Salvin's spiny pocket mouse

Salvin's Spiny Pocket Mouse (Liomys Salvini)
Conservation status

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Heteromyidae
Genus: Liomys
Species: L. salvini
Binomial name
Liomys salvini
(Thomas, 1893)

Salvin's spiny pocket mouse (Liomys salvini) is a small to medium-sized rodent. L. salvini is a species of rodent in the family Heteromyidae.

Physical characteristics

Like other pocket mice, it has external, fur-lined pouches in its cheeks for carrying seeds and other materials. Although the darkness of the fur can vary quite a bit geographically, it is always grey or grey-brown dorsally with cream-colored underparts, forelegs, and feet. The darker dorsal fur is meshed with dark spiny hairs and lighter, cream-colored hairs. The tail is approximately equal to the body length, bi-color, and nearly hairless (although it may have a short terminal hair cluster). In regions of overlap, L. salvini can be distinguished from other species by the lack of orange side stripes and a lack of dark forelimbs.[2]

Average size

Distribution

It is the only species of the genus that occupies much of the pacific coast and adjacent mountains of Central America and the drier parts of North America. It is also found in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, and Nicaragua[3] and is usually found from the lowlands to elevations of 1500 meters.[4]

Habitat

Liomys salvini reaches its greatest abundance in a geographic range that is mostly semiarid tropical lowland forest. It is a nocturnal species that lives in a variety of niches, including underground and in bushes, trees, rock clusters, and log shelters,[2] but is most commonly found in brushy, weedy fields that provide shelter to its burrows and protection from predation.

Diet

Although Liomys salvini eat some insects, they are mainly seed-eaters. In Costa Rica, L. salvini favors the seeds of the buttercup tree during the dry season. During other seasons these mice eat the seeds of many other species, including plants, corn, wheat, beans, castor beans, and the poisonous seeds of the guanacaste tree. Because they are not often satisfied with a single meal, they can be found with cheek pouches full of seeds that are stowed away in their burrows and used when food resources are scarce. Because they are nocturnal, they often locate seeds by sense of odor. They have also reportedly been known to locate seeds that are buried in dung.[5]

Reproduction

L. salvini reproduces for 6 months out of the year (JanuaryJune) with an average of 2 litters annually and 4 offspring per litter.[4] During this time female L. salvini undergo a remarkable increase in weight. Because they are a precocial species, their life spans are short lived, resulting in a high turnover rate in the population. Most individuals will survive for only one year; a few individuals will live to be 15 to 18 months old.

Behavior

Liomys salvini is less social than other species of pocket mice. In dry forest systems, home ranges of .20 ha overlap, but intolerance and aggression is shown to members of the same sex. This results in the clumping of female home ranges around male home ranges. Larger individuals are dominant over smaller individuals, and adults are dominant over the young of the year. Aggression does not vary according to season.[5][6][7]

References

  1. Vázquez, E., Emmons, L., Reid, F. & Cuarón, A.D. (2008). Liomys salvini. In: IUCN 2008. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved 16 January 2009.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Goldman A., Edward. 1911. Revision of the Spiney Pocket Mice
  3. Carter, H., Genoways, H. "Mammalian Species" The American Society of Mammalogist, 1978. No 84, pp 1-5, 6 figs.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Reid, F. 1997. A Field Guide to the Mammals of Central America and Southeast Mexico. New York: Oxford University Press.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Flemming, T. 1983. Liomys salvini (Raton Semiespinosa, Guardafiesta, Spiny Pocket Mouse). Pp. 475-477 in D Janzen, ed. Costa Rican Natural History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  6. Flemming, T. 1974. Social organization in two species of Costa Rican Heteromyid rodents. Journal of Mammalogy, 55: 543-561.
  7. Flemming, T. 1974. The population ecology of two species of Costa Rican heteromyid rodents. Ecology, 55: 493-510.