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Marsh shrew

The marsh shrew (Sorex bendirii), also known as the Pacific water shrew, Bendire's water shrew, Bendire's shrew and Jesus shrew is the largest North American member of the genus Sorex (long-tailed shrews). Primarily covered in dark-brown fur, it is found near aquatic habitats along the Pacific coast from southern British Columbia to northern California. With air trapped in its fur for buoyancy, marsh shrews can run for three to five seconds on top of the water. It measures about 16 cm (6.3 in) in length, including a 7-centimetre (2.8 in)-long tail, and weighs an average of 14.5–16 g (0.51–0.56 oz). The marsh shrew's diet consists mainly of invertebrates, which it hunts on land and in the water. They are rare; their populations are thought to be in decline, and they are considered endangered in parts of their range.

Marsh shrew
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Eulipotyphla
Family: Soricidae
Genus: Sorex
Species:
S. bendirii
Binomial name
Sorex bendirii
Merriam, 1884
Subspecies
  • S. b. albiventer (Merriam, 1895)
  • S. b. bendirii (Merriam, 1884)
  • S. b. palmeri (Merriam, 1895)
Marsh shrew range
Synonyms[2]
List
  • Atophyrax bendirii
    Merriam, 1884
  • Sorex bendirii
    Dobson, 1890
  • Sorex (Atophyrax) bendirii palmeri
    Merriam, 1895

Description edit

 
Marsh shrew skull (side view)
 
 
Skull top and bottom views

The marsh shrew is the largest member of the genus Sorex in North America,[2] and mammalogist David Nagorsen described it as "an attractive mammal".[3] Its fur is primarily dark brown, and it has a long tail.[1] Although the marsh shrew's fur is usually uniformly dark on its back and abdomen,[4] the abdominal fur of populations (S. b. albiventer) on the Olympic Peninsula may be white.[4] The marsh shrew is about 16 cm (6.3 in) in length, including a 7-centimetre (2.8 in)-long tail, and weighs about 14.5–16 g (0.51–0.56 oz).[5] Its hind feet, slightly fringed with coarse hairs on the toes,[6] measure about 19.2 mm (0.76 in).

Although in some areas the marsh shrew is sympatric with other members of the genus Sorex,[7] no other large, velvety, gray-black shrew shares this geographic range.[4] Its size distinguishes it from all but the American water shrew (Sorex palustris).[3] Although the marsh shrew and the American water shrew (the two largest shrews in North America) share some features,[4] the American water shrew has more dark-grey-to-black fur on its back, a silver-grey belly and a bi-colored tail[3] and the marsh shrew's fringed hairs are more distinct.[4] The American water shrew has a smaller skull, without the marsh shrew's characteristic curvature, and its upper incisors have less-distinct medial tines.[3] The marsh shrew typically has a longer snout than that of the American water shrew, which is more streamlined when viewed from the side.[4]

The marsh shrew's skull is relatively large,[3] and its condylobasal skull length is usually greater than 19.3 mm (0.76 in).[4] There is a distinctive, downward-sloping curve along the snout (rostrum).[3] Its dental formula is incisors: 1/1; unicuspids: 5/1; premolars: 1/1; molars: 3/3.[3] Of the five upper unicuspids the third is distinctly smaller than the fourth, and they have a pigmented ridge extending to the cingulum.[3] There is a large medial tine on the large upper incisor, in the anterior pigmented region.[3] The reddish pigmentation of the enamel, the result of iron deposits, is thought to be an adaptation strengthening the enamel.[8]

There are no known fossil remains.[4] The marsh shrew's karyotype somatic number is 2n = 54, and its fundamental number = 70.[9]

Taxonomy and naming edit

It was first described in the scientific literature in 1884 by Clinton Hart Merriam with its original name, Atophyrax bendirii (a monotypic taxon at the time).[9] The first specimen was obtained 18 mi (29 km) southeast of Fort Klamath in Klamath County, Oregon, at a location 1 mi (1.6 km) from the Williamson River.[9] Merriam obtained the specimen from Charles Bendire, an ornithologist and army captain stationed at Fort Klamath.[10] The shrew was caught in late July or early August by one of the dogs in the camp, and a soldier gave it to Bendire. Merriam named it Bendire's shrew (Atophyrax bendirii) in appreciation of Bendire's contribution.[10] Merriam reported that the animal represented a new genus, Atophyrax, deriving from the Greek and meaning "anomalous sorex".[11] The marsh shrew was later reclassified in the genus Sorex.

