Peromyscus levipes Merriam, 1898

Álvarez-Castañeda, Sergio Ticul & González-Ruiz, Noé, 2009, Peromyscus levipes (Rodentia: Cricetidae), Mammalian Species 824 (25), pp. 1-6 : 1-4

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1644/824.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/032F879B-FFEB-514A-3B9C-FC27FE315044

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Felipe

scientific name

Peromyscus levipes Merriam, 1898
status

 

Peromyscus levipes Merriam, 1898 View in CoL

Nimble-footed Deermouse

Peromyscus levipes Merriam, 1898:123 View in CoL . Type locality ‘‘M[oun]t. Malinche , Tlaxcala, Mexico, 8400 ft. ’’

Peromyscus boylei levipes: Osgood, 1909:153 View in CoL . Name combination (with unjustified emendation of Hesperomys boylii Baird, 1855:335 ).

Peromyscus boylii levipes: Hall and Kelson, 1959:635 View in CoL . Name combination.

Peromyscus boylii ambiguus Álvarez, 1961:118 View in CoL . Type locality ‘‘ Monterrey , Nuevo Leo´n,’’ Mexico.

beatae View in CoL and P. boylii View in CoL ). When compared to P. boylii rowleyi , P. levipes View in CoL can be distinguished by overall larger size, darker color, and more cinnamon dorsum. The following characteristics of P. levipes View in CoL usually distinguish it from P. boylii rowleyi ( Schmidly et al. 1988) : ratio of greatest anterior width of nasal bone to posterior width is,1.9; ratio of greatest posterior width of nasal bone to length of nasal bone is,0.17; maxillofrontal suture is a continuous line CONTEXT AND CONTENT. Order Rodentia View in CoL , suborder Myomorpha View in CoL , superfamily Muroidea View in CoL , family Cricetidae View in CoL , subfamily Neotominae View in CoL , tribe Reithrodontomyini View in CoL , genus Peromyscus (Musser and Carleton 2005) View in CoL , subgenus Peromyscus View in CoL . P. levipes View in CoL is a member of the boylii View in CoL species group ( Carleton 1989; Musser and Carleton 2005). Two subspecies are recognized (Castro-Campillo et al. 1999; Houseal et al. 1987; Schmidly et al. 1988; Tiemann-Boege et al. 2000):

P. l. ambiguus Álvarez, 1961:118. See above.

P. l. levipes Merriam, 1898:123 . See above.

DIAGNOSIS

Peromyscus levipes ( Fig. 1 View Fig ) may be confused with other members of the boylii species group that are sympatric (P. without bending; lateral border of parietal is more angular; nasolacrimal canal is situated less than halfway along infraorbital plate; mesostyle of right M2 is absent; and ectolophid of m1 is present. Length (in mm) of molar toothrow in P. levipes is 4.2–4.8 compared to 3.6–4.2 in P. boylii ( Schmidly et al. 1988) .

Peromyscus levipes is slightly smaller than P. beatae and has lighter coloration, particularly in dorsal band ( Schmidly et al. 1988). The following characteristics of P. levipes usually distinguish it from P. beatae ( Schmidly et al. 1988) : posterior extensions of premaxillae extend beyond the posterior border of nasals; lateral border of parietal is less rounded; nasolacrimal canal is not located midway along infraorbital plate; anterior ethmoid foramen is less frequently located at edge of 1st cavity from ventral border of ethmoid region; and alisphenoid has a smaller angle, making sphenoidal fissure more difficult to see ( Schmidly et al. 1988). Fundamental number (FN) of P. beatae is 48–54 compared to 56–60 in P. levipes ( Houseal et al. 1987; Schmidly et al. 1988).

Peromyscus levipes also may be confused with sympatric specimens of P. pectoralis , but it can be distinguished by its relatively short tail, larger skull, more swollen lacrimal region, and longer maxillary toothrow (. 4.2 mm in P. levipes and,4.0 mm in P. pectoralis —Schmidly 1974). P. levipes cannot be distinguished morphologically from allopatric P. schmidlyi , but the 2 species differ genetically in mitochondrial cytochrome- b gene sequence (3.25%) and FN (56–60 in P. levipes and 54–56 in P. schmidlyi — Bradley et al. 2004).

