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Brief Summary

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The Southern birch mouse Sicista subtilis (Pallas, 1773) is one of the rarest and least known small mammal species in Europe. Populations of this endangered species have suffered increasing fragmentation and isolation over the recent past. The distribution of this unique rodent has become restricted to a small part of its historical range, and the remaining habitats are also highly fragmented and mostly located on suboptimal terrain. European occurrences of the species have been reported in Poland (Baraniak et al. 1998), Romania and Bulgaria (Ausländer and Hellwing 1957), Serbia (Tvrtković and Dzukić 1974, Ham et al. 1983), Russia (Sokolov et al. 1986, Kovalskaya and Federovich 1997, Kovalskaya et al. 2000), Ukraine (Selyunina 1994, Zagorodniuk 2005), Slovakia (Demeter and Obuch 2004) and Hungary (Cserkész and Gubányi 2008). According to G. Demeter (pers. comm.) who found the Slovakian specimens in 20-30 year old owl pellets, this species probably does not occur in this region any more. It is extinct in Austria (Pucek 1999). In the coastal region of Black Sea the population of this mouse is not decreasing (Selyunina 2003) which is unique in Europe. Its recent status is unknown in Romania, Bulgaria and Serbia.
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Southern birch mouse

provided by wikipedia EN

The southern birch mouse (Sicista subtilis) is a species of birch mouse in the family Sminthidae.[2] It is native to southern Russia, Kazakhstan, and potentially northern Mongolia and China.[3][4]

Taxonomy

The Hungarian birch mouse (S. trizona) and Nordmann's birch mouse (S. loriger) were previously thought to be subspecies representing isolated western populations of S. subtilis, but phylogenetic and anatomical evidence supports them being distinct species.[4][5]

A 2018 study detected a distinct, previously unknown genetic lineage of S. subtilis in the North Caucasus.[6]

Description

The most prominent characteristic of the southern birch mouse is the dark stripe down the center of the back, which is bordered by two narrow bright stripes on both sides. From head to rump it measures from 56 to 72 mm, with a tail from 110 to 130% of the main body length. The background fur color is gray-brown.

Ecology

The southern birch mouse is pronouncedly a steppe dweller. It makes a burrow in the summer and hibernates. It eats green plants and insects.[7]

References

  1. ^ Cserkész, T. & Kennerley, R. (2017). "Sicista subtilis (errata version published in 2018)". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T91934441A123795199.title has extraneous text
  2. ^ Holden, M.E.; Musser, G.G. (2005). "Family Dipodidae". In Wilson, D.E.; Reeder, D.M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 871–893. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  3. ^ "Explore the Database". www.mammaldiversity.org. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  4. ^ a b Trust), Rosalind Kennerley (Durrell Wildlife Conservation; Cserkész, Tamás (2017-05-15). "IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: Sicista subtilis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
  5. ^ Cserkész, Tamás; Rusin, Mikhail; Sramkó, Gábor (2016). "An integrative systematic revision of the European southern birch mice (Rodentia: Sminthidae, Sicista subtilis group)". Mammal Review. 46 (2): 114–130. doi:10.1111/mam.12058. ISSN 1365-2907.
  6. ^ Lebedev, Vladimir; Poplavskaya, Natalia; Bannikova, Anna; Rusin, Mikhail; Surov, Alexey; Kovalskaya, Yulia (2020-03-01). "Genetic variation in the Sicista subtilis (Pallas, 1773) species group (Rodentia, Sminthidae), as compared to karyotype differentiation". Mammalia. 84 (2): 185–194. doi:10.1515/mammalia-2018-0216. ISSN 1864-1547. S2CID 202024134.
  7. ^ Andrew T. Smith; Yan Xie (2008). A guide to the mammals of China. Princeton University Press. pp. 207–. ISBN 978-0-691-09984-2. Retrieved 4 January 2012.
  • (in German) Macdonald D. : Die Große Enzyklopädie der Säugetiere, Könemann Verlag in der Tandem Verlag GmbH, Königswinter, 2004.
  • (in German) Detlef Schilling u. a. : BLV Bestimmungsbuch Säugetiere, BLV Verlagsgesellschaft, 1983 ISBN 3-405-12846-3

This page is based on a translation of the corresponding article from the German Wikipedia.

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Southern birch mouse: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

The southern birch mouse (Sicista subtilis) is a species of birch mouse in the family Sminthidae. It is native to southern Russia, Kazakhstan, and potentially northern Mongolia and China.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
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wikipedia EN