Status of the Plains Harvest Mouse (Reithrodontomys montanus griseus) in eastern Nebraska

Keith Geluso, Greg D. Wright
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Abstract

In eastern Nebraska, current status of the Plains Harvest Mouse (Reithrodontomys montanus griseus) is not well understood. Infrequent captures during the last century have led to a paucity of information regarding this taxon, and some researchers postulate that its distribution has contracted in the state. In 2008, we conducted a field survey for R. m. griseus in eastern Nebraska, amassed prior specimen records, and examined most of the specimens for this subspecies from the state to better understand its distribution, natural history, and subspecific status. In our field efforts, we only captured a single individual despite > 8,000 trap nights in suitable habitats. Our literature review and queries for vouchers yielded 20 specimens of R. m. griseus from eastern Nebraska, based on published distributional limits for this subspecies. In eastern Nebraska, R. m. griseus has been captured in tallgrass prairies, short-grass upland pastures, roadside ditches, and open areas associated with salt flats. Observations across eastern Nebraska in the last 40 years demonstrate that this taxon still exists across the entire region and has been captured more frequently in cooler months. We suspect that some combination of low abundance, trap shyness, and trapping biases towards heavily vegetated habitats and warm seasons likely has led to infrequent captures of R. m. griseus in eastern Nebraska. After examination of many museum specimens of this species from across Nebraska, Kansas, and Missouri, we questioned the delineations in distribution for the two subspecies in the region. On the basis of dorsal gray fur coloration, R. m. albescens appears limited to the Sandhill and Panhandle regions of Nebraska, whereas all of eastern and southern Nebraska as well as Kansas and western Missouri represent R. m. griseus, a subspecies with brown dorsal fur coloration. Based on our proposed distributional changes for these two subspecies in Nebraska, we do not find that either subspecies requires conservation efforts. Reithrodontomys montanus griseus likely will persist at low densities throughout eastern Nebraska in appropriate habitats and persist at higher densities farther westward in southern parts of the state. Reithrodontomys montanus albescens always has been more common in the Sandhill Region of Nebraska, as individuals still are observed and captured with regularity.
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内布拉斯加州东部平原收割鼠(Reithrodontomys montanus griseus)现状
在内布拉斯加州东部,平原收获鼠(Reithrodontomys montanus griseus)的现状尚不清楚。上个世纪的罕见捕获导致了有关该分类单元的信息匮乏,一些研究人员推测其在该州的分布已经缩小。2008年,我们在内布拉斯加州东部对灰尾蛇进行了一次实地调查,收集了之前的标本记录,并检查了该州该亚种的大部分标本,以更好地了解其分布、自然历史和亚种状况。在我们的野外工作中,尽管在合适的栖息地有8000多个陷阱之夜,但我们只捕获了一个个体。根据已公布的该亚种的分布限制,我们的文献综述和对凭证的查询从内布拉斯加州东部获得了20个灰色R.m.griseus标本。在内布拉斯加州东部,R.m.griseus在高草草原、短草高地牧场、路边沟渠和与盐滩相关的开阔地带被捕获。过去40年在内布拉斯加州东部的观测表明,该分类单元仍然存在于整个地区,并且在较冷的月份被更频繁地捕获。我们怀疑,低丰度、陷阱害羞、对植被茂密的栖息地和温暖季节的陷阱偏见等因素的结合,可能导致在内布拉斯加州东部很少捕捉到灰蝶。在检查了来自内布拉斯加州、堪萨斯州和密苏里州的许多该物种的博物馆标本后,我们对该地区这两个亚种的分布情况提出了质疑。根据背部灰色皮毛的颜色,R.m.albescens似乎仅限于内布拉斯加州的Sandhill和Panhandle地区,而内布拉斯加州东部和南部以及堪萨斯州和密苏里州西部的R.m.griseus是一个背部棕色皮毛的亚种。根据我们提出的这两个亚种在内布拉斯加州的分布变化,我们没有发现任何一个亚种需要保护。灰脊灰尾蠊可能会在内布拉斯加州东部的适当栖息地以低密度持续存在,并在该州南部以更高密度持续存在。在内布拉斯加的桑德希尔地区,由于仍有规律地观察和捕捉到个体,因此山地反照雷throdontomys一直更为常见。
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