THE MAMMALS
SHORT-TAILED MEADOW MOUSE. Lagurus curtatus (Cope)
Field characters.Body
size about twice that of House Mouse; tail very short, less than 1/4
head and body; pelage dense and lax. Head and body 4-1/4 inches (110
mm.), tail 1 inch (25 mm.), hind foot 3/4 inch (19 mm.), ear from crown
about 3/8 inch (11 mm.); weight slightly over 1 ounce (32.5 grams) [one
individual only]. Pelage light ashy gray above; paler, almost white, on
under surface.
Occurrence.Recorded only
at Mono Mills, east of Sierra Nevada. Lives on and in ground beneath
sagebrush.
The Short-tailed Meadow Mouse was collected in only
one locality, the extreme eastern end of the Yosemite section, at Mono
Mills, south of Mono Lake. Two female individuals, an adult and a
half-grown youngster, presumably representatives of one family, were
obtained, June 7 and 10, 1916. Both were taken in one location, under
sagebrush on the edge of a dry gully. The stomach contents of the adult
consisted solely of chewed-up leaves of sagebrush. There was neither
water nor meadow nor grassland anywhere near the place where the two
animals were caught. This species appears not to require such
surroundings, but to be adapted to life in an arid situation. It is
distributed throughout a considerable portion of the Great Basin
sagebrush country.
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