 
Palmer marsh shrew (S. b. palmeri); type specimen skull depiction from Merriam, 1895

The marsh shrew and the American water shrew (Sorex palustris) share many physical characteristics. The former is found in a narrower area from the northwest coast to the lower slopes of the inland mountains. The American water shrew is more widely distributed across the western mountains and through the subarctic regions of Canada and the eastern U.S.[12] The species' ranges are primarily allopatric; although they may overlap (sympatry) in coastal regions of the Pacific Northwest, differences in elevation tend to separate them.[12] Early taxonomists placed these mammals into separate subgenera; Merriam assigned the marsh shrew to Atophyrax, and Jackson (1928) assigned the Pacific water shrew to Neosorex. A closer, dentition-based relationship was assigned by Findley (1955), with both species assigned to the subgenus Otisorex.[12] Findley hypothesized that in the early Pleistocene, the ancestors of masked and vagrant shrews (Sorex cinereus and Sorex vagrans, respectively) diverged;[13] during the Yarmouth interglacial, the American water shrew and marsh shrew diverged from their vagrant-shrew ancestors.[13] Three other Sorex species evolved during the Sangamonian Stage: the dwarf shrew (S. nanus), the southeastern shrew (Sorex longirostris) and the ornate shrew (Sorex ornatus).[13] Findley's assignment of the marsh shrew and the American water shrew to Otisorex was later reinforced by biochemical and genetic studies. In 2005, findings were published (based on mitochondrial DNA analysis) which better defined the nature of the relationships between marsh shrews, Pacific water shrews and their respective subspecies. Variations in the sequencing of cytochrome b mitochondrial DNA were assessed, and the results of the 2005 phylogeny for the marsh shrew are shown below in detail.[12]

Sorex

Sorex ornatus

Sorex vagrans

S. palustris palustris

Sorex bendirii
S. b. bendirii

TK75014

TK75011

S. b. palmeri

AF238031

AF238032

S. b. bendirii

TK55976

TK55975

Sorex palustris

S. p. navigator

S. p. navigator

S. p. brooksi

S. p. navigator

Subspecies edit

The marsh shrew has three subspecies:[9]

  • S. bendirii albiventer (Merriam, 1895)
  • S. bendirii bendirii (Merriam, 1884)
  • S. bendirii palmeri (Merriam, 1895)

S. b. albiventer is found on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington, S . b . bendirii in the Cascades and southwestern British Columbia and S. b. palmeri in coastal Oregon. These specifications have historically been based on fur markings, skull shape and dental details of unclear significance, and their validity is uncertain.[12]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Marsh shrews often live near marshes with western skunk cabbage.

The geographic range of the marsh shrew extends from southwest British Columbia, along the western regions of the U.S. states of Washington and Oregon and through northwestern California to the area north of San Francisco.[14] The subspecies S. b. albiventer is found on the Olympic Peninsula. S. b. palmeri is found from western Oregon (south of the Columbia River) to extrema northwestern California. S. b. bendirii is found from the northern parts of the range (except for the Olympic Peninsula) south along the eastern range to the remaining range in California.[14] In British Columbia the eastern limits are the Chilliwack River and Agassiz, and the northern limits are the low elevations on the north shore of Burrard Inlet.[3]

Marsh shrews typically live in wetlands (such as marshes), and their habitat includes extensive forest canopy and ground cover from shrubs, logs, and debris;[3] they may also be found in riparian environments.[1] During cold, rainy seasons, they may travel as much as a kilometer from wet areas to more sheltered habitats;[14] these generally include mixed deciduous or coniferous forest with downed logs and surface cover.[1] Marsh shrews have been collected from near sea level to as high as 4,356 ft (1,328 m) in the Cascades.[15] They may inhabit forests of red alder, bigleaf maple, western hemlock or redcedar, often near marshes with western skunk cabbage.[3] In British Columbia the marsh shrew is generally found below 600 metres (2,000 ft), but it has been collected at 850 metres (2,790 ft) in Mount Seymour Provincial Park.[3] Environmental officials in British Columbia believe that marsh shrews are one of the rarest small mammals in the province.[16] In 1992, Carlos Galindo-Leal and Gustavo Zuleta trapped 1,000 small mammals at 55 locations in a large area of southwestern British Columbia; only three were Pacific water shrews.[3]

