Lower Sonoran life zone at altitudes up to about 2,025 m (6,644 ft), the actual maximum limit being the lower boundary of the pine-oak-juniper woodlands. Its typical habitat is desert with sparse, scrubby vegetation.[3] It is found on rocky slopes where cactus, creosote bush. desert spoon and Agave lechuguilla grow,[1] on sandy flat areas, in rock piles, in old walls, around old buildings and in bare overgrazed pasture. It is the most common pocket mouse in most of its range. There are two subspecies, C. n. canescens from the northern half of the range and C. n. nelsoni from the southern half.[3]
Nelson's pocket mouse is a nocturnal species and does not hibernate in winter. It excavates a shallow burrow with several openings in which it spends the day and rears its young. After nightfall it emerges to forage, tending to move from the base of one plant to another, seldom staying long on open ground and running (rather than hopping) only when startled. It feeds mostly on seeds which it gathers and packs into its cheek pouches. It also consumes other parts of plants and may also eat insects. It breeds in spring and summer when litters of about three young are born after a gestation period of about thirty days.[3]
The population of Nelson's pocket mouse varies with the seasons. It is quite abundant in late summer but numbers have dwindled by the following spring as only about 14% of individuals live to be one year old. There are several national parks or other protected areas within its distribution range and no particular threats have been identified, so the IUCN has assessed this pocket mouse as being of "least concern".[1]
Nelson's pocket mouse (Chaetodipus nelsoni) is a species of rodent in the family Heteromyidae. It is found in Mexico and in New Mexico and Texas in United States. It is named in honor of the American naturalist Edward William Nelson.