Records of Harvest Mice, Reithrodontomys, from Central America, with Description of a New Subspecies from Nicaragua

audiobook

Records of Harvest Mice, Reithrodontomys, from Central America, with Description of a New Subspecies from Nicaragua

by Sydney Anderson, J. Knox Jones

EN·~22 minutes

Chapters

Description

This volume brings together a decade of field observations on the tiny harvest mice of Central America. Starting with a survey that follows a 1952 review, the authors detail specimens gathered across Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua, noting where each animal was trapped and even recording pregnancies when they occurred. The work is grounded in meticulous measurements and geographic references that let listeners picture the rugged highlands and lowland forests where these rodents live.

Among the findings is the identification of a previously unknown subspecies from Nicaragua, extending the known distribution of its relatives by several hundred kilometres. The authors also highlight surprising range extensions for several other species, offering fresh insight into how these small mammals adapt to varied elevations. For anyone fascinated by natural history, the book offers a clear, data‑rich glimpse into the quiet lives of harvest mice and the dedicated scientists who study them.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~22 minutes (21K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chris Curnow, Joseph Cooper, Diane Monico, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2010-04-24

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the authors

SA

Sydney Anderson

b. 1927

A leading American mammalogist, he spent decades studying the diversity of mammals in the Americas and helped shape modern work on South American species, especially in Bolivia. His writing combined field knowledge, museum research, and a lifelong fascination with how mammals are classified and distributed.

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J. Knox Jones

J. Knox Jones

1929–1992

A leading American mammalogist and academic leader, he helped shape Texas Tech University into a stronger research institution while producing an impressive body of work on mammals and natural history.

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