During spring and summer 1983, biologists in western Oregon studied small-mammal distribution (including marsh shrews) near streams and along the riparian fringes of coniferous forests. "Riparian fringe" was defined as at least 15–20 m from a stream. The North American deermouse was caught in greater numbers than any other mammal, representing around 80% of all captures. Sixteen species were trapped, with the marsh shrew representing less than two percent of mammals captured in this study. All the marsh shrews were trapped at streamside, and were found in all three ages of coniferous forests: old-growth, mature and young growth.[17]

Behavior and ecology edit

The marsh shrew eats invertebrates, including spiders, earthworms, sowbugs, centipedes, termites and other terrestrial and aquatic arthropods.[14] It was observed in captivity pursuing and killing a goldfish, but not eating it.[18] In contrast, the American water shrew has been observed killing and eating fish.[18] A study of the gastric contents of marsh shrews in Oregon indicated that at least 25% of their diet is aquatic,[19] including insect larvae, slugs and snails, mayfly naiads and other, unidentified invertebrates.[20] Other researchers have reported that their diet may also include aquatic insects (water beetles and stonefly nymphs), craneflies, ground beetles, spiders, harvestmen, centipedes, earthworms, slugs and small terrestrial snails.[3] The marsh shrew swims, making short dives in search of food;[1] its mobile snout, whiskers and lips are used to find and capture underwater prey.[14] Before eating, it returns to land.[14] Air trapped in its fur provides buoyancy, and marsh shrews can run for as long as 3 to 5 seconds along the top of the water.[14] According to mammalogist Donald Pattie, they can "scull on the surface like whirligig beetles".[14] The air trapped in its fur gives it a silvery sheen.[14] On land, its foreleg and opposite hind leg move at the same time.[14]

 
Marsh shrew from C. Hart Merriam's original 1884 description

It is active throughout the year, primarily at night. Gestation is about three weeks, and the female has a litter of three or four young.[3] Nests in the wild, built from shredded bark,[3] are in a tunnel or under a log. Marsh shrews typically live about 18 months,[1] and males are not thought to reach sexual maturity during their first summer.[21][3] Since their lifespan is short, they apparently breed for only one season.[1] Although no breeding data exist for British Columbia, the breeding season elsewhere is from late January to late August; most young are born in March.[3] The number of litters a female rears is unknown.[3]

The strong odor associated with marsh shrews (in common with other long-tailed shrews) may be a means of communication.[14] Similar to other shrews, they have poor eyesight.[14] If a marsh shrew is placed in a foreign environment (such as along an edge of a raised surface), it will run off the edge and continue to run after landing on the surface below.[22] Landing in water, it dives beneath the surface.[22] Marsh shrews are easily trapped in sunken cans, possibly due to their inability to see where the edges of surfaces drop.[21] In captivity they vocalize when they are displaced or scuffle with other animals in their cage,[14] twittering shrilly if disturbed while eating or in a confrontation over food (such as a worm).[22] Although it is uncertain whether marsh shrews cache (or hoard) food in the wild,[22] in captivity they set aside nightcrawlers in a corner of the cage for later consumption;[15] no other food items were set aside in this fashion.[15]

Acarine parasites include the Glycyphagidae (Glycyphagus hypudaei and Orycteroxenus soricis); the Laelapidae (Androlaelaps fahrenholzi, Echinonyssus obsoletus, Haemogamasus occidentalis and Haemogamasus reidi); the Listrophoridae (Listrophorus mexicanus); the Myobiidae (Amorphacarus hengererorum, Amorphacarus soricis, Protomyobia atophyracis and Protomyobia brevisetosa), and the Pygmephoridae (Pygmephorus horridus and Pygmephorus whitakeri).[23] Probable predators include owls, fish and the Pacific giant salamander.[3]

Human interaction edit

 
Charles Bendire, after whom the marsh shrew was named

Before Donald Pattie's research during the late 1960s, when his team studied marsh shrews in captivity, little was known about their behavior.[15] Before then, most information about the marsh shrew was from notes about the mammal's habitat and information about trapping it. Its descriptions in the literature were largely derived from the examination of museum specimens.[15]

