54 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Lower front teeth long, their roots 

 extending under posterior grind- 

 ing tooth into outer side of jaw 



(voles) 



Tail flattened laterally (musk- 

 rat) Fiber, p. 101 



Tail round 

 Grinding teeth without roots 



(prongs) Mi crotus, p. 102 



Grinding teeth with roots 

 (prongs) in. adults 

 Grinding teeth heavy, 

 with sharp-pointed an- 

 gles; color never red-. Phe n ae o m y s, p. 108 

 Grinding teeth light, with 

 blunt angles; color usu- 

 ally red Evotomys,p. 109 



Genus Mus Linnaeus 

 1758 M u s Linnaeus, Systema naturae, ed. 10. 1 : 59. Type M u s rattus 

 Linnaeus. 

 Front teeth without grooves ; cheek teeth in upper jaw with iulerdes of croton 

 arranged in three longitudinal rows ; form slender ; tail long, scaly, scant haired ; 

 fur coarse. (Lat., a mouse) 



The genus Mus contains many old world species, but none native to 

 America. Four have been naturalized in the United States. One of 

 these, the roof rat, Mus alexandrinus (like the black rat but 

 brown with a yellowish white belly) is normally confined to the lower 

 austral zone. Two of the three others are well known within our limits. 



SPECIES OF MITS 



Total length under 200 (8) (mice) M. musculus 



Total length over 300 (12) (rats) 



Color bluish black ; tail more than half of total length M. rattus 



Color brownish; tailless than half of total length M. decumanus 



Mus musculus Linnaeus House mouse 



1758 [M u s] m u s c u 1 u s Linnaeus, Systema naturae, ed. 10. 1 : 62. (Sweden) 

 Brownish gray, slightly paler below. Total length, 170 (6f) ; tail vertebrae, 

 85 (3f) ; hind foot, 17 (ia). (musculus; Lat., a little mouse) 



The house mouse is thoroughly established throughout the settled parts 

 of America. It is abundant in buildings and cultivated fields within 

 our limits, and is sometimes found in woods. 