GENERAL CHARACTERS

Upper body parts of Peromyscus levipes vary from rich ochraceous buff to tawny; dusky hairs present. Sides of body are tawny with lateral line not sharply marked. Dorsum with dusky hair that sometimes forms a diffuse blackish stripe. Orbital ring is blackish and slightly more pronounced toward a grizzled area between eyes and base of ears. Ears are dusky, scarcely edged with white, and have a tuft of soft blackish slate hairs at anterior base. Underparts of body are white, occasionally creamy white, with a pectoral spot sometimes present; pelage at tarsal joint is white. Tail is distinctly bicolored (dusky brown above and white below) and penicillate at tip (Castro-Campillo et al. 1999; Osgood 1909; Schmidly et al. 1988). One specimen had a monocolored tail ( Hooper 1947).

Skull ( Fig. 2 View Fig ) is short and broad with relatively large auditory bullae and molar teeth; supraorbital border is not sharply angled ( Osgood 1909). Braincase is rounded, and zygomatic arches are nearly parallel. Supraorbital border is not sharply angled and seldom develops a shelf; intraorbital notch is slightly or scarcely evident ( Álvarez 1961; Osgood 1909).

Mean and range (in parentheses) of external and cranial measurements (in mm) from 37 topotypes of P. levipes ( Schmidly et al. 1988) were: total length, 205.1 (180–220); length of tail, 103.5 (91–115); length of hind foot, 23.0 (22– 24); length of ear, 20.3 (19–22); length of skull, 28.3 (26.6– 30); length of rostrum, 11.6 (10.8–12.7); length of nasal, 10.4 (9.2–11); postpalatal length, 9.5 (8.4–10.6); zygomatic breadth, 14.2 (13.4–15); breadth of braincase, 12.8 (12.2– 13.4); mastoid breadth, 12.0 (11.4–12.8); least interorbital width, 4.4 (4.1–4.7); length of molar toothrow, 4.4 (4.2–4.8);

FORM AND FUNCTION length of auditory bulla, 5.4 (4.7–5.8); depth of braincase, 10 (9.5–10.5); length of mesopterygoid fossa, 5 (4.4–5.6); width of mesopterygoid fossa, 2.3 (2.1–2.7); breadth across molars, 5.5 (5.3–5.9). Length of tail is slightly greater than length of head and body ( Álvarez 1961; Merriam 1898; Schmidly et al. 1988). Mean body masses (g) and ranges (in parentheses) for males (n 5 19) and females (n 5 18), respectively, were 25.2 (22–30) and 23.6 (20–29— Álvarez 1963).

Peromyscus levipes varies considerably in several morphological traits; in the states of San Luis Potosi and Hidalgo northward there is a gradual cline of decreasing measurements, except for ratio of length of tail to length of head and body. Specimens from several localities in San Luis Potosi are relatively shorter and darker dorsally than topotypes from Tlaxcala ( Álvarez 1961). Specimens from mountains on the Mexican Plateau in the state of San Luis Potosi were paler than those from tropical slopes of the Sierra Madre Occidental ( Álvarez 1961; Dalquest 1953).

DISTRIBUTION

Peromyscus levipes occurs in the mountain region of eastern Mexico ( Fig. 3 View Fig ). It is found on both sides of the Sierra Madre Oriental from central Nuevo Leon and western Tamaulipas to central Veracruz and into the northern slopes of the Transversal Neovolcanic area of the states of Queretaro, Tlaxcala, Puebla, Distrito Federal, state of Mexico, and Morelos (Musser and Carleton 2005; Schmidly et al. 1988). No fossils of P. levipes are known .

The phallus of Peromyscus levipes is elongated and sharp. Glans is about two-fifths the length of hind foot, and 4.75 times longer than wide (Bradley and Schmidly 1987). Triangular spines, pointed at tip and about as wide as long, are present on dorsal and ventral surfaces. Fluting is absent. Baculum is rod-shaped, dorsoventrally curved, and has a triangular base 4–5 times wider than shaft (Bradley and Schmidly 1987). Baculum is about 1.2–1.3 times longer than glans, and tip of baculum is covered by a minute cartilaginous cap (Bradley and Schmidly 1987; Carleton 1977).

The phallus of P. levipes has 2 different epidermal conditions, with spines and spineless. The spineless condition was found in specimens from 9 locations in Queretaro and Hidalgo, and all 45 specimens exhibited this condition ( Bradley et al. 1989). Individuals with the spineless condition do not differ biochemically ( Bradley et al. 1989), craniometrically ( Schmidly et al. 1988), or karyotypically ( Houseal et al. 1987) from individuals with spines.

