fbpx
Wikipedia

Camas pocket gopher

The camas pocket gopher (Thomomys bulbivorus), also known as the camas rat or Willamette Valley gopher, is a rodent, the largest member in the genus Thomomys, of the family Geomyidae. First described in 1829, it is endemic to the Willamette Valley of northwestern Oregon in the United States. The herbivorous gopher forages for vegetable and plant matter, which it collects in large, fur-lined, external cheek pouches. Surplus food is hoarded in an extensive system of tunnels. The dull-brown-to-lead-gray coat changes color and texture over the year. The mammal's characteristically large, protuberant incisors are well adapted for use in tunnel construction, particularly in the hard clay soils of the Willamette Valley. The gophers make chattering sounds with their teeth; males and females make purring (or crooning) sounds when they are together, and the young make twittering sounds. Born toothless, blind and hairless, the young grow rapidly before being weaned at about six weeks of age.

Camas pocket gopher
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Geomyidae
Genus: Thomomys
Subgenus: Megascapheus
Species:
T. bulbivorus
Binomial name
Thomomys bulbivorus
Distribution of the camas pocket gopher in the Willamette Valley of northwest Oregon
Synonyms[2]
List
  • Diplostoma bulbivorum
    Richardson, 1829
  • Diplostoma douglasii
    Richardson, 1829
  • Geomys bulbivorus
    Richardson, 1837
  • Ascomys bulbivorus
    Wagner, 1843
  • Pseudostoma bulbivorum
    Audubon & Bachmann, 1854
  • Geomys (Thomomys) bulbivorus
    Giebel, 1855
  • Thomomys bulbivora
    Brandt, 1855
  • Thomomys bulbivorus
    Baird, 1858
  • Thomomys (subgenus Megascapheus) bulbivorus
    Elliot, 1903

Although the camas pocket gopher is fiercely defensive when cornered, it may become tame in captivity. While population trends are generally stable, threats to the species' survival include urbanization, habitat conversion for agricultural use and active attempts at eradication with trapping and poisons. It is prey for raptors and carnivorous mammals, and host to several parasitic arthropods and worms. Scientists believe that the gopher's evolutionary history was disrupted when the Missoula Floods washed over the Willamette Valley at the end of the last ice age. The floods almost completely inundated its geographic range, which may have caused a genetic bottleneck as survivors repopulated the region after the waters receded.[citation needed]

Taxonomy edit

There are six genera of North American pocket gophers: Cratogeomys, Geomys, Orthogeomys, Pappogeomys, Thomomys, and Zygogeomys.[3] The camas pocket gopher is a smooth-toothed pocket gopher of the genus Thomomys, within the pocket-gopher family Geomyidae.[4] The incisors of gophers in the genus Thomomys have characteristically smooth anterior surfaces, while those of Geomys have two deep grooves per tooth and those of Cratogeomys have a single groove.[5] The camas pocket gopher is a member of the subgenus Megascapheus, established in 1903, at that time for the camas pocket gopher alone.[4][6] Taxonomists subsequently assigned other gophers to the same subgenus.[7] The name Thomomys derives from the Greek σωρός (heap) + μῦς (mouse), probably describing the mounds of excavated soil produced by the burrowing gopher.[8] Bulbus translates as "bulb" in Latin, and the word for "devour" is voro.[8] Naturalist David Douglas reported that the gopher consumed bulbs of the camas lily,[9] and Vernon Bailey later attributed the lack of camas lilies in areas inhabited by the gopher to the bulbs being eaten.[10] However, naturalist H. M. Wight observed that the gopher ate primarily dandelion greens, and was skeptical that it was a large consumer of bulbs.[10][11]

Early history edit

 
Nineteenth-century naturalists referred to a "camas rat", as in this James Audubon print.

The taxonomy of the camas pocket gopher and its genus, Thomomys, have a convoluted history.[12] According to a review article published by the American Society of Mammalogists in 1987, Johann Friedrich von Brandt was the first to refer to the camas pocket gopher as Thomomys bulbivorus in an 1855 article published by the Imperial Academy of Sciences.[6] In the 1855 article, Brandt refers to Tomomys bulbivora without the "h" and ending with an "a".[13] He writes parenthetically "(man schreibe nicht Thomomys)".[14] The authors of the 1987 review note that they did not see Brandt's actual article, but source the textbook The mammals of North America published in 1981.[6]

Early confusion arose from writings by John Richardson between 1828 and 1839.[15] Although he describes six species in the genus, according to later critics he was unfamiliar with all specimens.[12] Richardson's descriptions of the animals and the figures in the text were also criticized.[12] His 1829 Fauna boreali-americana describes a type specimen of camas pocket gopher obtained from the "banks of the Columbia River, Oregon", the northern limit of the gopher's geographic range.[9][16] This was probably Portland, at the confluence of the Willamette and Columbia Rivers, the only place on the Columbia where subsequent specimens have been found.[2] The present location of this initial specimen is uncertain;[2] reportedly stored at the Hudson Bay Museum, it could not be located in 1915.[2] When Richardson made his first examination, the specimen was apparently incomplete;[12] although Joel Asaph Allen wrote in 1893 that it consisted only of the skin,[17] Richardson described the skull and facial features in detail.[18]

In Fauna boreali-americana, Richardson assigns the mammal to the now-defunct genus Diplostoma described by Rafinesque in 1817.[9] He named it Diplostoma ? bulbivorum.[12] Illustration-labeling errors in Richardson's book further confounded subsequent taxonomists; the plate was labeled Diplostoma douglasii.[12]

There is a specimen of a quadruped in the Hudson's Bay Museum, which Mr David Douglas informs me is the animal known on the banks of the Columbia by the name of the camas-rat, because the bulbous root of the Quamash or Camas plant (Scilla esculenta) forms its favourite food. The scull is wanting, and the animal, therefore, cannot be with certainty referred to a genus, but the form of its exterior cheek-pouches leads me to think that it may belong to the diplostoma of M Rafinesque-Schmaltz.

— John Richardson, Fauna boreali-americana, 1829[9]
 
Diplostoma douglasii from Fauna boreali-americana, 1829
 
Woodcut from 1879 encyclopedia article

The confusion around the species' taxonomy and identification amplified when naturalist Spencer Fullerton Baird interpreted Richardson's reports.[17] The camas pocket gopher's large size led Baird to conclude that the animal's measurements (reported by Richardson) were an artifact of its taxidermy preparation.[19] Baird was also apparently in error about the location from which the specimen was taken,[17] attributing the name Thomomys bulbivorus to a set of previously collected specimens later known as the California Gopher.[17] This confusion was echoed by subsequent authors.[17] The article on gophers in the 1879 edition of the American Cyclopædia has an illustration captioned "California Gopher (Thomomys bulbivorus)".[20] The ninth edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (published during the late 19th century) mistakenly reports Thomomys bulbivorus as abundant along the central California coast.[21]

Clarifications edit

Although Baird and Elliott Coues were involved in early assessments of the genus, according to Allen neither ever saw a specimen of the camas pocket gopher (T. bulbivorus).[17] Allen obtained and examined two large adults (male and female) collected in Beaverton, Oregon, in May 1890[17] which were considerably larger and darker than previously examined specimens.[22] Skull features and white markings around the mouth and anus also differed.[22] His findings and the specimen-collection location helped identify the camas pocket gopher as a species separate from California gophers.[22] The California specimens were classified by Eydoux and Gervais as Oryctomys bottae, now known as Thomomys bottae (Botta's pocket gopher).[22] They were found near Monterey, California, over 1,000 kilometers (620 mi) south of the now-recognized range of the Camas pocket gopher.[22]

 
Taxidermied specimen in the Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Genova, mislabeled "California"

The distribution of Elliot's "great pocket gopher" (as it was known) extended along the California coast "north of San Francisco."[23] James Audubon and John Bachman reassessed the taxonomy on the camas pocket gopher in the late 1800s. They referred it as the "camas rat". They reclassified the gopher as Pseudostoma borealis.[24] They rejected Diplostoma as a genus, and assigned Diplostoma bulbivorum as synonymous with P. borealis. They attributed any differences described by Richardson to artifact, from a specimen that was "twisted and disfigured" in preparation.[25] Based on observations of taxidermy specimens in Europe, they suggested that Townsend's pocket gopher (Geomys (Thomomys) townsendii) belonged to the same species.[26] In 1875, the camas pocket gopher was reported as a sub-species of the northern pocket gopher (Thomomys talpoides),.[27] During the 1920s H. M. Wight referred to it colloquially as the "Willamette Valley gopher".[28]

