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Mammals of Mount ShastaMoles and Shrews |
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Sorex shastensis. Shasta Shrew. [Not recognized as a new species, believed to be Sorex vagrans]
Characters.--Size small; decidedly smaller than S. vagrans; tail rather short; ears small, but conspicuous. Third unicuspid smaller than fourth. Skull and teeth peculiar.
Color.--Type specimen, in change from summer to winter pelage: parts dark steel gray; underparts ashy brown; tail sharply bicolor, dusky above, buffy below, becoming dusky toward tip.
Cranial characters.--Skull small, decidedly smaller than in vagrans and as small as in californicus; unicuspids decidely narrower, particularly the first and second; molariform series much as in californicus, but slightly smaller; large premolar very broad posteriorly.
Measurements.--Type: Total length, 90; tail vertebrae, 35, hind foot, 12.
Remarks.--This new species is based on a single specimen caught by W.H. Osgood in a trap set in a springy place among the Shasta firs, immediately above Wagon Camp. In the same trap, and in the identical spot, he caught also specimens of Neosorex navigator and Neurotrichus gibbsi major. Several specimens of Sorex vagrans amoenus were caught near by, but no others of this species.
Sorex shastensis is a small shrew of uncertain affinities. In several respects it resembles S. californicus, but differs from this species markedly in color, and still more in the form of the cranium and narrowness of the unicuspidate teeth.
Sorex vagrans amoenus. Sierra Shrew. [Sorex vagrans Wandering Shrew, Vagrant Shrew]
Sorex montereyensis. Monterey Shrew.
Sorex (Neosorex) navigator. White-bellied Water-shrew. [Sorex palustris Water Shrew]
Neurotrichus gibbsi major. Large Shrewmole. [Neurotrichus gibbsii Shrew-mole]
Characters.--Similar to N. gibbsi, but decidedly larger; hind feet larger; forefeet much broader an dlonger; tail much longer; under parts darker; skull larger and broader; fifth upper lateral tooth (the 'large premolar') decidedly smaller than in gibbsi, and possessing a distinct anterior cusp on the cingulum, which is absent in gibbsi; fifth lower lateral tooth (the 'large premolar') decidedly larger than in gibbsi.
Measurements.--Average of 3 specimens from type locality: Total length, 120; tail vertebrae, 40; hind foot, 17. Average of 4 specimens from Mount Shasta: Total length, 113; tail vertebrae, 41; hind foot, 16.2.
Remarks.--Four specimens of this new form of Gibbs shrewmole were collected by our party on Shasta--all in the Canadian zone. Three were caught in Mud Creek canyon near the mouth of Clear Creek by Walter K. Fisher and W.H. Osgood, and one was taken at tWagon Camp by Osgood. In May, 1894, my assistant, Clark P. Streator, obtained 3 specimens (the type and cotypes) at Carberry Ranch, on the south side of Pitt River, between Mounts Shasta and Lassen. Carberry Ranch is in the upper part of the Transition zone. The Canadian zone specimens from Shasta are not quite so large, but agree in other characters.
Scapanus californicus. California Mole. [Scapanus latimanus Broad-footed Mole]
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