Measurements (mean ± SE, in mm, n 5 24) of glans penis and baculum of P. levipes ( Bradley et al. 1989) are: length of distal tract, 12.85 ± 0.18; length of glans, 8.48 ± 0.15; length of protractile tip, 2.11 ± 0.05; width of glans, 1.79 ± 0.03; length of baculum, 11.02 ± 0.18; length of cartilaginous tip, 0.16 ± 0.00; width of baculum at base, 1.52 ± 0.04, and width of baculum at midpoint, 0.37 ± 0.02. Detailed descriptions of 63 muscles of the cervical region of P. levipes are available ( Esquivel 1981).

ONTOGENY AND REPRODUCTION

Peromyscus levipes usually produces 2–3 litters per year ( Davis 1944). Between late March and early April, 1 pregnant female was collected with 2 embryos, 3.0 mm in length ( Hooper 1953). Two pregnant juvenile females were caught in August ( Davis 1944). In Morelos, reproductive activity was recorded during all months except March, with maximum reproductive activity occurring in July–November (García-Estrada et al. 2004; Romero-Almaraz et al. 2004). In Morelos, males with enlarged testes were collected in May (Álvarez-Castan˜eda 1996) and in June and August (Davis and Russell 1954).

ECOLOGY

Peromyscus levipes occupies oak–sweet gum forest, oak– pine forest, pinyon–juniper woodland, and scrub oak ( Hooper 1953; Koestner 1941; Schmidly et al. 1988). P. levipes occurs along rock walls in a mixed forest association (Davis and Russell 1953, 1954), and in xerophytic vegetation in the Distrito Federal in central Mexico (Castro-Campillo et al. 1992). In central Veracruz (Jalapa) and north of Puebla (Chignahuapan), P. levipes occurs in cloud forest with P. beatae ( Schmidly et al. 1988) .

Peromyscus levipes occurs in tall sacaton grass (Mulhenbergia), mixed grasses, and herbs along creeks, rocky bluffs, and lava flows; there is a decided preference for rocky areas ( Davis 1944). Plants associated with P. levipes are Bursera grandifolia , Daphnopsis americana, Enterolobium cyclocarpum, Euphorbia fulva , Ficus petiolaris , Guazuma ulmifolia , Licania arborea , Lysiloma divaricata , Neobuxbaumia mezcalaensis , Pachycereus weberi , Pithecellobium dulce , Sapindus saponaria , Stenocereus beneckei , and S. stellatus (Romero-Almaraz et al. 2004) .

In a low-disturbance area in Morelos, minimum number known alive (individuals/ha) during 14 months ranged from 16 to 41. Average residence time (range in parentheses; in days) for sexes combined, males, and females, respectively, was 175 (41–393), 217 (41–393), and 134 (41–228). Mean measurement of spatial activity (range in parentheses; in m 2) for males (n 5 39) and females (n 5 29), respectively, was 541.5 (44.2–3,623.1) and 577.5 (44.2–4,146.5—Romero- Almaraz et al. 2004). No significant differences in spatial activity were found between sexes in wet and dry seasons, and overall sex ratio did not differ from 1:1 (Romero- Almaraz et al. 2004). P. levipes preferred areas dominated by trees (73.4%) to those dominated by annual plants (5.6%), shrubs (11.5%), or tree–cactus associations (9.5%—Romero- Almaraz et al. 2004).

Peromyscus levipes has been taken in the same trapline as P. melanotis in Veracruz (Hall and Dalquest 1963) and P. aztecus in Hidalgo ( Musser 1964). P. levipes occurs in sympatry with P. boylii rowleyi in Hidalgo ( Houseal et al. 1987; Rennert and Kilpatrick 1986; Schmidly et al. 1988) and with P. beatae in Puebla ( Houseal et al. 1987; Schmidly et al. 1988).

Ectoparasites infecting P. levipes include Jellisonia bonia , J. grayi , J. hayesi , Pleochaetis mundus , Plusaetis dolens , P. mathesoni , P. parus , and P. sibynus (family Ceratophyllidae ); Ctenophthalmus pseudagyrtes , Stenoponia ponera , and Strepsylla mina (family Ctenophthalmidae ); and Atyphloceras tancitari and Hystrichopsylla orophila (family Hystrichopsylidae — Acosta 2003; Whitaker and Morales- Malacara 2005). P. levipes has been found in pellets of barn owl ( Tyto alba —Koopman and Martin 1959; López- Forment and Urbano 1977) and mottled owl ( Ciccaba virgata —Koopman and Martin 1959).