Current phylogeny edit

In 2008, a team of biologists from the University of California, Berkeley and Harvard University published multilocus phylogenetic analysis results of the genus Thomomys. The camas pocket gopher was found to be well separated from other taxa in the subgenus Megascapheus. These findings suggested that the camas pocket gopher was a sister to the other taxa in the subgenus, but the relationships between those other animals was less clear.[29] Only one camas pocket gopher was included in this study, which limited the ability to distinguish features such as monophyly.[30] The following cladogram was presented showing the placement of the camas pocket gopher among its closest relatives:[30]

Thomomys
Thomomys

Mazama pocket gopher (Thomomys mazama)

Idaho pocket gopher (Thomomys idahoensis)

Mountain pocket gopher (Thomomys monticola)

Northern pocket gopher (Thomomys talpoides)

Megascapheus

Camas pocket gopher (Thomomys bulbivorus)

Southern pocket gopher (Thomomys umbrinus)

Townsend's pocket gopher (Thomomys townsendii)

Botta's pocket gopher (Thomomys bottae)

Patterns of genetic variation in the camas pocket gopher have been studied.[31] Although there are no subspecies, there is substantial genetic diversity within the species. Its genetic patterns are consistent with limited inbreeding within specific populations.[32] This is similar to patterns described in Botta's pocket gopher and the southern pocket gopher, both of which are members of the same genus. However, it contrasts with patterns noted in Baird's pocket gopher and the plains pocket gopher, members of a separate genus, Geomys, which showed a higher degree of inbreeding.[32]

The species' genetic diversity is similar to that of other pocket gophers occupying a larger geographic range and diversity of habitat.[33] Compared to Townsend's pocket gopher, which is distributed across a much larger area, but less diverse habitat, it is more genetically heterogeneous.[33] Although there is considerable differentiation between separate populations of camas pocket gophers, their genetic variability does not affect the mammal's appearance.[34] Study of the effects of genetic change over time revealed a pattern affected by a cataclysmic event across the species' entire geographic area about 13,000 years ago.[34] Such an event would cause a population bottleneck, leading to scattered, isolated populations.[34]

Description edit

 
Camas pocket gopher at habitat-restoration site

The camas pocket gopher is, by a small margin, the largest member of its genus (Thomomys).[35] The fur is a dull brown above and dark, leaden gray beneath.[36] There are often patches of white on the chin, throat and around the anus,[37] and it has blackish ear and nose markings.[6] The external ear is a thickened rim of tissue.[37] During the summer, the gopher's coat is short and coarse; winter pelage is longer and furrier.[6] The coat of the young is similar to the adult summer coat, but with more sparsely distributed fur; the abdominal skin may be visible.[37]

Like other gophers, it has small eyes and ears and a nearly hairless tail. Its shoulders are broader than its hips. It is pentadactyl, with five claws on each foot. The claws on its forefeet are longer than those on its hind feet, and its middle claws are longest.[6] The front claws of the camas pocket gopher are short and weak relative to its size.[38] It employs plantigrade locomotion. The male is larger than the female, measuring an average 300 mm (12 in) in length. A large male weighs about 500 g (18 oz).[6] One male specimen was 321 mm (12.6 in) long and weighed 633.8 g (22.36 oz).[35] Females are about 271 mm (10.7 in) long. The tail measures 90 mm (3.5 in) in the male and 81 mm (3.2 in) in the female. An adult male's hind feet measure 40–43 mm (1.6–1.7 in), and an average female's hind feet measure 39 mm (1.5 in).[6] There are four mammary glands: two in the inguinal region and two in the pectoral region, each supplying a pair of nipples.[2] Morphologically, it most closely resembles Botta's pocket gopher;[37] differentiation can be made based on the concavity of the inner surface of the pterygoids, small claws, more uniform fur coloring and exoccipital groove of the camas pocket gopher.[39][40]

Skull and dentition edit

 
Camas pocket gopher skull (Bailey, 1915)

The skull of the camas pocket gopher is sturdily proportioned.[39] The camas pocket gopher and other smooth-toothed pocket gophers with robust snouts are included in the subgenus Megascapheus.[35] Male skulls measure 52 mm (2.0 in) in length across the base and 57 mm (2.2 in) if the incisors are included. The short, wide skull has a relatively short nasal passage. In width, the skull measures 19 mm (0.75 in) across the nasal passages, 30.5 mm (1.20 in) across the mastoids and 36.5 mm (1.44 in) at the zygomatic arches.[6] The external auditory meatus is broad and open, although the auditory bullae are confined.[37]

The dentition of the camas pocket gopher is symmetric, with one set of incisors, one set of premolars, and three sets of molars above and below. This gives a dental formula of 1.0.1.31.0.1.3, for a total of 20 teeth.[6] The slender incisors are prominent and distinctive, smooth with yellow surface enamel and white tips due to soil abrasion.[37] These distinctive, large, protuberant upper incisors give the gopher a buck-toothed appearance.[6][36] The lips do not cover the incisors, but close behind them. There are faintly visible grooves on the inner aspect of the upper incisors, which are more pronounced in other members of the genus (such as the Mazama pocket gopher, T. mazama). The upper molars have an alveolar length of 10 mm (0.39 in).[6]

Cheek pouches edit

 
Additional views of the skull and dentition (Brandt, 1855)

Gophers are burrowing rodents of the family Geomyidae, characterized by fur-lined, external cheek pouches used to gather and transport food.[41] The cheek pouches of geomyids such as the camas pocket gopher are controlled by a set of muscles,[42] with a sphincter controlling the opening and closing of the pouch. A pair of muscles attached to the premaxilla pull the pouches forward, and paired retractor muscles pull the pouches back.[42] These retractor muscles extend back and up from the cheek surfaces, forming a band 7–10 cm (2.8–3.9 in) long and about 2 cm (0.79 in) wide[6] attached to aponeurosis of the latissimus dorsi muscle.[42]

Male genitalia edit

Like many mammals, the penis of the camas pocket gopher contains a bone, the baculum. Although its baculum was initially reported as smaller than that of other gophers—1.5 mm (0.059 in) high, 1.8 mm (0.071 in) wide at the base and 8.5 mm (0.33 in) long—the examiner did not know if the specimen had reached full maturity.[43] Subsequent reports averaged about 2.1 mm (0.083 in) high, 2.2 mm (0.087 in) wide at the base and 10.1 mm (0.40 in) long.[44] The phallus' total length averaged 13.5 mm (0.53 in), with the glans covering more than half its length.[6]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Some argued that the camas pocket gopher consumed bulbs of the camas flower.

The camas pocket gopher is found in the Willamette Valley and the drainage areas of the Yamhill River and other tributaries of the Willamette River.[6] Its range extends north from Eugene to Portland and Forest Grove and west to Grand Ronde.[2] A 1920 report of a Pleistocene fossil in Fort Rock, Oregon has been questioned, since it is far outside the species' current geographic range; as of 1987, the specimen could not be located for further evaluation.[6]

The clay-rich Willamette Valley soils are hard in the dry season, and the gopher's protuberant incisors are well adapted to these conditions.[37] Adequate soil drainage and suitable plant food are essential components of the gopher's ideal habitat. Not typically found in wetland areas (where its tunnels would flood), the species is found in seral communities of grasses and shrubs. They are also established in agricultural fields in the Willamette Valley, including fields of alfalfa, wheat and oats. The species has also been found in areas of ecological disturbance with similar terrain features.[45]

On a geologic timescale, the Willamette Valley has been the site of massive floods.[46] During the late Wisconsin glaciation, a series of floods (known as the Missoula or Bretz Floods) occurred.[46] The last flood in the series, a massive flood with an estimated 1,693 km3 (406 cu mi) of water flowing at a rate of 42 km3 per hour (412 million ft3 per second) over a 40-hour period,[46] occurred about 13,000 years ago. The flood filled the Willamette Valley to a depth of about 122 m (400 ft), in a near-perfect overlay of the camas pocket gopher's range.[32] Although the species has been collected above this elevation, such finds are uncommon.[45] A temporary lake, Lake Allison, formed.[32] Although it is assumed that the gopher lived in the valley before the flood, no fossils have been recovered. The Chehalem Mountains, with a peak elevation of 497 m (1,631 ft), probably provided refuge for survivor populations and survivors would have repopulated in isolated pockets when the waters receded. Before and since the floods, the mountains are thought to have limited gene flow between populations. The relatively narrow, sluggish Willamette River does not appear to obstruct genetic flow in gopher populations.[34]

Behavior edit

The gopher has been credited with being one of the most vicious animals known for its size. It has a great deal of courage and fights a man savagely until an opportunity for escape is offered, then it turns and runs as rapidly as possible, attempting to hide from its pursuer.

