Habitat use and body form of the long-tailed mouse (Pseudomys higginsi)
DM Stoddart and G Challis
Wildlife Research
20(6) 733 - 737
Published: 1993
Abstract
The Tasmanian long-tailed mouse (Pseudomys higginsi) is more readily trapped in upland habitats (alpine and montane forest habitats) than in lowland forests in southern Tasmania. Morphometric examination of the relationship between hind-foot length and head-body length, and tail length and head-body length, in eight species of Pseudomys reveals that P. higginsi has both a relatively longer hind foot and tail than other species in the genus, but the significance of this is unclear.https://doi.org/10.1071/WR9930733
© CSIRO 1993