Sicista betulina

Sicista betulina (Pallas 1779) [Mus] betulina Pallas 1779, Nova Spec. Quad. Glir. Ord.: 332. Type Locality: SW Siberia, birch plain on bank of Ishim River, and Barabinskaya Step. Vernacular Names: Northern Birch Mouse. Synonyms: Sicista montana Méhely 1913; Sicista norvegica Chaworth-Musters 1927; S...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wilson, Don E., Reeder, DeeAnn
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: The Johns Hopkins University Press 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11329067
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/6871B70215342BA34E3C8B54D6A55C42
Description
Summary:Sicista betulina (Pallas 1779) [Mus] betulina Pallas 1779, Nova Spec. Quad. Glir. Ord.: 332. Type Locality: SW Siberia, birch plain on bank of Ishim River, and Barabinskaya Step. Vernacular Names: Northern Birch Mouse. Synonyms: Sicista montana Méhely 1913; Sicista norvegica Chaworth-Musters 1927; Sicista taigica Stroganov and Potapkina 1950; Sicista tatricus Méhely 1913. Distribution: Boreal and montane forests from Norway and Denmark, east to Lake Baikal region, north to the Artic Circle at the White Sea and Usa River, south to Austria, Carpathian and Sayan Mtns (Corbet, 1978c). See Gromov and Erbajeva (1995), Kuznetsov (1965), Sludskii (1977), and Shenbrot et al. (1995) for range in Russia. Corbet (1978c) included the Ussuri region of SE Siberia, but Sokolov et al. (1989) considered the Ussuri region records questionable, and Pavlinov (in litt., 1994) and Shenbrot et al. (1995) indicate that the species does not extend east of Lake Baikal. Conservation: IUCN – Lower Risk (nt). Discussion: Sokolov et al. (1982, 1987 b ) gave karyological and spermatozoal characters that distinguished this species from S. napaea and S. pseudonapaea . Pallas' type specimen was probably not preserved (Ognev, 1963 b :33). Review of taxonomy, characteristics, ecology, and distribution available for Europe (Pucek, 1982; Mitchell-Jones, 1999), Austria (Spitzenberger, et al., 1995), East Baltic region (Timm et al., 1998), E Carpathian Mtns of Slovakia (Danko, 1994), Sumava Mtns of SW Bohemia (And�ra and ervený, 1994), Svjatoj Nos peninsula and isthmus in Lake Baikal (Reiter et al., 1995), and Russia (Gromov and Erbajeva, 1995; Shenbrot et al., 1995). Fragments in owl pellets from Schleswig-Holstein is the first and only record for S. betulina since 1950 (Borkenhagen, 1996). Miljutin (1999) provided a comprehensive review of the morphology of S. betulina and its phylogenetic and adaptive significance. He (Miljutin, 1997, 1998) also included the species in a treatise on ecomorphology of Baltic rodents and review of ecological strategies ...