— H. M. Wight, Economic Entomology: Pamphlets, 1918[47]
 
Camas pocket gopher mounds

The camas pocket gopher is a mostly solitary herbivore which is active throughout the year and does not hibernate.[48] The gopher spends most of its time excavating tunnels in search of food,[49] and the hard clay soils of the Willamette Valley pose a challenge.[10] Although the gopher's front claws are too weak to dig through the clay (particularly during dry seasons), its large incisors and strongly protuberant orientation are well-adapted for this purpose. Tunnel systems constructed by the camas pocket gopher can be complex, with some tunnels exceeding 240 m (260 yd) in length. About 90 mm (3.5 in) in diameter, the tunnels are up to 0.91 m (3.0 ft) deep.[10] When soils are damp the gopher constructs ventilation ducts or chimney mounds (possibly unique to the species),[49] to increase ventilation.[10] The chimney mounds rise vertically 15–25 cm (6–10 in), are open at the top and are thought to ventilate the burrows in accordance with Bernoulli's principle.[49] It is not known if adjacent gopher burrowing systems interconnect.[49] Reports differ about whether or not the ranges of the camas pocket gopher and the Mazama pocket gopher overlap; if so, this refutes the previous belief that Oregon gopher ranges do not overlap.[10]

 
Camas pocket gopher burrow

Although the species is primarily fossorial, it occasionally gathers food near the entrance of a tunnel.[10] Dandelions seem to be its favorite food, and are also used as nesting material.[50] During breeding season males will enter the tunnels of females, and males and females may make purring (or cooing) sounds when they are together.[51] Mothers seem to comfort the young by softly vocalizing,[51] with the young twittering in response.[28]

The camas pocket gopher may behave aggressively when on the defensive, with mammalogist Vernon Orlando Bailey describing the species as "morose and savage."[10] However, it may be easily tamed in captivity;[49] the female is more readily tamed than the male.[52] Another small rodent endemic to the Willamette Valley, the gray-tailed vole (Microtus canicaudus), also uses camas pocket gopher tunnels. Other mammals sharing the range of the camas pocket gopher (and, possibly, its tunnels) include the vagrant shrew, Townsend's mole, the brush rabbit, the eastern cottontail rabbit, Townsend's chipmunk, the California ground squirrel, the dusky-footed woodrat, the North American deermouse, the creeping vole, Townsend's vole, the Pacific jumping mouse, the long-tailed weasel and the striped skunk.[10]

Ecology edit

Growth and development[43]
Age (weeks) Weight Length Description
Birth 6.1 g (0.22 oz) 50 mm (2.0 in) No hair, no teeth, no cheek pouches
2 23 g (0.81 oz) 90 mm (3.5 in) Developing hair
3 35.5 g (1.25 oz) 108 mm (4.3 in) Crawling, eat solid food
4 53.6 g (1.89 oz) 123.5 mm (4.86 in) Pockets developed
5 70.5 g (2.49 oz) 153 mm (6.0 in) Eyes open
6 86 g (3.0 oz) 164 mm (6.5 in) Weaned

Varying onset times and duration of the camas pocket gopher breeding season have been reported. Early reports suggested an early-April onset, with the season extending through June. Other reports cited "evidently pregnant" females seen in late March.[44] In heavily irrigated areas the breeding season may be longer, extending into early September.[45] About four young are born in a litter, although litters as large as nine have been reported.[44] The blind, hairless, toothless offspring weigh about 6.1 g (0.22 oz) and are 50 mm (2.0 in) in length.[44] During their first six weeks they will begin to crawl, develop cheek pouches, open their eyes and wean from milk to solid food.[44] The young then weigh about 86 g (3.0 oz) and measure 164 mm (6.5 in) in length.[44] At weeks 8, 10 and 17 they will weigh 101 g (3.6 oz), 160 g (5.6 oz) and 167 g (5.9 oz).[44] Some reports indicate that more than one litter may be born in a season.[45] Sexual maturity probably develops by the following year's breeding season.[44] Although males are fully grown by that time, females may continue to increase in size.[45]

 
Ten-day-old camas pocket gopher pups

There was little data as of 1998 on the longevity and mortality of the camas pocket gopher.[45] It is presumably prey for carnivorous mammals, and its bones have been identified in regurgitated pellets of raptors such as the great horned owl. Parasites include mites, lice, fleas, roundworms and flatworms. The species' tougher skin may protect it from some fleas known to infest Botta's pocket gopher and the Mazama pocket gopher.[10] Mites known to parasitize the camas pocket gopher include Androlaelaps geomys and Echinonyssus femuralis.[53] Some authorities report Androlaelaps fahrenholzi as another parasitic mite,[10] but a later publication did not report it.[54] The chewing louse Geomydoecus oregonus has also been reported.[10]

Two parasitic worms first discovered in the gastrointestinal tract of camas pocket gophers are the nematode Heligmosomoides thomomyos and the cestode Hymenolepis tualatinensis. Other worms include two nematodes and the cestode Hymenolepis horrida.[10]

Human interactions edit

 
Camas pocket gopher relocation may protect threatened species of flora, such as Kincaid's lupine.

Camas pocket gophers cause significant economic losses, so may be treated as an agricultural pest. Crops damaged include clover, alfalfa and vetch.[50] The gophers may eat these crops or damage the roots while burrowing. This can injure the roots and expose them to air, causing them to dry out. Subterranean activity can also damage the roots of fruit trees. Root crops are particularly susceptible to damage and consumption; potatoes, carrots, parsnips and other crops may be eaten on site or dragged off by the gopher for caching in the burrow. Excavated soil can cover grass and limit livestock grazing; freshly sprouted grains may be similarly damaged.[50] An estimate of impact from camas pocket gopher activities in the Willamette Valley in 1918 amounted to $1.5 million annual losses.[50] Gopher activities can provide a benefit of soil aeration, enhancing water retention after rain or snowmelt. Buried vegetation can also compost, enhancing organic soil content to provide additional benefits.[55]

Proposed methods for controlling gopher populations in agricultural areas include poisoning dandelions,[50] clover, carrots, sweet potatoes and parsnips.[10] Camas pocket gophers are larger than other gophers, so conventional gopher traps may fail to capture them.[10] Toxic baits and fumigants may also fail, since the gophers will sometimes wall off a segment of the burrow.[10] Gophers may also cause local flooding if their tunneling activities damage levees.[55]

In an effort to mitigate damage by camas pocket gophers to sensitive habitat, the Oregon Department of Transportation and the Institute for Applied Ecology trap and relocate the animals.[56] At a site south of Philomath, Oregon, the IAE is working to protect a small but viable population of Kincaid's lupine (Lupinus sulphureus).[56] This threatened flower is the primary host plant for the endangered Fender's blue butterfly (Icaricia icarioides fenderi), which is endemic to the Willamette Valley.[57][58] The gophers are relocated to a nearby location distant from the lupines.[56]

Conservation status edit

 
Skeleton at the Museum of Osteology in Oklahoma

Citing concerns of urbanization, habitat loss and active attempts at eradication, NatureServe assessed in 2014 the camas pocket gophers' conservation status as vulnerable.[48] The conservation status of the camas pocket gopher is classified as "least concern" by the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) Species Programme, with a stable population trend.[1] The IUCN notes that the gopher is common in its range; studies indicate that populations can recover rapidly after traps are removed from an area,[1][45] and the species may adapt well to environmental changes.[1]