Conservation status edit

Marsh shrews are listed as "Endangered" by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC),[1] their habitat in British Columbia limited to the lower Fraser Valley. Their available habitat continues to degrade as a result of economic activity in the area; with little chance of the trend reversing, they are rare in that part of Canada. COSEWIC designated the marsh shrew as "Threatened" from April 1994 until May 2000, updating its status in April 2006 to "Endangered."[24] According to the IUCN, marsh shrews are of "Least Concern" in terms of conservation. Although the shrew is considered a rare mammal and its numbers are thought to be in decline, no population estimates are currently provided and its rate of decline is not considered fast enough to warrant placing it in a more-threatened category. Suitable wetland habitat is declining, due primarily to urbanization and the conversion of habitat to agriculture, and areas of protected habitat are expected to be provided in the shrew's broad geographic range.[1]

References edit

Footnotes:

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Cassola 2016.
  2. ^ a b Verts & Carraway 1998, p. 49.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Nagorsen 1996, pp. 79–82.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Pattie 1973, p. 1.
  5. ^ Pattie 1973.
  6. ^ Pattie 1973, pp. 1–2.
  7. ^ Verts & Carraway 1998, pp. 45–64.
  8. ^ Strait & Smith 2006.
  9. ^ a b c d Hutterer 2005, p. 285.
  10. ^ a b Merriam 1884, p. 217.
  11. ^ Merriam 1884, p. 221.
  12. ^ a b c d e O'Neill, Nagorsen & Baker 2005.
  13. ^ a b c George 1988.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Pattie 1973, p. 2.
  15. ^ a b c d e Pattie 1969, p. 27.
  16. ^ "Pacific Water Shrew" (PDF). British Columbia Ministry of Environment. British Columbia Ministry of Environment. (PDF) from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  17. ^ Anthony et al. 1987.
  18. ^ a b Pattie 1969, p. 30.
  19. ^ Verts & Carraway 1998, p. 50.
  20. ^ Verts & Carraway 1998, pp. 50–51.
  21. ^ a b Pattie 1969, p. 32.
  22. ^ a b c d Pattie 1969, p. 31.
  23. ^ Whitaker et al. 2007, pp. 75–76.
  24. ^ "NatureServe". NatureServe Explorer: An online encyclopedia of life. NatureServe, Arlington, Virginia. from the original on 21 December 2014. Retrieved 21 December 2014.

Sources:

  • Anthony, R. G.; Forsman, E. D.; Green, G. A.; Witmer, G.; Nelson, S. K. (1987). "Small Mammal Populations in Riparian Zones of Different-Aged Coniferous Forests". The Murrelet. 68 (3): 94. doi:10.2307/3534114. JSTOR 3534114.
  • Cassola, F. (2016). Sorex bendirii (errata version published in 2017). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T41389A22313946.en.
  • George, S. B. (1988). "Systematics, Historical Biogeography, and Evolution of the Genus Sorex". Journal of Mammalogy. 69 (3): 443–461. doi:10.2307/1381337. JSTOR 1381337.
  • Hutterer, R. (2005). "Order Soricomorpha". 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. 285. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  • Merriam, C Hart (1884). A new genus and species of Sorecidae. Press of L. S. Foster. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
  • Nagorsen, David W. (1996). Opossums, Shrews and Moles of British Columbia. UBC Press. ISBN 978-0-7748-0563-6. from the original on 2016-12-23. Retrieved 2016-10-16.
  • O'Neill, M B; Nagorsen, D W; Baker, R J (November 2005). "Mitochondrial DNA variation in water shrews from western North America: implications for taxonomy and phylogeography". Canadian Journal of Zoology. 83 (11): 1469–1475. doi:10.1139/z05-146.
  • Pattie, Donald (13 June 1973). (PDF). Mammalian Species (27): 1–2. doi:10.2307/3503886. JSTOR 3503886. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 December 2014. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  • Pattie, D. L. (1969). "Behavior of Captive Marsh Shrews (Sorex bendirii)". The Murrelet. 50 (3): 27–32. doi:10.2307/3535348. JSTOR 3535348.
  • Strait, S. G.; Smith, S. C. (August 2006). "Elemental Analysis Of Soricine Enamel: Pigmentation Variation and Distribution in Molars of Blarina Brevicauda". Journal of Mammalogy. 87 (4). American Society of Mammalogists: 700–705. doi:10.1644/05-MAMM-A-265R4.1.
  • Verts, B.J.; Carraway, Leslie N (1998). Land mammals of Oregon. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520211995. from the original on 11 February 2017. 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.

