Mouse
Description
A small rodent (Mus Musculus), such as the house mouse (Mus Domesticus), that is found throughout the world, except Antartica. Mice are generally considered pests, but some species are kept as pets and others are used in laboratory experiments. Mice eat seeds, insects, vegetation, and many other items. They can rapidly damage collections by chewing through fabric, wood, leather, and other types of containers to reach food or create a nesting site. Signs of mouse activity include gnaw marks, fecal pellets, urine stains, and mousy odor (MuseumPests.net).
Synonyms and Related Terms
mice (pl.); Mus Musculus; Mus Domesticus (house mouse); mus (Dan., Sven.); Maus (Deut.); ratn (Esp.); souris (Fr.); muis (Ned.); mysz (Pol.);
Other Properties
Size=5-8 in (12-21 cm); color=gray or brown; Tail=semi-hairless and qbout equal in length to the body
Litter size=5-7 pups; Gestation=18-21 days; Lifespan=1-2 years
Additional Information
MuseumPests.net: http://www.museumpests.net/pdfholder/32image.pdf House Mouse
Additional Images
Authority
- Website address 1, Website address 1 Comment: Olympus Microscopy Resource Center at http://www.olympusmicro.com/galleries/polarizedlight/pages/mousehairsmall.html
- Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, at http://www.wikipedia.com Comment: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouse (Accessed Nov. 9, 2005)