The IUCN and others express concern about degradation of the species' habitat due to urbanization and agricultural expansion.[1][59] The total area occupied by the camas pocket gopher is less than 20,000 km2 (7,700 sq mi).[1] This area, the Willamette Valley, contains 70 percent of Oregon's human population.[60] Although this range probably contains a few protected areas, many preserves in the valley are primarily waterfowl protection for hunters.[59] Wetland areas are not suited to the camas pocket gopher, since tunnels are flood-prone. In areas better suited to the gopher (disturbed habitats and pastoral farmland),[45] it may be considered a pest and subject to eradication by poisoning and trapping.[1]

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Cassola 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Bailey 1915, p. 40.
  3. ^ Patton 2005, pp. 859–870.
  4. ^ a b Patton 2005, p. 868.
  5. ^ Elbroch 2006, p. 296.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Verts & Carraway 1987, p. 1.
  7. ^ "Thomomys (Megascapheus)". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  8. ^ a b Verts & Carraway 1987, p. 4.
  9. ^ a b c d Richardson 1829, p. 206.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Verts & Carraway 1987, p. 3.
  11. ^ Wight 1918, p. 12.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Allen 1893, p. 53.
  13. ^ Brandt 1855, p. 188.
  14. ^ Brandt 1855, p. 189.
  15. ^ Allen 1893, pp. 53–64.
  16. ^ Allen 1893, p. 55.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g Allen 1893, p. 56.
  18. ^ Richardson 1829, pp. 206–207.
  19. ^ Allen 1893, pp. 53–56.
  20. ^ Ripley & Dana 1879.
  21. ^ DePuy 1895, p. 703.
  22. ^ a b c d e Allen 1893, p. 57.
  23. ^ Elliot 1905, p. 272.
  24. ^ Audubon, Audubon & Bachman 1851, p. 198.
  25. ^ Audubon, Audubon & Bachman 1851, pp. 200–201.
  26. ^ Audubon, Audubon & Bachman 1851, p. 200.
  27. ^ Coues 1875, pp. 136–137.
  28. ^ a b Wight 1922.
  29. ^ Belfiore, Liu & Moritz 2008, p. 300.
  30. ^ a b Belfiore, Liu & Moritz 2008, p. 304.
  31. ^ Carraway & Kennedy 1993, p. 952.
  32. ^ a b c d Carraway & Kennedy 1993, p. 958.
  33. ^ a b Carraway & Kennedy 1993, p. 957.
  34. ^ a b c d Carraway & Kennedy 1993, p. 960.
  35. ^ a b c Verts & Carraway 1998, p. 229.
  36. ^ a b Kays & Wilson2010, p. 82.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g Bailey 1915, p. 41.
  38. ^ Bailey 1915, p. 42.
  39. ^ a b Bailey 1915, p. 32.
  40. ^ Bailey 1915, p. 36.
  41. ^ Vaughan, Ryan & Czaplewski 2011, p. 207.
  42. ^ a b c Merriam 1895, p. 101.
  43. ^ a b Verts & Carraway 1987, pp. 1–2.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h Verts & Carraway 1987, p. 2.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h Verts & Carraway 1998, pp. 229–231.
  46. ^ a b c Carraway & Kennedy 1993, p. 959.
  47. ^ Wight 1918, p. 16.
  48. ^ a b Comprehensive Report Species – Thomomys bulbivorus 2014.
  49. ^ a b c d e Verts & Carraway 1998, p. 230.
  50. ^ a b c d e Experiment Station Record 1920.
  51. ^ a b Verts & Carraway 1987, pp. 3–4.
  52. ^ Wight 1918, p. 3.
  53. ^ Whitaker et al. 2007, pp. 86.
  54. ^ Whitaker et al. 2007, pp. 13–14.
  55. ^ a b Nowak 1999.
  56. ^ a b c The Camas pocket gopher – Small but fierce!.
  57. ^ Kincaid's lupine.
  58. ^ Plebejus icarioides fenderi. NatureServe. 2012.
  59. ^ a b Ricketts 1999, p. 155.
  60. ^ Jewell & McRae 2011, p. 9.

Sources edit

  • Allen, Joel Asaph (1893). "Descriptions of four new species of Thomomys, with remarks on other species of the genus" (PDF). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 5 (5): 47–69. Retrieved 7 February 2015.
  • Audubon, John James; Audubon, John Woodhouse; Bachman, John (1851). The Quadrupeds of North America, Volume 3. New York: V.G. Audubon. pp. 198–201. Archived from the original on 29 April 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  • Bailey, Vernon (15 November 1915). "Revision of the pocket gophers of the genus Thomomys". North American Fauna. 39: 1–136. doi:10.3996/nafa.39.0001. hdl:2027/mdp.39015006867546.
  • Belfiore, Natalia; Liu, Liang; Moritz, Craig (April 2008). "Multilocus phylogenetics of a rapid radiation in the genus Thomomys". Systematic Biology. 57 (2): 294–310. doi:10.1080/10635150802044011. hdl:1885/66474. JSTOR 20143143. PMID 18432550.
  • Brandt, Johann Friedrich (1855). Beiträge zur Nähern Kenntniss der Säugethiere Russland's (in German). St. Petersburg: De l'Imprimerie de l'Académie impériale des sciences. Archived from the original on 25 November 2014. Retrieved 25 November 2014.
  • Carraway, Leslie N.; Kennedy, Phyllis K. (November 1993). "Genetic variation in Thomomys bulbivorus, an endemic to the Willamette Valley, Oregon". Journal of Mammalogy. 74 (4): 952–962. doi:10.2307/1382434. JSTOR 1382434.
  • Cassola, F. (2016). "Thomomys bulbivorus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T42594A22216513. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-2.RLTS.T42594A22216513.en. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  • "Comprehensive Report Species – Thomomys bulbivorus". NatureServe Explorer: An Online Encyclopedia of Life [web application]. Version 7.1. NatureServe, Arlington, Virginia. 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  • Coues, Elliott (1875). "Synopsis of the Geomyidae". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 27: 136–137. Retrieved 8 February 2015.
  • DePuy, W. H., ed. (1895). "Entry for California "Fauna"". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. IV. The Werner Company. OCLC 2320653.
  • Elbroch, Mark (2006). Animal Skulls: A Guide to North American Species. Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-3309-0.
  • Elliot, Daniel Giraud (1905). A checklist of mammals of the North American continent, the West Indies, and the neighboring seas. 6. Field Columbian Museum Zoölogical. pp. 1–761. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
  • Experiment Station Record. Vol. XL. U.S. Department of Agriculture. 1920. p. 54. Retrieved 12 November 2014.
  • "The Camas pocket gopher – Small but fierce!". Institute for Applied Ecology. 23 October 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
  • Jewell, Judy; McRae, W.C. (31 May 2011). Moon Spotlight Eugene, Salem, & the Willamette Valley. Avalon Travel. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-61238-094-0.
  • Kays, Roland W.; Wilson, Don E. (2010). Mammals of North America (2nd ed.). Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-3350-4. Retrieved 12 November 2014.
  • "Kincaid's lupine". Oregon Fish & Wildlife Office Home. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
  • Merriam, Clinton Hart (January 1895). "Monographic revision of the pocket gophers: Family Geomyidæ". North American Fauna. 8: 1–262. doi:10.3996/nafa.8.0001. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  • Nowak, Ronald M. (1999). Walker's Mammals of the World (6th ed.). Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-5789-8. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  • Patton, J. L. (2005). "Family Geomyidae". In Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 859–870. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  • Richardson, John (1829). Fauna Boreali-Americana. London: J. Murray. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  • Ricketts, Taylor H. (1999). Terrestrial Ecoregions of North America: A Conservation Assessment. Island Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-1-55963-722-0.
  • Ripley, George; Dana, Charles A. (1879). "Gopher" . The American Cyclopædia. Vol. VIII.
  • Vaughan, Terry; Ryan, James; Czaplewski, Nicholas (2011). Mammalogy. Jones & Bartlett Learning. ISBN 978-0-7637-6299-5. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  • Verts, B.J.; Carraway, Leslie N. (27 February 1987). (PDF). Mammalian Species (273): 1–4. doi:10.2307/3504014. JSTOR 3504014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 November 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  • Verts, B.J.; Carraway, Leslie N. (1998). Land Mammals of Oregon. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-21199-5. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
  • Whitaker, John O.; Walters, Brianne L.; Castor, Linda K.; Ritzi, Christopher M.; Wilson, Nixon (24 July 2007). "Host and distribution lists of mites (acari), parasitic and phoretic, in the hair or on the skin of North American wild mammals north of Mexico: records since 1974". Faculty Publications from the Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology.
  • Wight, H.M. (October 1922). "The Willamette Valley gopher". The Murrelet. 3 (3): 6–8. doi:10.2307/3533661. JSTOR 3533661.
  • Wight, H.M. (1918). Economic Entomology: Pamphlets.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Thomomys bulbivorus at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Thomomys bulbivorus at Wikispecies
  • UniProt. "Thomomys bulbivorus". Retrieved 5 August 2016.

