Muridae
Author
Don E. Wilson
Author
Russell A. Mittermeier
Author
Thomas E. Lacher, Jr
text
2017
2017-11-30
Lynx Edicions
Barcelona
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 7 Rodents II
536
884
book chapter
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6887260
a016af63-6437-427b-80b7-22bc9a002e20
978-84-16728-04-6
6887260
346.
Silky Mouse
Pseudomys apodemoides
French:
Pseudomys soyeux
/
German:
Seidige Australienmaus
/
Spanish:
Raton sedoso
Other common names:
Silky Pseudomys
Taxonomy.
Pseudomys (gyomys) [sic] apodemoides Finlayson, 1932
,
Coombe, South Australia, Australia.
Placed earlier in genus
Gyomys
, P. apode- moides was returned to
Pseudomys
by G. H. H. Tate in 1951 and subsequent authors. It was synonymized with
P. albocinereus
by W. D. L. Ride in 1970 but, as a result of genetic analyses, P. R. Baverstock and colleagues in 1977 resurrected it, F. Ford in 2006 and B. Breed and Ford in 2007 plac-
ing
P. apodemoides
in same clade as
P. albocinereus
and
P. fumeus
. Monotypic.
Distribution.
SE South Australia and W Victoria, in SE Australia.
Descriptive notes.
Head—body 65-95 mm, tail 90-115 mm, ear 16-19 mm, hindfoot 20-23 mm; weight 16-22 g. Dorsal pelage of this mouse-like rodent is silver gray with some light brown hairs, and ventral surface is white. Tail is longer than head-body length. Some scattered white hairs can be seen on the pink naked tail.
Habitat.
Semi-desert sandy regions with
Banksia
ornata (
Proteaceae
) shrubs and postfire regrowth vegetation.
Food and Feeding.
The Silky Mouse is primarily granivorous, but sometimes omnivorous, the diet including flowers, pollen, fungi, and insects and other arthropods.
Breeding.
Most breeding occurs in spring and early summer, but these mice reproduce at any time of year, and it has been observed that breeding coincides with an abundance of flowers, fungi, and/or seeds. Gestation lasts 34-38 days, females giving birth to litter of 2-5 (average 3—4) young; under good conditions females may produce 2-3 litters in same season. Young are weaned after 40 days and reach sexual maturity after three months.
Activity patterns.
The Silky Mouse is a terrestrial, burrowing rodent. It digs burrows in deep sandy soils, often beneath B. ornata scrubs; these are characterized by a series of steep shafts connected by horizontal tunnels up to 1-5 m in depth. A spherical nest chamber is lined with shredded bark and leaves.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
Silky Mice may colonize new patches inregenerating habitats after fires. In captivity, females nest communally in groups of 2-3 in a burrow system. Males live alone and visit females at different times. Young mature females disperse to new burrows and establish new groups.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. Populations are highly dependent on active fire management which provides regenerating heathland at different stages. There are
no major
threats to this species, which is found in several protected areas.
On following pages: 347. Plains Mouse (
Pseudomys australis
); 348. Bolam'’s Mouse (
Pseudomys bolami
); 349.
Kakadu Pebble Mouse (
Pseudomys calabyi
); 350. Western Pebble Mouse (
Pseudomys chapmani
); 351. Desert Mouse
(
Pseudomys desertor
); 352. Shark Bay Mouse (
Pseudomys
field); 353. Australian Smoky Mouse (
Pseudomys fumeus
); 354. Eastern Chestnut Mouse (
Pseudomys gracilicaudatus
); 355. Sandy Inland Mouse (
Pseudomys hermannsburgensis
); 356. Long-tailed Mouse (
Pseudomys higginsi
); 357. Central Pebble Mouse (
Pseudomys
johnson
); 358. Western Chestnut Mouse (
Pseudomys nanus
); 359. New Holland Mouse (
Pseudomys
novaehollandiae
); 360. Western Mouse (
Pseudomys occidentalis
); 361. Hastings River Mouse (
Pseudomys oralis
); 362. Eastern Pebble Mouse (
Pseudomys patrius
); 363. Heath Mouse (
Pseudomys
shortridgel); 364. Common Australian Rock Rat (
Zyzomys argurus
); 365. Arnhem Land Rock Rat (
Zyzomys maini
); 366. Carpentarian Rock Rat (
Zyzomys
palatalis
); 367. Central Australian Rock Rat (
Zyzomys pedunculatus
); 368. Kimberley Rock Rat (
Zyzomys
woodward
); 369. Malayan Tree Rat (
Pithecheir parvus
); 370. Red Tree Rat (
Pithecheir melanurus
); 371. Bornean Tree Rat (
Pithecheirops otion
); 372. Cutch Rat (
Cremnomys cutchicus
); 373.
Elvira Rat
(
Cremnomys elvira
); 374. Crump's Rat (
Diomys crumpi
); 375. White-tailed Wood Rat (
Madromys blanfordi
); 376. Sand-colored Soft-furred Rat (
Millardia
gleadowi
); 377.
Kondana
Soft-furred Rat (
Millardia kondana
); 378. Common Soft-furred Rat (
Millardia
meltada); 379. Burmese Soft-furred Rat (
Millardia kathleenae
).
Bibliography.
Baverstock et al. (1977), Breed & Ford (2007), Cockburn (1981), Cockburn & Menkhorst (2008), Ford (2006), Menkhorst et al. (2008), Ride (1970), Tate (1951), Watts & Aslin (1981).