HOME --> CLASS MAMMALIA
--> ORDER RODENTIA
--> SUBORDER MYOMORPHA
--> SUPERFAMILY Muroidea
--> FAMILY Cricetidae
--> SUBFAMILY Arvicolinae
--> GENUS Microtus
--> SUBGENUS See comments.
SPECIES Microtus (See comments.) richardsoni
Author: | DeKay, 1842. | Citation: | Zoology of New York, Part I, Mammals: 91. | Common Name: | North American Water Vole | Type Locality: | Canada, Alberta Prov., vicinity of Jasper House (as interpreted by Bailey, 1900:60). | Distribution: | Wet subalpine and alpine meadows of Rocky Mountains, from S British Columbia and Alberta, Canada, to W Wyoming and C Utah, USA; and of Cascade Mountains, from SW British Columbia south through WC Oregon. | Status: | IUCN – Lower Risk (lc). | Comments: | Senior synonym of the type (= arvicoloides) of Aulacomys. In early classifications (Bailey, 1900; Miller, 1896), richardsoni was placed with Old World water voles in the subgenus Arvicola (including Aulacomys) of Microtus, a relationship reaffirmed by Hooper and Hart (1962) and followed by others, with Arvicola employed either at the subgeneric (Hall, 1981) or generic level (Jones et al., 1975). Substantial evidence argues the retention of richardsoni within Microtus and the restriction of Arvicola to Old World forms (Carleton, 1981; Conroy and Cook, 2000a; Gromov and Polyakov, 1977; Hinton, 1926a; Jannett, 1997; Koenigswald, 1980; Repenning, 1980; Zagorodnyuk, 1990). Hoffmann and Koeppel (1985) further suggested the autochthonous origin of M. richardsoni in North America from an early stock that also gave rise to M. xanthognathus, an idea consistent with the biochemical similarity of richardsoni to certain New World Microtus (Nadler et al., 1978) and with Zagorodnyuk's (1990) usage of the subgenus Aulacomys; cytochrome b sequence data, although also supporting a North American origin, disclose nearest kinship to M. (Pitymys) pinetorum (Conroy and Cook, 2000a). See Ludwig (1984, Mammalian Species, 223). |
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| Offspring: | Synonyms:
arvicoloides (Rhoads, 1894) macropus (Merriam, 1891) myllodontus Rasmussen and Chamberlain, 1959 principalis Rhoads, 1895
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