camas, pocket, gopher, camas, pocket, gopher, thomomys, bulbivorus, also, known, camas, willamette, valley, gopher, rodent, largest, member, genus, thomomys, family, geomyidae, first, described, 1829, endemic, willamette, valley, northwestern, oregon, united, . The camas pocket gopher Thomomys bulbivorus also known as the camas rat or Willamette Valley gopher is a rodent the largest member in the genus Thomomys of the family Geomyidae First described in 1829 it is endemic to the Willamette Valley of northwestern Oregon in the United States The herbivorous gopher forages for vegetable and plant matter which it collects in large fur lined external cheek pouches Surplus food is hoarded in an extensive system of tunnels The dull brown to lead gray coat changes color and texture over the year The mammal s characteristically large protuberant incisors are well adapted for use in tunnel construction particularly in the hard clay soils of the Willamette Valley The gophers make chattering sounds with their teeth males and females make purring or crooning sounds when they are together and the young make twittering sounds Born toothless blind and hairless the young grow rapidly before being weaned at about six weeks of age Camas pocket gopher Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Rodentia Family Geomyidae Genus Thomomys Subgenus Megascapheus Species T bulbivorus Binomial name Thomomys bulbivorus Richardson 1829 Distribution of the camas pocket gopher in the Willamette Valley of northwest Oregon Synonyms 2 List Diplostoma bulbivorumRichardson 1829Diplostoma douglasiiRichardson 1829Geomys bulbivorusRichardson 1837Ascomys bulbivorusWagner 1843Pseudostoma bulbivorumAudubon amp Bachmann 1854Geomys Thomomys bulbivorusGiebel 1855Thomomys bulbivoraBrandt 1855Thomomys bulbivorusBaird 1858Thomomys subgenus Megascapheus bulbivorusElliot 1903 Although the camas pocket gopher is fiercely defensive when cornered it may become tame in captivity While population trends are generally stable threats to the species survival include urbanization habitat conversion for agricultural use and active attempts at eradication with trapping and poisons It is prey for raptors and carnivorous mammals and host to several parasitic arthropods and worms Scientists believe that the gopher s evolutionary history was disrupted when the Missoula Floods washed over the Willamette Valley at the end of the last ice age The floods almost completely inundated its geographic range which may have caused a genetic bottleneck as survivors repopulated the region after the waters receded citation needed Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Early history 1 2 Clarifications 1 3 Current phylogeny 2 Description 2 1 Skull and dentition 2 2 Cheek pouches 2 3 Male genitalia 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behavior 5 Ecology 6 Human interactions 6 1 Conservation status 7 References 7 1 Footnotes 7 2 Sources 8 External linksTaxonomy editThere are six genera of North American pocket gophers Cratogeomys Geomys Orthogeomys Pappogeomys Thomomys and Zygogeomys 3 The camas pocket gopher is a smooth toothed pocket gopher of the genus Thomomys within the pocket gopher family Geomyidae 4 The incisors of gophers in the genus Thomomys have characteristically smooth anterior surfaces while those of Geomys have two deep grooves per tooth and those of Cratogeomys have a single groove 5 The camas pocket gopher is a member of the subgenus Megascapheus established in 1903 at that time for the camas pocket gopher alone 4 6 Taxonomists subsequently assigned other gophers to the same subgenus 7 The name Thomomys derives from the Greek swros heap mῦs mouse probably describing the mounds of excavated soil produced by the burrowing gopher 8 Bulbus translates as bulb in Latin and the word for devour is voro 8 Naturalist David Douglas reported that the gopher consumed bulbs of the camas lily 9 and Vernon Bailey later attributed the lack of camas lilies in areas inhabited by the gopher to the bulbs being eaten 10 However naturalist H M Wight observed that the gopher ate primarily dandelion greens and was skeptical that it was a large consumer of bulbs 10 11 Early history edit nbsp Nineteenth century naturalists referred to a camas rat as in this James Audubon print The taxonomy of the camas pocket gopher and its genus Thomomys have a convoluted history 12 According to a review article published by the American Society of Mammalogists in 1987 Johann Friedrich von Brandt was the first to refer to the camas pocket gopher as Thomomys bulbivorus in an 1855 article published by the Imperial Academy of Sciences 6 In the 1855 article Brandt refers to Tomomys bulbivora without the h and ending with an a 13 He writes parenthetically man schreibe nicht Thomomys 14 The authors of the 1987 review note that they did not see Brandt s actual article but source the textbook The mammals of North America published in 1981 6 Early confusion arose from writings by John Richardson between 1828 and 1839 15 Although he describes six species in the genus according to later critics he was unfamiliar with all specimens 12 Richardson s descriptions of the animals and the figures in the text were also criticized 12 His 1829 Fauna boreali americana describes a type specimen of camas pocket gopher obtained from the banks of the Columbia River Oregon the northern limit of the gopher s geographic range 9 16 This was probably Portland at the confluence of the Willamette and Columbia Rivers the only place on the Columbia where subsequent specimens have been found 2 The present location of this initial specimen is uncertain 2 reportedly stored at the Hudson Bay Museum it could not be located in 1915 2 When Richardson made his first examination the specimen was apparently incomplete 12 although Joel Asaph Allen wrote in 1893 that it consisted only of the skin 17 Richardson described the skull and facial features in detail 18 In Fauna boreali americana Richardson assigns the mammal to the now defunct genus Diplostoma described by Rafinesque in 1817 9 He named it Diplostoma bulbivorum 12 Illustration labeling errors in Richardson s book further confounded subsequent taxonomists the plate was labeled Diplostoma douglasii 12 There is a specimen of a quadruped in the Hudson s Bay Museum which Mr David Douglas informs me is the animal known on the banks of the Columbia by the name of the camas rat because the bulbous root of the Quamash or Camas plant Scilla esculenta forms its favourite food The scull is wanting and the animal therefore cannot be with certainty referred to a genus but the form of its exterior cheek pouches leads me to think that it may belong to the diplostoma of M Rafinesque Schmaltz John Richardson Fauna boreali americana 1829 9 nbsp Diplostoma douglasii from Fauna boreali americana 1829 nbsp Woodcut from 1879 encyclopedia article The confusion around the species taxonomy and identification amplified when naturalist Spencer Fullerton Baird interpreted Richardson s reports 17 The camas pocket gopher s large size led Baird to conclude that the animal s measurements reported by Richardson were an artifact of its taxidermy preparation 19 Baird was also apparently in error about the location from which the specimen was taken 17 attributing the name Thomomys bulbivorus to a set of previously collected specimens later known as the California Gopher 17 This confusion was echoed by subsequent authors 17 The article on gophers in the 1879 edition of the American Cyclopaedia has an illustration captioned California Gopher Thomomys bulbivorus 20 The ninth edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica published during the late 19th century mistakenly reports Thomomys bulbivorus as abundant along the central California coast 21 Clarifications edit Although Baird and Elliott Coues were involved in early assessments of the genus according to Allen neither ever saw a specimen of the camas pocket gopher T bulbivorus 17 Allen obtained and examined two large adults male and female collected in Beaverton Oregon in May 1890 17 which were considerably larger and darker than previously examined specimens 22 Skull features and white markings around the mouth and anus also differed 22 His findings and the specimen collection location helped identify the camas pocket gopher as a species separate from California gophers 22 The California specimens were classified by Eydoux and Gervais as Oryctomys bottae now known as Thomomys bottae Botta s pocket gopher 22 They were found near Monterey California over 1 000 kilometers 620 mi south