Further reading edit

  • Lindgren, Pontus. "Accounts and Measures for Managing Identified Wildlife" (PDF). Retrieved 21 December 2014.

External links edit

  Data related to Sorex bendirii at Wikispecies

marsh, shrew, marsh, shrew, sorex, bendirii, also, known, pacific, water, shrew, bendire, water, shrew, bendire, shrew, jesus, shrew, largest, north, american, member, genus, sorex, long, tailed, shrews, primarily, covered, dark, brown, found, near, aquatic, h. The marsh shrew Sorex bendirii also known as the Pacific water shrew Bendire s water shrew Bendire s shrew and Jesus shrew is the largest North American member of the genus Sorex long tailed shrews Primarily covered in dark brown fur it is found near aquatic habitats along the Pacific coast from southern British Columbia to northern California With air trapped in its fur for buoyancy marsh shrews can run for three to five seconds on top of the water It measures about 16 cm 6 3 in in length including a 7 centimetre 2 8 in long tail and weighs an average of 14 5 16 g 0 51 0 56 oz The marsh shrew s diet consists mainly of invertebrates which it hunts on land and in the water They are rare their populations are thought to be in decline and they are considered endangered in parts of their range Marsh shrewConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder EulipotyphlaFamily SoricidaeGenus SorexSpecies S bendiriiBinomial nameSorex bendiriiMerriam 1884SubspeciesS b albiventer Merriam 1895 S b bendirii Merriam 1884 S b palmeri Merriam 1895 Marsh shrew rangeSynonyms 2 List Atophyrax bendiriiMerriam 1884Sorex bendiriiDobson 1890Sorex Atophyrax bendirii palmeriMerriam 1895 Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy and naming 2 1 Subspecies 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behavior and ecology 5 Human interaction 5 1 Conservation status 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDescription edit nbsp Marsh shrew skull side view nbsp nbsp Skull top and bottom views The marsh shrew is the largest member of the genus Sorex in North America 2 and mammalogist David Nagorsen described it as an attractive mammal 3 Its fur is primarily dark brown and it has a long tail 1 Although the marsh shrew s fur is usually uniformly dark on its back and abdomen 4 the abdominal fur of populations S b albiventer on the Olympic Peninsula may be white 4 The marsh shrew is about 16 cm 6 3 in in length including a 7 centimetre 2 8 in long tail and weighs about 14 5 16 g 0 51 0 56 oz 5 Its hind feet slightly fringed with coarse hairs on the toes 6 measure about 19 2 mm 0 76 in Although in some areas the marsh shrew is sympatric with other members of the genus Sorex 7 no other large velvety gray black shrew shares this geographic range 4 Its size distinguishes it from all but the American water shrew Sorex palustris 3 Although the marsh shrew and the American water shrew the two largest shrews in North America share some features 4 the American water shrew has more dark grey to black fur on its back a silver grey belly and a bi colored tail 3 and the marsh shrew s fringed hairs are more distinct 4 The American water shrew has a smaller skull without the marsh shrew s characteristic curvature and its upper incisors have less distinct medial tines 3 The marsh shrew typically has a longer snout than that of the American water shrew which is more streamlined when viewed from the side 4 The marsh shrew s skull is relatively large 3 and its condylobasal skull length is usually greater than 19 3 mm 0 76 in 4 There is a distinctive downward sloping curve along the snout rostrum 3 Its dental formula is incisors 1 1 unicuspids 5 1 premolars 1 1 molars 3 3 3 Of the five upper unicuspids the third is distinctly smaller than the fourth and they have a pigmented ridge extending to the cingulum 3 There is a large medial tine on the large upper incisor in the anterior pigmented region 3 The reddish pigmentation of the enamel the result of iron deposits is thought to be an adaptation strengthening the enamel 8 There are no known fossil remains 4 The marsh shrew s karyotype somatic number is 2n 54 and its fundamental number 70 9 Taxonomy and naming editIt was first described in the scientific literature in 1884 by Clinton Hart Merriam with its original name Atophyrax bendirii a monotypic taxon at the time 9 The first specimen was obtained 18 mi 29 km southeast of Fort Klamath in Klamath County Oregon at a location 1 mi 1 6 km from the Williamson River 9 Merriam obtained the specimen from Charles Bendire an ornithologist and army captain stationed