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Pencil-tailed tree mouse

Genus of rodents From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pencil-tailed tree mouse

Chiropodomys (or pencil-tailed tree mice) is a genus of Old World rats and mice native to Southeast Asia and northeast India.[2] They are tree-dwelling, very small mice, mostly found in tropical rainforest. In total six extant species have been identified, but only one of these, Chiropodomys gliroides, is common and widely distributed, and has been extensively studied.

Quick Facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Pencil-tailed tree mice
Temporal range: Late Pliocene to Holocene, 2.588–0 Ma[1]
Indomalayan pencil-tailed tree mouse in Thailand
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Muridae
Tribe: Hydromyini
Genus: Chiropodomys
Peters, 1868
Type species
Mus gliroides
Species

Chiropodomys calamianensis
Chiropodomys gliroides
Chiropodomys karlkoopmani
Chiropodomys major
Chiropodomys muroides
Chiropodomys pusillusChiropodomys maximus
Chiropodomys primitivus

Synonyms

Insulaemus Taylor, 1934

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Species

Genus Chiropodomys — pencil-tailed tree mice:[2]

Description

Species of Chiropodomys have a body length of 7 to 12 cm, plus a tail of 9 to 17 cm. They are generally gray or brown on the back and white underneath. The tail is only sparsely covered with hair, but has somewhat more at the end, giving the appearance of a pencil, thus the genus name.

Chiropodomys gliroides is particularly common in bamboo forest. It is active at night, sleeps during the day in a nest in the bamboo, padded with leaves. It eats exclusively plants.

Previously, it was thought that Chiropodomys were closely related to the genus Hapalomys (marmoset rats), with both forming a clade with Micromys and Vandeleuria; however, more recent phylogenetic studies support them being closely allied with the Australasian mice and rats of the tribe Hydromyini, either as a distinct tribe of their own or as a group within Hydromyini.[3][4]

References

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