GENETICS

Diploid number (2n) is 48, which is typical of the genus Peromyscus , but P. levipes exhibits some variation in autosomal morphology with FN ranging from 56 to 60 ( Houseal et al. 1987; Schmidly et al. 1988). Karyotype includes 3–5 pairs of large to medium biarmed chromosomes, 2 pairs of small biarmed chromosomes, and 16–18 pairs of acrocentric chromosomes ( Houseal et al. 1987; Schmidly et al. 1988; Schmidly and Schroeter 1974). The X chromosome is large and submetacentric, and the Y chromosome is small and submetacentric ( Schmidly et al. 1988).

An examination of 19 populations for which chromosomal data have been reported ( Houseal et al. 1987; Schmidly and Schroeter 1974) revealed that 58% of those populations were fixed for either FN 5 58 (37%) or FN 5 60 (21%). Thirty-seven percent were polymorphic for FN 5 58– 60, and 1 population (Cola de Caballo, Nuevo Leo´n) was polymorphic for FN 5 56–58. Specimens with FN of 58–60 are only found in Queretaro and Hidalgo, with FN 5 58 in San Luis Potosi, southeast of Hidalgo and northwest of Puebla, and with FN 5 60 in the state of Mexico and central Veracruz ( Houseal et al. 1987; Schmidly et al. 1988). In Jonacapa, Hidalgo, a population of P. levipes (FN 5 58–60) occurred in sympatry with P. boylii rowleyi (FN 5 52— Houseal et al. 1987; Rennert and Kilpatrick 1986; Schmidly et al. 1988), and in Chignahupan, Puebla, a population of P. levipes (FN 5 58) occurred in sympatry with P. beatae (FN 5 52–54— Houseal et al. 1987; Schmidly et al. 1988).

Kilpatrick and Zimmerman (1975) reported genetic polymorphism per population (P 5 0.059) and heterozygosity per individual (h 5 0.0392) for P. levipes ; however, their analysis included specimens currently assigned to P. beatae and P. levipes . A population from Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas (n 5 6), was polymorphic at 3 loci: phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (PGD-1), glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase (GOT-1), and albumin (ALB-1— Avise et al. 1974). In a sample of similar size, Kilpatrick and Zimmerman (1975) did not observe any polymorphism at those 3 loci but did report polymorphism at 2 esterase loci (EST-5 and EST-7). Polymorphisms were reported at 2 loci, ALB-1 and transferrin (TRF-1) in 3 populations from Queretaro and Hidalgo (n 5 3), and no variation was reported at 16 other loci (Kilpatrick and Zimmerman 1975). All populations of P. boylii , including P. levipes , were monomorphic for a null allele at the EST-1 locus (Kilpatrick and Zimmerman 1975).

A population of P. levipes exhibited polymorphism at 7 loci (amylase [AMY-1], EST-1, EST-6, phosphoglucomutase [PGM-2 and PGM-3], glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase [G6PD-1], and isocitrate dehydrogenase [IDH-1]—Rennert and Kilpatrick 1987). The population in Cola de Caballo (P. l. ambiguus) showed some genetic differentiation from samples of P. l. levipes at the carbonic anhydrase (CAR-1), EST-7 loci (Rennert and Kilpatrick 1987). P. levipes can be distinguished from P. b. rowleyi by genetic markers at the TRF-1 and salivary amylase (AMY-1) loci and from P. beatae by markers at the IDH locus (Rennert and Kilpatrick 1987). P. levipes and P. boylii rowleyi shared common alleles at many loci, although some differences existed with TRF-1 and AMY-1 (Rennert and Kilpatrick 1987). Rogers’ similar- ity between P. levipes and P. boylii rowleyi was.0.89 (S 5 0.95 — Avise et al. 1974), although that analysis included in the sample of P. levipes , specimens currently recognized as P. beatae ( Avise et al. 1974) .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Rodentia

Family

Cricetidae

Genus

Peromyscus

Loc

Peromyscus levipes Merriam, 1898

Álvarez-Castañeda, Sergio Ticul & González-Ruiz, Noé 2009
2009
Loc

Peromyscus boylii ambiguus Álvarez, 1961:118

ALVAREZ, T 1961: 118
1961
Loc

Peromyscus boylei levipes:

OSGOOD, W 1909: 153
BAIRD, S 1855: 335
1909
Loc

Peromyscus levipes

MERRIAM, C 1898: 123
1898
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