at Fort Klamath 10 The shrew was caught in late July or early August by one of the dogs in the camp and a soldier gave it to Bendire Merriam named it Bendire s shrew Atophyrax bendirii in appreciation of Bendire s contribution 10 Merriam reported that the animal represented a new genus Atophyrax deriving from the Greek and meaning anomalous sorex 11 The marsh shrew was later reclassified in the genus Sorex nbsp Palmer marsh shrew S b palmeri type specimen skull depiction from Merriam 1895The marsh shrew and the American water shrew Sorex palustris share many physical characteristics The former is found in a narrower area from the northwest coast to the lower slopes of the inland mountains The American water shrew is more widely distributed across the western mountains and through the subarctic regions of Canada and the eastern U S 12 The species ranges are primarily allopatric although they may overlap sympatry in coastal regions of the Pacific Northwest differences in elevation tend to separate them 12 Early taxonomists placed these mammals into separate subgenera Merriam assigned the marsh shrew to Atophyrax and Jackson 1928 assigned the Pacific water shrew to Neosorex A closer dentition based relationship was assigned by Findley 1955 with both species assigned to the subgenus Otisorex 12 Findley hypothesized that in the early Pleistocene the ancestors of masked and vagrant shrews Sorex cinereus and Sorex vagrans respectively diverged 13 during the Yarmouth interglacial the American water shrew and marsh shrew diverged from their vagrant shrew ancestors 13 Three other Sorex species evolved during the Sangamonian Stage the dwarf shrew S nanus the southeastern shrew Sorex longirostris and the ornate shrew Sorex ornatus 13 Findley s assignment of the marsh shrew and the American water shrew to Otisorex was later reinforced by biochemical and genetic studies In 2005 findings were published based on mitochondrial DNA analysis which better defined the nature of the relationships between marsh shrews Pacific water shrews and their respective subspecies Variations in the sequencing of cytochrome b mitochondrial DNA were assessed and the results of the 2005 phylogeny for the marsh shrew are shown below in detail 12 Sorex Sorex ornatusSorex vagransS palustris palustrisSorex bendirii S b bendirii TK75014TK75011S b palmeri AF238031AF238032S b bendirii TK55976TK55975Sorex palustris S p navigatorS p navigatorS p brooksiS p navigator Subspecies edit The marsh shrew has three subspecies 9 S bendirii albiventer Merriam 1895 S bendirii bendirii Merriam 1884 S bendirii palmeri Merriam 1895 S b albiventer is found on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington S b bendirii in the Cascades and southwestern British Columbia and S b palmeri in coastal Oregon These specifications have historically been based on fur markings skull shape and dental details of unclear significance and their validity is uncertain 12 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Marsh shrews often live near marshes with western skunk cabbage The geographic range of the marsh shrew extends from southwest British Columbia along the western regions of the U S states of Washington and Oregon and through northwestern California to the area north of San Francisco 14 The subspecies S b albiventer is found on the Olympic Peninsula S b palmeri is found from western Oregon south of the Columbia River to extrema northwestern California S b bendirii is found from the northern parts of the range except for the Olympic Peninsula south along the eastern range to the remaining range in California 14 In British Columbia the eastern limits are the Chilliwack River and Agassiz and the northern limits are the low elevations on the north shore of Burrard Inlet 3 Marsh shrews typically live in wetlands such as marshes and their habitat includes extensive forest canopy and ground cover from shrubs logs and debris 3 they may also be found in riparian environments 1 During cold rainy seasons they may travel as much as a kilometer from wet areas to more sheltered habitats 14 these generally include mixed deciduous or coniferous forest with downed logs and surface cover 1 Marsh shrews have been collected from near sea level to as high as 4 356 ft 1 328 m in the Cascades 15 They may inhabit forests of red alder bigleaf maple western hemlock or redcedar often near marshes with western skunk cabbage 3 In British Columbia the marsh shrew is generally found below 600 metres 2 000 ft but it has been collected at 850 metres 2 790 ft in Mount Seymour