Order Rodentia - Family Geomyidae
Author
James L. Patton
text
1993
Smithsonian Institution Press
Washington and London
Editor
Don E. Wilson
Editor
DeeAnn M. Reeder
Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition)
469
476
book chapter
193478
10.5281/zenodo.7353077
cfa9a295-fcad-4633-a3d9-26b72bae5d1a
1-56098-217-9
7353077
Thomomys talpoides
(Richardson, 1828)
.
Zool. J., 3:518
.
TYPE LOCALITY:
Restricted to
Canada
,
Saskatchewan
, North Saskatchewan River, Carlton House near Fort Carlton by Bailey (1915:97)
.
DISTRIBUTION: S
British Columbia
to C
Alberta
and SW
Manitoba
(
Canada
), south to C
South Dakota
and N
New Mexico
, N
Arizona
, N
Nevada
, and NE
California
(
USA
).
SYNONYMS:
aequalidens
Dalquest,
andersoni
Goldman,
attenuatus
Hall and Montague,
badius
Goldman
,
borealis
Richardson,
bridgeri
Merriam,
bullatus
Bailey
,
caryi
Bailey,
cheyennensis
Swenk,
cognatus
Johnstone,
columbianus
Bailey,
devexus
Hall and Dalquest,
douglasii
Richardson,
duranti Kelson, falcifer
Grinnell,
fisheri
Merriam,
fossor
J. A. Allen,
fuscus
Merriam,
gracilis
Durrant,
immunis
Hall and Dalquest,
incensus
Goldman,
kaibabensis
Goldman,
kelloggi
Goldman,
levis
Goldman,
limosus
Merriam,
loringi
Bailey,
macrotis
Miller,
médius
Goldman,
meritus
Hall,
monoensis
Huey,
moorei
Goldman,
myops
Merriam,
nebulosus
Bailey,
ocius
Merriam,
oquirrhensis
Durrant,
parowanensis
Goldman,
pierreicolus
Swenk,
pryori
Bailey,
quadratus
Merriam,
ravus
Durrant,
relicinus
Goldman,
retrorsus
Hall,
rostralis
Hall and Montague,
rufescens
Wied-Neuwied
,
saturatus
Bailey,
segregatus
Johnstone,
shawi
Taylor,
taylori
Hooper,
tenellus
Goldman
,
trivialis
Goldman,
uinta
Merriam,
unisulcatus
Gray,
wallowa
Hall and Orr,
wasatchensis
Durrant,
whitmani
Drake and Booth,
yakimensis
Hall and Dalquest.
COMMENTS: Formerly included
idahoensis
and
clusius
; see
Thaeler (1972)
and
Thaeler and Hinesley (1979)
. Partial revision by Bailey (1915) and
Thaeler (1985)
. The considerable degree of chromosomal differentiation among geographic representatives of this form (
Thaeler, 1985
) suggests that more than one biological species is currently included under the name
talpoides
.