Cricetidae
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
204
535
book chapter
80832
10.5281/zenodo.6707142
ab66b2b7-9544-4411-bf61-5bc3651d7bca
978-84-16728-04-6
6707142
666.
Western Puna Mouse
Punomys lemminus
French:
Punomys lemming
/
German:
Westliche Puna-Maus
/
Spanish:
Raton de puna occidental
Other common names:
Puna Mouse
Taxonomy.
Punomys lemminus Osgood, 1943
,
San Antonio de Esquilache, altitude
15,000 feet
(=
4572 m
),
Puno
,
Peru
.
Punomys
lemminusis type species of the genus. Monotypic.
Distribution.
High W Andean slope localities in S Peru (Puno, Arequipa, Moquegua, and Tacna regions).
Descriptive notes.
Head-body 139-142 mm, tail 46-61 mm, ear 23-25 mm, hindfoot 28-29 mm. No specific data are available for body weight. The Western
Puna Mouse
is medium-sized, stoutly built, and vole-like, with long and lax fur, short tail, and relatively small ears. Pelage is without much glossiness and is very long, very soft, and, although dense,still rather loose. Hairs on back are c.18 mm long. Soles of hindfeet are hairy for proximal one-quarter of their lengths, toes are of medium length, and claws are uniformly small. Feet are white; tail sharply bicolored, narrowly dusky above and white below. Females have eight mammae, paired in pectoral, axillary, abdominal, and inguinal positions. Two recognized species of
Punomys
are very similar in external morphology. Upperparts are pale yellow-gray, strongly contrasting with underparts; tail is shorter than 30% of head-body length.
Habitat.
Puna
or treeless zone of the higher parts of Peru. The Western
Puna Mouse
was always encountered among rocks in barren, broken areas near yareta (
Azorella
compacta,
Apiaceae
) and clumps ofits favorite food plants, shrub
Senecio
adenophylloides and ground rosette herb
Werneria
digitata (both
Asteraceae
), and notfar from water.
Food and Feeding.
Western
Puna Mice
fed mostly or entirely on dwarf, fleshy-leaved S. adenophylloides shrub or low rosette herb W. digitata growing in most places. They cut twigs of both plants into lengths as long as 30 cm and stored them under rocks in caches of several dozen twigs. These materials were chewed only slightly when eaten.
Breeding.
The Western
Puna Mouse
breeds during wet season (November-April); a pregnant female with two embryos was caught in early November and a second female was caught in late January with two embryos; three females caught in September and October had no embryos, and no juveniles were collected during those months.
Activity patterns.
The Western
Puna Mouse
is terrestrial. It has been easily observed during the
day
feeding or scurrying from one rock shelter to another.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
The Western
Puna Mouse
was neither scarce nor shy at the Peruvian locality of Caccachara.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Vulnerable on The IUCN Red List. The Western
Puna Mouse
has a very restricted area of occupancy and is known from less than five locations.
Bibliography.
Nowak (1991), Osgood (1943b), Pacheco & Patton (1995), Patterson & Zeballos (2008b), Patton (2015a), Pearson (1951a, 1957), Salazar-Bravo, Miralles-Salazar et al. (2011), Salazar-Bravo, Pardinas et al. (2016).