of the now recognized range of the Camas pocket gopher 22 nbsp Taxidermied specimen in the Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Genova mislabeled California The distribution of Elliot s great pocket gopher as it was known extended along the California coast north of San Francisco 23 James Audubon and John Bachman reassessed the taxonomy on the camas pocket gopher in the late 1800s They referred it as the camas rat They reclassified the gopher as Pseudostoma borealis 24 They rejected Diplostoma as a genus and assigned Diplostoma bulbivorum as synonymous with P borealis They attributed any differences described by Richardson to artifact from a specimen that was twisted and disfigured in preparation 25 Based on observations of taxidermy specimens in Europe they suggested that Townsend s pocket gopher Geomys Thomomys townsendii belonged to the same species 26 In 1875 the camas pocket gopher was reported as a sub species of the northern pocket gopher Thomomys talpoides 27 During the 1920s H M Wight referred to it colloquially as the Willamette Valley gopher 28 Current phylogeny edit In 2008 a team of biologists from the University of California Berkeley and Harvard University published multilocus phylogenetic analysis results of the genus Thomomys The camas pocket gopher was found to be well separated from other taxa in the subgenus Megascapheus These findings suggested that the camas pocket gopher was a sister to the other taxa in the subgenus but the relationships between those other animals was less clear 29 Only one camas pocket gopher was included in this study which limited the ability to distinguish features such as monophyly 30 The following cladogram was presented showing the placement of the camas pocket gopher among its closest relatives 30 Thomomys Thomomys Mazama pocket gopher Thomomys mazama Idaho pocket gopher Thomomys idahoensis Mountain pocket gopher Thomomys monticola Northern pocket gopher Thomomys talpoides Megascapheus Camas pocket gopher Thomomys bulbivorus Southern pocket gopher Thomomys umbrinus Townsend s pocket gopher Thomomys townsendii Botta s pocket gopher Thomomys bottae Patterns of genetic variation in the camas pocket gopher have been studied 31 Although there are no subspecies there is substantial genetic diversity within the species Its genetic patterns are consistent with limited inbreeding within specific populations 32 This is similar to patterns described in Botta s pocket gopher and the southern pocket gopher both of which are members of the same genus However it contrasts with patterns noted in Baird s pocket gopher and the plains pocket gopher members of a separate genus Geomys which showed a higher degree of inbreeding 32 The species genetic diversity is similar to that of other pocket gophers occupying a larger geographic range and diversity of habitat 33 Compared to Townsend s pocket gopher which is distributed across a much larger area but less diverse habitat it is more genetically heterogeneous 33 Although there is considerable differentiation between separate populations of camas pocket gophers their genetic variability does not affect the mammal s appearance 34 Study of the effects of genetic change over time revealed a pattern affected by a cataclysmic event across the species entire geographic area about 13 000 years ago 34 Such an event would cause a population bottleneck leading to scattered isolated populations 34 Description edit nbsp Camas pocket gopher at habitat restoration site The camas pocket gopher is by a small margin the largest member of its genus Thomomys 35 The fur is a dull brown above and dark leaden gray beneath 36 There are often patches of white on the chin throat and around the anus 37 and it has blackish ear and nose markings 6 The external ear is a thickened rim of tissue 37 During the summer the gopher s coat is short and coarse winter pelage is longer and furrier 6 The coat of the young is similar to the adult summer coat but with more sparsely distributed fur the abdominal skin may be visible 37 Like other gophers it has small eyes and ears and a nearly hairless tail Its shoulders are broader than its hips It is pentadactyl with five claws on each foot The claws on its forefeet are longer than those on its hind feet and its middle claws are longest 6 The front claws of the camas pocket gopher are short and weak relative to its size 38 It employs plantigrade locomotion The male is larger than the female measuring an average 300 mm 12 in in length A large male weighs about 500 g 18 oz 6 One male specimen was 321 mm 12 6 in long and weighed 633 8 g 22 36 oz 35 Females are about 271 mm 10 7 in long The tail measures 90 mm 3 5 in in the male and 81 mm 3 2 in in the female An adult male s hind feet measure 40 43 mm 1 6 1 7 in and an average female s hind feet measure 39 mm 1 5 in 6 There are four mammary glands two in the inguinal region and two in the pectoral region each supplying a pair of nipples 2 Morphologically it most closely resembles Botta s pocket gopher 37 differentiation can be made based on the concavity of the inner surface of the pterygoids small claws more uniform fur coloring and exoccipital groove of the camas pocket gopher 39 40 Skull and dentition edit nbsp Camas pocket gopher skull Bailey 1915 The skull of the camas pocket gopher is sturdily proportioned 39 The camas pocket gopher and other smooth toothed pocket gophers with robust snouts are included in the subgenus Megascapheus 35 Male skulls measure 52 mm 2 0 in in length across the base and 57 mm 2 2 in if the incisors are included The short wide skull has a relatively short nasal passage In width the skull measures 19 mm 0 75 in across the nasal passages 30 5 mm 1 20 in across the mastoids and 36 5 mm 1 44 in at the zygomatic arches 6 The external auditory meatus is broad and open although the auditory bullae are confined 37 The dentition of the camas pocket gopher is symmetric with one set of incisors one set of premolars and three sets of molars above and below This gives a dental formula of 1 0 1 3 1 0 1 3 for a total of 20 teeth 6 The slender incisors are prominent and distinctive smooth with yellow surface enamel and white tips due to soil abrasion 37 These distinctive large protuberant upper incisors give the gopher a buck toothed appearance 6 36 The lips do not cover the incisors but close behind them There are faintly visible grooves on the inner aspect of the upper incisors which are more pronounced in other members of the genus such as the Mazama pocket gopher T mazama The upper molars have an alveolar length of 10 mm 0 39 in 6 Cheek pouches edit nbsp Additional views of the skull and dentition Brandt 1855 Gophers are burrowing rodents of the family Geomyidae characterized by fur lined external cheek pouches used to gather and transport food 41 The cheek pouches of geomyids such as the camas pocket gopher are controlled by a set of muscles 42 with a sphincter controlling the opening and closing of the pouch A pair of muscles attached to the premaxilla pull the pouches forward and paired retractor muscles pull the pouches back 42 These retractor muscles extend back and up from the cheek surfaces forming a band 7 10 cm 2 8 3 9 in long and about 2 cm 0 79 in wide 6 attached to aponeurosis of the latissimus dorsi muscle 42 Male genitalia edit Like many mammals the penis of the camas pocket gopher contains a bone the baculum Although its baculum was initially reported as smaller than that of other gophers 1 5 mm 0 059 in high 1 8 mm 0 071 in wide at the base and 8 5 mm 0 33 in long the examiner did not know if the specimen had reached full maturity 43 Subsequent reports averaged about 2 1 mm 0 083 in high 2 2 mm 0 087 in wide at the base and 10 1 mm 0 40 in long 44 The phallus total length averaged 13 5 mm 0 53 in with the glans covering more than half its length 6 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Some argued that the camas pocket gopher consumed bulbs of the camas flower The camas pocket gopher is found in the Willamette Valley and the drainage areas of the Yamhill River and other tributaries of the Willamette River 6 Its range extends north from Eugene to Portland and Forest Grove and west to Grand Ronde 2 A 1920 report of a Pleistocene fossil in Fort Rock Oregon has been questioned since it is far outside the species current geographic range as of 1987 the specimen could not be located for further evaluation 6 The clay rich Willamette Valley soils are hard in the dry season and the gopher s protuberant incisors are well adapted to these conditions 37 Adequate soil drainage