Little native mouse

Species of mammal


title: "Little native mouse" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["pseudomys", "mammals-of-western-australia", "mammals-of-the-northern-territory", "mammals-of-new-south-wales", "mammals-of-queensland", "rodents-of-australia", "mammals-described-in-1842", "taxonomy-articles-created-by-polbot", "rodents-of-new-guinea"] description: "Species of mammal" topic_path: "geography/australia" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_native_mouse" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Species of mammal ::

| name = Little native mouse | image = Pseudomys delicatus 20020401.jpg | status = LC | status_system = IUCN3.1 | status_ref = | genus = Pseudomys | species = delicatulus | authority = (Gould, 1842) | synonyms =

The little native mouse (Pseudomys delicatulus), also known as the delicate mouse, is a species of rodent in the family Muridae. The Kunwinjku people of western Arnhem Land call this little creature kijbuk.

It is found in Western Australia, the Northern Territory, Queensland, New South Wales and Papua New Guinea.

Taxonomy

In 2024, genetic study revealed that delicate mouse populations actually belong to not one, but three different species. In the announcement paper Emily Roycroft et al. proposed names based on the rodents' geographic distribution: the western delicate mouse or the Pilbara delicate mouse, the eastern delicate mouse and the northern delicate mouse.

Description and behaviour

The little native mouse has fur that is yellow-brown to grey-brown above and white underneath. It is the smallest of all Australian native mice with a head and body length of 55–75 mm with adults of both sexes being roughly the same in size, weight (6–15 g) and colour. In Arnhem Land, the only place the species has been studied at length, breeding takes place in July and August. Two to four young are born in a grass-lined nesting chamber after a gestation of 28–31 days. At birth the eyes are shut and the ears tightly folded back, they develop quickly and are independent of the mother around four weeks of age.

Habitat

The species is found in sandy, well drained, sparsely covered savanna. The animal lives in hollow logs, under pieces of bark, or in burrows, the design of which varies with local conditions: in hard granite sand ridges the burrow is shallow, intricately constructed retreats with many false passages and one main nesting chamber; in sandy conditions the burrows are deep simple structures around two metres long and with only one main chamber. It occasionally excavates burrows in termite mounds.{{cite web | last = | first = | title = Delicate Mouse - profile | work = New South Wales Threatened Species | publisher = NSW Department of Environment and Climate Change | date = 2005-01-09 | url = http://www.threatenedspecies.environment.nsw.gov.au/tsprofile/profile.aspx?id=10685 | doi = | access-date = 2009-07-04}}

Diet

Grass seeds from native grasses comprise most of their diet.

References

References

  1. Burbidge, A.A.. (2016). "''Pseudomys delicatulus''".
  2. Reverend Peterson Nganjmirra, personal comment in ''Goodfellow, Fauna of Kakadu and the Top End'', 1993)
  3. (February 22, 2024). "Two New Species of Native Mice Discovered in Australia".
  4. Horner, B.E.. (1986). "Australian Mammals".
  5. Taylor, J.M.. (1970). "Observations on reproduction in Leggadina".

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pseudomysmammals-of-western-australiamammals-of-the-northern-territorymammals-of-new-south-walesmammals-of-queenslandrodents-of-australiamammals-described-in-1842taxonomy-articles-created-by-polbotrodents-of-new-guinea