Subgenus of rodents
Nannomys is a subgenus of the rodent genus Mus , the mice. They are known as the African pygmy mice .[ 1] These species are native to sub-Saharan Africa , where they can be found in many types of habitat.[ 1] There are 20 species.[ 2]
Species include:[ 3]
Baoule's mouse , Mus baoulei (Ivory Coast to Guinea)
Toad mouse , Mus bufo (Mountains of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and neighboring parts of the Democratic Republic of Congo)
Callewaert's mouse , Mus callewaerti (Angola and Democratic Republic of Congo)
Gounda mouse , Mus goundae (Central African Republic)
Hausa mouse , Mus haussa (Senegal to northern Nigeria)
Ethiopian striped mouse , Mus imberbis (Ethiopia) (formerly classified in its own genus, Muriculus )[ 4]
Desert pygmy mouse , Mus indutus (Southern Angola to western Zimbabwe and northern South Africa)
Mahomet mouse , Mus mahomet (Ethiopia, southwestern Uganda and southwestern Kenya)
Matthey's mouse , Mus mattheyi (Ghana)
African pygmy mouse , Mus minutoides (Zimbabwe, Southern Mozambique, South Africa)
Harenna mouse , Mus harennensis (southern Ethiopia)[ 5]
Temminck's mouse , Mus musculoides (Africa south of the Sahara, excluding the range of Mus minutoides )
Neave's mouse , Mus neavei (Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo to northeastern South Africa)
Free State pygmy mouse , Mus orangiae (South Africa)
Oubangui mouse , Mus oubanguii (Central African Republic)
Peters's mouse , Mus setulosus (Senegal to Ethiopia and western Kenya)
Setzer's pygmy mouse , Mus setzeri (Northeastern Namibia, Botswana, and western Zambia)
Thomas's pygmy mouse , Mus sorella (Eastern Cameroon to western Tanzania)
Delicate mouse , Mus tenellus (Sudan to southern Somalia and central Tanzania)
Gray-bellied pygmy mouse , Mus triton (Southern Ethiopia to central Angola and Malawi)
^ a b Veyrunes, F., et al. (2005). Molecular phylogeny of the African pygmy mice, subgenus Nannomys (Rodentia, Murinae, Mus ): implications for chromosomal evolution. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution , 36(2), 358-369.
^ Veyrunes, F., et al. (2006). Phylogenomics of the genus Mus (Rodentia; Muridae): extensive genome repatterning is not restricted to the house mouse. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences , 273(1604), 2925-2934.
^ Mus (Nannomys ) Peters, 1876. Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS)
^ Meheretu, Yonas; Šumbera, Radim; Bryja, Josef (2015-02-01). "Enigmatic Ethiopian endemic rodent Muriculus imberbis (Rüppell 1842) represents a separate lineage within genus Mus" . Mammalia . 79 (1): 15–23. doi :10.1515/mammalia-2013-0119 . ISSN 1864-1547 . S2CID 87805083 .
^ Krásová, J.; et al. (2022). "A new rodent species of the genus Mus (Rodentia: Muridae) confirms the biogeographical uniqueness of the isolated forests of southern Ethiopia" . Organisms Diversity & Evolution . 22 (2). Springer Nature : 491–509. doi :10.1007/s13127-022-00539-x . S2CID 246405287 .