Provincial Park 3 Environmental officials in British Columbia believe that marsh shrews are one of the rarest small mammals in the province 16 In 1992 Carlos Galindo Leal and Gustavo Zuleta trapped 1 000 small mammals at 55 locations in a large area of southwestern British Columbia only three were Pacific water shrews 3 During spring and summer 1983 biologists in western Oregon studied small mammal distribution including marsh shrews near streams and along the riparian fringes of coniferous forests Riparian fringe was defined as at least 15 20 m from a stream The North American deermouse was caught in greater numbers than any other mammal representing around 80 of all captures Sixteen species were trapped with the marsh shrew representing less than two percent of mammals captured in this study All the marsh shrews were trapped at streamside and were found in all three ages of coniferous forests old growth mature and young growth 17 Behavior and ecology editThe marsh shrew eats invertebrates including spiders earthworms sowbugs centipedes termites and other terrestrial and aquatic arthropods 14 It was observed in captivity pursuing and killing a goldfish but not eating it 18 In contrast the American water shrew has been observed killing and eating fish 18 A study of the gastric contents of marsh shrews in Oregon indicated that at least 25 of their diet is aquatic 19 including insect larvae slugs and snails mayfly naiads and other unidentified invertebrates 20 Other researchers have reported that their diet may also include aquatic insects water beetles and stonefly nymphs craneflies ground beetles spiders harvestmen centipedes earthworms slugs and small terrestrial snails 3 The marsh shrew swims making short dives in search of food 1 its mobile snout whiskers and lips are used to find and capture underwater prey 14 Before eating it returns to land 14 Air trapped in its fur provides buoyancy and marsh shrews can run for as long as 3 to 5 seconds along the top of the water 14 According to mammalogist Donald Pattie they can scull on the surface like whirligig beetles 14 The air trapped in its fur gives it a silvery sheen 14 On land its foreleg and opposite hind leg move at the same time 14 nbsp Marsh shrew from C Hart Merriam s original 1884 descriptionIt is active throughout the year primarily at night Gestation is about three weeks and the female has a litter of three or four young 3 Nests in the wild built from shredded bark 3 are in a tunnel or under a log Marsh shrews typically live about 18 months 1 and males are not thought to reach sexual maturity during their first summer 21 3 Since their lifespan is short they apparently breed for only one season 1 Although no breeding data exist for British Columbia the breeding season elsewhere is from late January to late August most young are born in March 3 The number of litters a female rears is unknown 3 The strong odor associated with marsh shrews in common with other long tailed shrews may be a means of communication 14 Similar to other shrews they have poor eyesight 14 If a marsh shrew is placed in a foreign environment such as along an edge of a raised surface it will run off the edge and continue to run after landing on the surface below 22 Landing in water it dives beneath the surface 22 Marsh shrews are easily trapped in sunken cans possibly due to their inability to see where the edges of surfaces drop 21 In captivity they vocalize when they are displaced or scuffle with other animals in their cage 14 twittering shrilly if disturbed while eating or in a confrontation over food such as a worm 22 Although it is uncertain whether marsh shrews cache or hoard food in the wild 22 in captivity they set aside nightcrawlers in a corner of the cage for later consumption 15 no other food items were set aside in this fashion 15 Acarine parasites include the Glycyphagidae Glycyphagus hypudaei and Orycteroxenus soricis the Laelapidae Androlaelaps fahrenholzi Echinonyssus obsoletus Haemogamasus occidentalis and Haemogamasus reidi the Listrophoridae Listrophorus mexicanus the Myobiidae Amorphacarus hengererorum Amorphacarus soricis Protomyobia atophyracis and Protomyobia brevisetosa and the Pygmephoridae Pygmephorus horridus and Pygmephorus whitakeri 23 Probable predators include owls fish and the Pacific giant salamander 3 Human interaction edit nbsp Charles Bendire after whom the marsh shrew was namedBefore Donald Pattie s research during the late 1960s when his team studied marsh shrews in captivity little was known about their behavior 15 Before then most