and suitable plant food are essential components of the gopher s ideal habitat Not typically found in wetland areas where its tunnels would flood the species is found in seral communities of grasses and shrubs They are also established in agricultural fields in the Willamette Valley including fields of alfalfa wheat and oats The species has also been found in areas of ecological disturbance with similar terrain features 45 On a geologic timescale the Willamette Valley has been the site of massive floods 46 During the late Wisconsin glaciation a series of floods known as the Missoula or Bretz Floods occurred 46 The last flood in the series a massive flood with an estimated 1 693 km3 406 cu mi of water flowing at a rate of 42 km3 per hour 412 million ft3 per second over a 40 hour period 46 occurred about 13 000 years ago The flood filled the Willamette Valley to a depth of about 122 m 400 ft in a near perfect overlay of the camas pocket gopher s range 32 Although the species has been collected above this elevation such finds are uncommon 45 A temporary lake Lake Allison formed 32 Although it is assumed that the gopher lived in the valley before the flood no fossils have been recovered The Chehalem Mountains with a peak elevation of 497 m 1 631 ft probably provided refuge for survivor populations and survivors would have repopulated in isolated pockets when the waters receded Before and since the floods the mountains are thought to have limited gene flow between populations The relatively narrow sluggish Willamette River does not appear to obstruct genetic flow in gopher populations 34 Behavior editThe gopher has been credited with being one of the most vicious animals known for its size It has a great deal of courage and fights a man savagely until an opportunity for escape is offered then it turns and runs as rapidly as possible attempting to hide from its pursuer H M Wight Economic Entomology Pamphlets 1918 47 nbsp Camas pocket gopher mounds The camas pocket gopher is a mostly solitary herbivore which is active throughout the year and does not hibernate 48 The gopher spends most of its time excavating tunnels in search of food 49 and the hard clay soils of the Willamette Valley pose a challenge 10 Although the gopher s front claws are too weak to dig through the clay particularly during dry seasons its large incisors and strongly protuberant orientation are well adapted for this purpose Tunnel systems constructed by the camas pocket gopher can be complex with some tunnels exceeding 240 m 260 yd in length About 90 mm 3 5 in in diameter the tunnels are up to 0 91 m 3 0 ft deep 10 When soils are damp the gopher constructs ventilation ducts or chimney mounds possibly unique to the species 49 to increase ventilation 10 The chimney mounds rise vertically 15 25 cm 6 10 in are open at the top and are thought to ventilate the burrows in accordance with Bernoulli s principle 49 It is not known if adjacent gopher burrowing systems interconnect 49 Reports differ about whether or not the ranges of the camas pocket gopher and the Mazama pocket gopher overlap if so this refutes the previous belief that Oregon gopher ranges do not overlap 10 nbsp Camas pocket gopher burrow Although the species is primarily fossorial it occasionally gathers food near the entrance of a tunnel 10 Dandelions seem to be its favorite food and are also used as nesting material 50 During breeding season males will enter the tunnels of females and males and females may make purring or cooing sounds when they are together 51 Mothers seem to comfort the young by softly vocalizing 51 with the young twittering in response 28 The camas pocket gopher may behave aggressively when on the defensive with mammalogist Vernon Orlando Bailey describing the species as morose and savage 10 However it may be easily tamed in captivity 49 the female is more readily tamed than the male 52 Another small rodent endemic to the Willamette Valley the gray tailed vole Microtus canicaudus also uses camas pocket gopher tunnels Other mammals sharing the range of the camas pocket gopher and possibly its tunnels include the vagrant shrew Townsend s mole the brush rabbit the eastern cottontail rabbit Townsend s chipmunk the California ground squirrel the dusky footed woodrat the North American deermouse the creeping vole Townsend s vole the Pacific jumping mouse the long tailed weasel and the striped skunk 10 Ecology editGrowth and development 43 Age weeks Weight Length Description Birth 6 1 g 0 22 oz 50 mm 2 0 in No hair no teeth no cheek pouches 2 23 g 0 81 oz 90 mm 3 5 in Developing hair 3 35 5 g 1 25 oz 108 mm 4 3 in Crawling eat solid food 4 53 6 g 1 89 oz 123 5 mm 4 86 in Pockets developed 5 70 5 g 2 49 oz 153 mm 6 0 in Eyes open 6 86 g 3 0 oz 164 mm 6 5 in Weaned Varying onset times and duration of the camas pocket gopher breeding season have been reported Early reports suggested an early April onset with the season extending through June Other reports cited evidently pregnant females seen in late March 44 In heavily irrigated areas the breeding season may be longer extending into early September 45 About four young are born in a litter although litters as large as nine have been reported 44 The blind hairless toothless offspring weigh about 6 1 g 0 22 oz and are 50 mm 2 0 in in length 44 During their first six weeks they will begin to crawl develop cheek pouches open their eyes and wean from milk to solid food 44 The young then weigh about 86 g 3 0 oz and measure 164 mm 6 5 in in length 44 At weeks 8 10 and 17 they will weigh 101 g 3 6 oz 160 g 5 6 oz and 167 g 5 9 oz 44 Some reports indicate that more than one litter may be born in a season 45 Sexual maturity probably develops by the following year s breeding season 44 Although males are fully grown by that time females may continue to increase in size 45 nbsp Ten day old camas pocket gopher pups There was little data as of 1998 on the longevity and mortality of the camas pocket gopher 45 It is presumably prey for carnivorous mammals and its bones have been identified in regurgitated pellets of raptors such as the great horned owl Parasites include mites lice fleas roundworms and flatworms The species tougher skin may protect it from some fleas known to infest Botta s pocket gopher and the Mazama pocket gopher 10 Mites known to parasitize the camas pocket gopher include Androlaelaps geomys and Echinonyssus femuralis 53 Some authorities report Androlaelaps fahrenholzi as another parasitic mite 10 but a later publication did not report it 54 The chewing louse Geomydoecus oregonus has also been reported 10 Two parasitic worms first discovered in the gastrointestinal tract of camas pocket gophers are the nematode Heligmosomoides thomomyos and the cestode Hymenolepis tualatinensis Other worms include two nematodes and the cestode Hymenolepis horrida 10 Human interactions edit nbsp Camas pocket gopher relocation may protect threatened species of flora such as Kincaid s lupine Camas pocket gophers cause significant economic losses so may be treated as an agricultural pest Crops damaged include clover alfalfa and vetch 50 The gophers may eat these crops or damage the roots while burrowing This can injure the roots and expose them to air causing them to dry out Subterranean activity can also damage the roots of fruit trees Root crops are particularly susceptible to damage and consumption potatoes carrots parsnips and other crops may be eaten on site or dragged off by the gopher for caching in the burrow Excavated soil can cover grass and limit livestock grazing freshly sprouted grains may be similarly damaged 50 An estimate of impact from camas pocket gopher activities in the Willamette Valley in 1918 amounted to 1 5 million annual losses 50 Gopher activities can provide a benefit of soil aeration enhancing water retention after rain or snowmelt Buried vegetation can also compost enhancing organic soil content to provide additional benefits 55 Proposed methods for controlling gopher populations in agricultural areas include poisoning dandelions 50 clover carrots sweet potatoes and parsnips 10 Camas pocket gophers are larger than other gophers so conventional gopher traps may fail to capture them 10 Toxic baits and fumigants may also fail since the gophers will sometimes wall off a segment of the burrow 10 Gophers may also cause local flooding if their tunneling activities damage levees 55 In an effort to mitigate damage by camas pocket gophers to sensitive habitat the Oregon Department of Transportation and the Institute for Applied Ecology trap and relocate the animals 56 