Order Rodentia - Family Muridae
Author
Wilson, Don E.
Author
Reeder, DeeAnn
text
2005
The Johns Hopkins University Press
Baltimore
Mammal Species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3 rd Edition), Volume 2
1189
1531
book chapter
0-8018-8221-4
10.5281/zenodo.7316535
Meriones (Pallasiomys) unguiculatus
Milne-Edwards 1867
Meriones (Pallasiomys) unguiculatus
Milne-Edwards 1867
,
Ann. Sci. Nat. Zool., ser. 7, 5: 377
.
Type Locality:
China
, N
Shanxi
,
10 mi
(
16 km
) NE of Tschang-Kur, Eul-che san hao (= Ershi san hao).
Vernacular Names:
Mongolian Jird
.
Synonyms:
Meriones (Pallasiomys) chihfengensis
Mori 1939
;
Meriones (Pallasiomys) koslovi
(Satunin 1903)
;
Meriones (Pallasiomys) kurauchii
Mori 1930
;
Meriones (Pallasiomys) selenginus
Heptner 1949
.
Distribution:
Mongolia
, and adjacent regions of Siberia (Transbaikalia) and of
China
from E
Gansu
, N
Ningxia
, N
Shaanxi
, N
Shanxi
, and
Hebei
, through C and N
Nei Mongol
and
Liaoning
(see
Gromov and Erbajeva [1995]
,
Wang [2003]
, and
Zhang et al. [1997]
).
Conservation:
IUCN
– Lower Risk (lc).
Discussion:
Subgenus
Pallasiomys
. Reviewed by G. M. Allen (1940),
Corbet (1978
c
)
, and
Pavlinov et al. (1990)
. Corbet also included Xinjiang in the distribution of the species, but
Ma et al. (1987)
did not record it there.
Spicer and Schulte (1994)
documented cochlear structure at the cellular level. This study is an example of the many undertaken on this species, as this is the gerbil usually sold as pets and used in medical laboratories (Turton, 1984). Laboratory colonies were derived from twenty pairs captured in the Amur River basin in 1935, initially taken to
Japan
from which a colony was shipped to the
United States
, and from there others were distributed to Europe (Turton, 1984).
Yang et al. (1992)
described phallic morphology and contrasted it with that of
M. meridianus
.
Cao et al. (1995)
reported histology of the glans penis in
M. unguiculatus
and contrasted the pattern and morphology of its epidermal spines with
M. meridianus
and
Rhombomys opimus
, and commented upon the significance of the spines for discriminating among species. See
Gulotta (1971
, Mammalian Species, 3).