information about the marsh shrew was from notes about the mammal s habitat and information about trapping it Its descriptions in the literature were largely derived from the examination of museum specimens 15 Conservation status edit Marsh shrews are listed as Endangered by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada COSEWIC 1 their habitat in British Columbia limited to the lower Fraser Valley Their available habitat continues to degrade as a result of economic activity in the area with little chance of the trend reversing they are rare in that part of Canada COSEWIC designated the marsh shrew as Threatened from April 1994 until May 2000 updating its status in April 2006 to Endangered 24 According to the IUCN marsh shrews are of Least Concern in terms of conservation Although the shrew is considered a rare mammal and its numbers are thought to be in decline no population estimates are currently provided and its rate of decline is not considered fast enough to warrant placing it in a more threatened category Suitable wetland habitat is declining due primarily to urbanization and the conversion of habitat to agriculture and areas of protected habitat are expected to be provided in the shrew s broad geographic range 1 References editFootnotes a b c d e f g h i Cassola 2016 a b Verts amp Carraway 1998 p 49 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Nagorsen 1996 pp 79 82 a b c d e f g h Pattie 1973 p 1 Pattie 1973 Pattie 1973 pp 1 2 Verts amp Carraway 1998 pp 45 64 Strait amp Smith 2006 a b c d Hutterer 2005 p 285 a b Merriam 1884 p 217 Merriam 1884 p 221 a b c d e O Neill Nagorsen amp Baker 2005 a b c George 1988 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Pattie 1973 p 2 a b c d e Pattie 1969 p 27 Pacific Water Shrew PDF British Columbia Ministry of Environment British Columbia Ministry of Environment Archived PDF from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 21 December 2014 Anthony et al 1987 a b Pattie 1969 p 30 Verts amp Carraway 1998 p 50 Verts amp Carraway 1998 pp 50 51 a b Pattie 1969 p 32 a b c d Pattie 1969 p 31 Whitaker et al 2007 pp 75 76 NatureServe NatureServe Explorer An online encyclopedia of life NatureServe Arlington Virginia Archived from the original on 21 December 2014 Retrieved 21 December 2014 Sources Anthony R G Forsman E D Green G A Witmer G Nelson S K 1987 Small Mammal Populations in Riparian Zones of Different Aged Coniferous Forests The Murrelet 68 3 94 doi 10 2307 3534114 JSTOR 3534114 Cassola F 2016 Sorex bendirii errata version published in 2017 The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T41389A22313946 en George S B 1988 Systematics Historical Biogeography and Evolution of the Genus Sorex Journal of Mammalogy 69 3 443 461 doi 10 2307 1381337 JSTOR 1381337 Hutterer R 2005 Order Soricomorpha 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 285 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Merriam C Hart 1884 A new genus and species of Sorecidae Press of L S Foster Retrieved 20 December 2014 Nagorsen David W 1996 Opossums Shrews and Moles of British Columbia UBC Press ISBN 978 0 7748 0563 6 Archived from the original on 2016 12 23 Retrieved 2016 10 16 O Neill M B Nagorsen D W Baker R J November 2005 Mitochondrial DNA variation in water shrews from western North America implications for taxonomy and phylogeography Canadian Journal of Zoology 83 11 1469 1475 doi 10 1139 z05 146 Pattie Donald 13 June 1973 Sorex bendirii PDF Mammalian Species 27 1 2 doi 10 2307 3503886 JSTOR 3503886 Archived from the original PDF on 21 December 2014 Retrieved 21 December 2014 Pattie D L 1969 Behavior of Captive Marsh Shrews Sorex bendirii The Murrelet 50 3 27 32 doi 10 2307 3535348 JSTOR 3535348 Strait S G Smith S C August 2006 Elemental Analysis Of Soricine Enamel Pigmentation Variation and Distribution in Molars of Blarina Brevicauda Journal of Mammalogy 87 4 American Society of Mammalogists 700 705 doi 10 1644 05 MAMM A 265R4 1 Verts B J Carraway Leslie N 1998 Land mammals of Oregon Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520211995 Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 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 Further reading editLindgren Pontus Accounts and Measures for Managing Identified Wildlife PDF Retrieved 21 December 2014 External links edit nbsp Data related to Sorex bendirii at Wikispecies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marsh shrew amp oldid 1110629211, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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