Field Mice Classification
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VolesVoles - Pages on voles, AKA meadow mice or field mice depending upon what part of the world you live in. Pages devoted to the classification & behaviour of the vole, as well as useful advice on how to control vole populations and damage.



Field Mice Classification. Different field mice species characteristics and how they are labelled under the term 'Field Mouse'. Also pictures and links related to field mice classification.


Field Mice Classification

Most, but not all, of the rodents called mice are members of the rodent subclass Myomorpha, or mouse like rodents. The approximately 1,100 species in this enormous group are classified in several families. The Old World family Muridae includes the now ubiquitous house mouse, as well as a great variety of wild-living Old World species, including the Old World field mouse, the tiny European harvest mouse (Micromys minutus) and the African tree mice.

The cosmopolitan family Cricetidae includes the native New World mice, such as the deer mouse, American harvest mouse (Reithrodontomys), the carnivorous grasshopper mouse, the South American field mice, the pack rat, and the rice rat; it also includes the various Old and New World species of vole, hamster, lemming, muskrat, and gerbil. Still other families of the Myomorpha include the dormouse, jumping mouse, and jerboa. The pocket mouse and the kangaroo rats and mice are members of the suborder Sciuromorpha, or squirrel like rodents.

In Field Mice Classification the name Field mouse is applied to various wild-living mice in different parts of the world. The Old World field mice are species of the genus Apodemus, closely related to the house mouse and found throughout Eurasia and North Africa. One species that comes under Field Mice Classification is the widely distributed long-tailed field mouse, Apodemus sylvaticus, it is a nocturnal, burrowing creature that prefers succulent plant food and frequently invades gardens and houses.

In North American Field Mice Classification, the name field mouse (or meadow mouse) is applied to voles. South American field mice belong to the genus Akodon, with about sixty species distributed among a wide variety of habitats, including human dwellings. Most of these resemble long-tailed voles. In Field Mice Classification the name tree mouse is likewise applied to various arboreal mice and voles in different parts of the world.

Mice that fall under Field Mice Classification are found in all places of moderate temperature, there are unusual collections in cities but many more live out in the open fields or forests. Most buildings are home to at least one Mouse which quietly eats whatever it can before escaping to its home The Field Mouse is a cousin to the rat and the two share certain attributes. For instance the coloring of these rodents are similar, blacks browns and whites, although more commonly mice will be more white or grey than others. Field Mice do not share the large front teeth of rats and their claws are much smaller



Pictures

A Field Mouse.

A Field Mouse.

A Field Mouse.

The most relevant links we could find, placed here free

Animal Diversity Web - This page contains a Field Mice Classification list of the different species of field mice. http://animaldiversity

Website of Everything - Long-tailed field mouse - Comic of the Forest - pictures and facts. thewebsiteofeverything.com

Site structure created by Neil Villette Site written by Richard Wedge