FACTOID # 180: Mali and Niger have 7 children born per woman, yet their populations grow at less than 3% per year.
 
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Encyclopedia > Gliridae
Dormouse
Image:Dormouse.jpeg
Scientific Classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Gliridae

Dormice are a type of rodent indigenous to the eastern hemisphere comprising the family Gliridae. (This family is also variously called Myoxidae or Muscardinidae by different taxonomists.) They are mostly found in Europe, although some live in Africa and Asia.


They are smallish for rodents, with a typical length of about 2-3" (70 mm). Dormice typically feed on fruits, berries, flowers, nuts and insects. They are largely but not exclusively arboreal and nocturnal animals.


One of the most notable characteristics of those dormice which live in temperate zones is hibernation. Dormice can hibernate six months out of the year, or even longer if the weather remains sufficiently cool, sometimes waking for brief periods to eat food they had previously stored nearby. It is from this trait that they got their name, which is most likely a combination of the word "mouse" and either Middle French dormir or Anglo-Norman dormeus, both of which mean "sleep." It is this quality which is behind the sleepy behaviour of the Dormouse character in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.


Dormice breed once or twice a year, with four being the typical size of a litter. They can live for as long as five years.


Currently, the earliest fossil evidence of dormouse species in Europe is placed in the middle Eocene. They appear in Africa in the upper Miocene and only relatively recently in Asia. Many types of extinct dormouse species have been identified. In the current (Holocene) epoch, the family consists of 28 species, in three subfamilies and (arguably) 9 genera:

  • Subfamily Graphiurinae
    • Genus Graphiurus (African Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus christyi (Christy's Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus crassicaudatus (Jentink's Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus hueti (Huet's Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus kelleni (Kellen's Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus lorraineus (Lorrain Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus microtis (Small-eared Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus monardi (Monard's Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus murinus (Woodland Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus ocularis (Spectacled Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus olga (Olga's Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus parvus (Savanna Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus platyops (Rock Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus rupicola (Stone Dormouse)
      • Species Graphiurus surdus (Silent Dormouse)
  • Subfamily Leithiinae
    • Genus Dryomys
      • Species Dryomys laniger (Woolly Dormouse)
      • Species Dryomys nitedula (Forest Dormouse)
      • Species Dryomys sichuanensis (Chinese Dormouse)
    • Genus Eliomys (Garden Dormouse)
      • Species Eliomys melanurus (Asian Garden Dormouse)
      • Species Eliomys quercinus (Garden Dormouse)
    • Genus Hypnomys (Balearic Dormouse - extinct)
      • Species Hypnomys morphaeus
      • Species Hypnomys mahonensis
    • Genus Myomimus (Mouse-tailed Dormouse)
      • Species Myomimus personatus (Masked Mouse-tailed Dormouse)
      • Species Myomimus roachi (Roach's Mouse-tailed Dormouse)
      • Species Myomimus setzeri (Setzer's Mouse-tailed Dormouse)
    • Genus Selevinia
      • Species Selevinia betpakdalaensis (Desert Dormouse)
  • Subfamily Myoxinae
    • Genus Glirulus
      • Species Glirulus japonicus (Japanese Dormouse)
    • Genus Muscardinus
      • Species Muscardinus avellanarius (Hazel Dormouse)
    • Genus Glis
      • Species Glis glis (Fat Dormouse)

External link

  • Mammals of the World: Dormice (http://www.press.jhu.edu/books/walkers_mammals_of_the_world/rodentia/rodentia.gliridae.html)
  • Glirarium.org (http://www.glirarium.org/) (English and German)

  Results from FactBites:
 
New Page 3 (2191 words)
Dormice (Gliridae) are mammals whose exact distribution in Poland is still unknown.
During the study we found three species of Gliridae in the Bialskie Mountains: the fat dormouse (Glis glis), the common dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius) and the forest dormouse (Dryomys nitedula).
In spite of the fact that the edible dormouse is one of the rarest mammals in the Polish Sudety Mountains we found that the species is much more numerous than the other two dormice in the study area.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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