Smooth-toothed pocket gopher
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Smooth-toothed pocket gophers Fossil range: Early Pliocene - Recent |
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Thomomys talpoides |
The smooth-toothed pocket gophers, genus Thomomys, are so called because they among the only pocket gophers without grooves on their incisors. They are also called the Western pocket gophers because they are distributed in western North America. They are considered distinct enough from other pocket gophers to be recognized as a separate subfamily or tribe.
[edit] Natural history
Thomomys is highly fossorial. They rely on their incisors for digging more than most other gophers. They feed on plants, largely from beneath the surface, but they do come above ground at night. Roots, stems, leaves, and bulbs are eaten. When not directly in an agricultural field they are a benefit to humans by enriching soil and preventing runoff.
[edit] Species
Over a hundred subspecies have been described, but not all are currently recognized by modern authorities. Like many fossorial rodents, Thomomys shows a great deal of allopatric variation.
- Thomomys
- Subgenus Megascapheus
- Thomomys clusius - Wyoming Pocket Gopher
- Thomomys idahoensis - Idaho Pocket Gopher
- Thomomys mazama - Western Pocket Gopher (including the extinct subspecies Thomomys mazama tacomensis - Tacoma Pocket Gopher)
- Thomomys monticola - Mountain Pocket Gopher
- Thomomys talpoides - Northern Pocket Gopher
- Subgenus Thomomys
- Thomomys bottae - Botta's Pocket Gopher
- Thomomys bulbivorus - Camas Pocket Gopher
- Thomomys townsendii - Townsend's Pocket Gopher
- Thomomys umbrinus - Southern Pocket Gopher
- Subgenus Megascapheus
[edit] References
- Nowak, R. M. 1999. Walker's Mammals of the World, Vol. 2. Johns Hopkins University Press, London.