Masked Shrew Sorex Cinereus

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Masked Shrew Sorex Cinereus masked shrew Sorex cinereus Kingdom: Animalia FEATURES Phylum: Chordata An adult masked shrew is between three and one- Class: Mammalia half and four and one-half inches in length, including Order: Eulipotyphla the tail. It has a pointed nose, tan feet and gray- brown body fur with the belly fur, underside of the Family: Soricidae tail and sides a lighter color. The tail is two-colored: ILLINOIS STATUS light below and dark above. common, native BEHAVIORS The masked shrew may be found in Illinois in the northern one-third of the state, in the southeastern part near the Wabash River and in the southwestern section near the junction of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers. This tiny animal lives in damp places with good ground cover, like sedge meadows, wet prairies, drainage ditches, peatlands, bottomland forests, swamps and fencerows. A masked shrew feeds on insects and other invertebrates. It has a high metabolic rate and eats more than its own body weight in food in a day. The masked shrew is nocturnal. Breeding occurs in late March or early April. The gestation period is about 18 days. Litter adult size ranges from four to eight. ILLINOIS RANGE © Illinois Department of Natural Resources. 2021. Biodiversity of Illinois. Unless otherwise noted, photos and images © Illinois Department of Natural Resources. © P. Myers, Mammal Images Library of the American Society of Mammalogists © Illinois Department of Natural Resources. 2021. Biodiversity of Illinois. Unless otherwise noted, photos and images © Illinois Department of Natural Resources. © P. Myers, Mammal Images Library of the American Society of Mammalogists © Illinois Department of Natural Resources. 2021. Biodiversity of Illinois. Unless otherwise noted, photos and images © Illinois Department of Natural Resources. © P. Myers, Mammal Images Library of the American Society of Mammalogists Aquatic Habitats bottomland forests; marshes; peatlands; swamps; wet prairies and fens Woodland Habitats bottomland forests; southern Illinois lowlands Prairie and Edge Habitats edge © Illinois Department of Natural Resources. 2021. Biodiversity of Illinois. Unless otherwise noted, photos and images © Illinois Department of Natural Resources..
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    Cavia porcellus Felis catus 65 Pteropus alecto Equus caballus Sus scrofa 100 Solenodon paradoxus 67 Mesechinus dauuricus 100 100 Erinaceus europaeus 100 Neotetracus sinensis 47 100 Hylomys suillus 100 Echinosorex gymnura 100 Podogymnures truei 100 Crocidura indochinensis 100 100 100 Blarina brevicauda Blarinella quadraticauda 100 100 Sorex palustris 100 Sorex araneus Sorex bedfordiae 100 100 Anourosorex squamipes Neomys fodiens 100 Episoriculus fumidus 92 Episoriculus macrurus 97 Episoriculus umbrinus 100 58 Nectogale elegans 98 Chimarrogale platycephala 100 Chimarrogale himalayica 98 Chimarrogale styani Uropsilus investigator 100 100 Uropsilus nivatus 100 Uropsilus sp. 1 100 Uropsilus soricipes 100 Uropsilus atronates 100 Uropsilus gracilis 100 100 Scapanulus oweni 100 Parascalops breweri 100 Scalopus aquaticus 100 Scapanus townsendii 100 Scapanus orarius 100 87 Scapanus latimanus 100 Desmana moschata Galemys pyrenaicus 100 Scaptonyx sp. 100 Scaptonyx fusicaudus 100 Neurotrichus gibbsii 100 97 Urotrichus talpoides Dymecodon pilirostris 100 Condylura cristata 80 100 Talpa romana Talpa caeca 82 Talpa europaea 72 Oreoscaptor mizura 100 100 Mogera latouchei 100 Mogera kanoana 100 Mogera insularis 100 Mogera tokudae Mogera etigo 100 Mogera robusta 100 100 Mogera wogura 70 100 Scaptochirus moschatus Parascaptor leucura 100 Parascaptor sp. 1 Euroscaptor subanura 100 100 Euroscaptor parvidens Euroscaptor longirostris 100 73 Euroscaptor grandis 100 Euroscaptor orlovi 100 Euroscaptor klossi 95 Euroscaptor sp. 2 97 Euroscaptor sp. 1 100 Euroscaptor
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