At a site south of Philomath Oregon the IAE is working to protect a small but viable population of Kincaid s lupine Lupinus sulphureus 56 This threatened flower is the primary host plant for the endangered Fender s blue butterfly Icaricia icarioides fenderi which is endemic to the Willamette Valley 57 58 The gophers are relocated to a nearby location distant from the lupines 56 Conservation status edit nbsp Skeleton at the Museum of Osteology in Oklahoma Citing concerns of urbanization habitat loss and active attempts at eradication NatureServe assessed in 2014 the camas pocket gophers conservation status as vulnerable 48 The conservation status of the camas pocket gopher is classified as least concern by the IUCN International Union for Conservation of Nature Species Programme with a stable population trend 1 The IUCN notes that the gopher is common in its range studies indicate that populations can recover rapidly after traps are removed from an area 1 45 and the species may adapt well to environmental changes 1 The IUCN and others express concern about degradation of the species habitat due to urbanization and agricultural expansion 1 59 The total area occupied by the camas pocket gopher is less than 20 000 km2 7 700 sq mi 1 This area the Willamette Valley contains 70 percent of Oregon s human population 60 Although this range probably contains a few protected areas many preserves in the valley are primarily waterfowl protection for hunters 59 Wetland areas are not suited to the camas pocket gopher since tunnels are flood prone In areas better suited to the gopher disturbed habitats and pastoral farmland 45 it may be considered a pest and subject to eradication by poisoning and trapping 1 References editFootnotes edit a b c d e f g Cassola 2016 a b c d e f Bailey 1915 p 40 Patton 2005 pp 859 870 a b Patton 2005 p 868 Elbroch 2006 p 296 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Verts amp Carraway 1987 p 1 Thomomys Megascapheus Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 14 November 2014 a b Verts amp Carraway 1987 p 4 a b c d Richardson 1829 p 206 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Verts amp Carraway 1987 p 3 Wight 1918 p 12 a b c d e f Allen 1893 p 53 Brandt 1855 p 188 Brandt 1855 p 189 Allen 1893 pp 53 64 Allen 1893 p 55 a b c d e f g Allen 1893 p 56 Richardson 1829 pp 206 207 Allen 1893 pp 53 56 Ripley amp Dana 1879 DePuy 1895 p 703 a b c d e Allen 1893 p 57 Elliot 1905 p 272 Audubon Audubon amp Bachman 1851 p 198 Audubon Audubon amp Bachman 1851 pp 200 201 Audubon Audubon amp Bachman 1851 p 200 Coues 1875 pp 136 137 a b Wight 1922 Belfiore Liu amp Moritz 2008 p 300 a b Belfiore Liu amp Moritz 2008 p 304 Carraway amp Kennedy 1993 p 952 a b c d Carraway amp Kennedy 1993 p 958 a b Carraway amp Kennedy 1993 p 957 a b c d Carraway amp Kennedy 1993 p 960 a b c Verts amp Carraway 1998 p 229 a b Kays amp Wilson2010 p 82 a b c d e f g Bailey 1915 p 41 Bailey 1915 p 42 a b Bailey 1915 p 32 Bailey 1915 p 36 Vaughan Ryan amp Czaplewski 2011 p 207 a b c Merriam 1895 p 101 a b Verts amp Carraway 1987 pp 1 2 a b c d e f g h Verts amp Carraway 1987 p 2 a b c d e f g h Verts amp Carraway 1998 pp 229 231 a b c Carraway amp Kennedy 1993 p 959 Wight 1918 p 16 a b Comprehensive Report Species Thomomys bulbivorus 2014 a b c d e Verts amp Carraway 1998 p 230 a b c d e Experiment Station Record 1920 a b Verts amp Carraway 1987 pp 3 4 Wight 1918 p 3 Whitaker et al 2007 pp 86 Whitaker et al 2007 pp 13 14 a b Nowak 1999 a b c The Camas pocket gopher Small but fierce Kincaid s lupine Plebejus icarioides fenderi NatureServe 2012 a b Ricketts 1999 p 155 Jewell amp McRae 2011 p 9 Sources edit Allen Joel Asaph 1893 Descriptions of four new species of Thomomys with remarks on other species of the genus PDF Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 5 5 47 69 Retrieved 7 February 2015 Audubon John James Audubon John Woodhouse Bachman John 1851 The Quadrupeds of North America Volume 3 New York V G Audubon pp 198 201 Archived from the original on 29 April 2015 Retrieved 21 November 2014 Bailey Vernon 15 November 1915 Revision of the pocket gophers of the genus Thomomys North American Fauna 39 1 136 doi 10 3996 nafa 39 0001 hdl 2027 mdp 39015006867546 Belfiore Natalia Liu Liang Moritz Craig April 2008 Multilocus phylogenetics of a rapid radiation in the genus Thomomys Systematic Biology 57 2 294 310 doi 10 1080 10635150802044011 hdl 1885 66474 JSTOR 20143143 PMID 18432550 Brandt Johann Friedrich 1855 Beitrage zur Nahern Kenntniss der Saugethiere Russland s in German St Petersburg De l Imprimerie de l Academie imperiale des sciences Archived from the original on 25 November 2014 Retrieved 25 November 2014 Carraway Leslie N Kennedy Phyllis K November 1993 Genetic variation in Thomomys bulbivorus an endemic to the Willamette Valley Oregon Journal of Mammalogy 74 4 952 962 doi 10 2307 1382434 JSTOR 1382434 Cassola F 2016 Thomomys bulbivorus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T42594A22216513 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 2 RLTS T42594A22216513 en Retrieved 17 November 2021 Comprehensive Report Species Thomomys bulbivorus NatureServe Explorer An Online Encyclopedia of Life web application Version 7 1 NatureServe Arlington Virginia 2014 Retrieved 28 November 2014 Coues Elliott 1875 Synopsis of the Geomyidae Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 27 136 137 Retrieved 8 February 2015 DePuy W H ed 1895 Entry for California Fauna Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol IV The Werner Company OCLC 2320653 Elbroch Mark 2006 Animal Skulls A Guide to North American Species Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 3309 0 Elliot Daniel Giraud 1905 A checklist of mammals of the North American continent the West Indies and the neighboring seas 6 Field Columbian Museum Zoological pp 1 761 Retrieved 15 November 2014 Experiment Station Record Vol XL U S Department of Agriculture 1920 p 54 Retrieved 12 November 2014 The Camas pocket gopher Small but fierce Institute for Applied Ecology 23 October 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2015 Jewell Judy McRae W C 31 May 2011 Moon Spotlight Eugene Salem amp the Willamette Valley Avalon Travel p 9 ISBN 978 1 61238 094 0 Kays Roland W Wilson Don E 2010 Mammals of North America 2nd ed Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 3350 4 Retrieved 12 November 2014 Kincaid s lupine Oregon Fish amp Wildlife Office Home Retrieved 29 March 2015 Merriam Clinton Hart January 1895 Monographic revision of the pocket gophers Family Geomyidae North American Fauna 8 1 262 doi 10 3996 nafa 8 0001 Retrieved 28 November 2014 Nowak Ronald M 1999 Walker s Mammals of the World 6th ed Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5789 8 Retrieved 28 November 2014 Patton J L 2005 Family Geomyidae In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 859 870 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Richardson John 1829 Fauna Boreali Americana London J Murray Retrieved 21 November 2014 Ricketts Taylor H 1999 Terrestrial Ecoregions of North America A Conservation Assessment Island Press p 155 ISBN 978 1 55963 722 0 Ripley George Dana Charles A 1879 Gopher The American Cyclopaedia Vol VIII Vaughan Terry Ryan James Czaplewski Nicholas 2011 Mammalogy Jones amp Bartlett Learning ISBN 978 0 7637 6299 5 Retrieved 27 November 2014 Verts B J Carraway Leslie N 27 February 1987 Thomomys bulbivorus PDF Mammalian Species 273 1 4 doi 10 2307 3504014 JSTOR 3504014 Archived from the original PDF on 12 November 2014 Retrieved 27 November 2014 Verts B J Carraway Leslie N 1998 Land Mammals of Oregon Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 21199 5 Retrieved 15 November 2014 Whitaker John O Walters Brianne L Castor Linda K Ritzi Christopher M Wilson Nixon 24 July 2007 Host and distribution lists of mites acari parasitic and phoretic in the hair or on the skin of North American wild mammals north of Mexico records since 1974 Faculty Publications from the Harold W Manter Laboratory of Parasitology Wight H M October 1922 The Willamette Valley gopher The Murrelet 3 3 6 8 doi 10 2307 3533661 JSTOR 3533661 Wight H M 1918 Economic Entomology Pamphlets External links edit nbsp Mammals portal nbsp Oregon portal nbsp Media related to Thomomys bulbivorus at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Thomomys bulbivorus at Wikispecies UniProt Thomomys bulbivorus Retrieved 5 August 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Camas pocket gopher amp oldid 1223352971, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.