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[[File:spo_marmot.jpg]] Yellow Bellied Marmot in Spokane, Washington [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f79nXSMbeG0]


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 18:52, 28 July 2009

Marmot
Temporal range: Late Miocene - Recent
Yellow-bellied Marmot in Yosemite National Park
Scientific classification
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Genus:
Marmota

Blumenbach, 1779
Species

Marmota baibacina
Marmota bobak
Marmota broweri
Marmota caligata
Marmota camtschatica
Marmota caudata
Marmota flaviventris
Marmota himalayana
Marmota marmota
Marmota menzbieri
Marmota monax
Marmota olympus
Marmota sibirica
Marmota vancouverensis

Marmots are members of the genus Marmota, in the rodent family Sciuridae (squirrels).

Marmots are generally large ground squirrels. Those most often referred to as marmots tend to live in mountainous areas such as the Alps, northern Apennines, Carpathians, Tatra, and Pyrenees in Europe, the Rockies, the Black Hills and the Sierra Nevada in the United States, Northern Canada and Ladakh in India. However, the groundhog is also properly called a marmot, while the similarly-sized but more social prairie dog is not classified in the genus Marmota but in the related genus Cynomys.

Marmots typically live in burrows, and hibernate there through the winter. Most marmots are highly social, and use loud whistles to communicate with one another, especially when alarmed.

The name marmot comes from French marmotte, from Old French marmotan, marmontaine, from Old Franco-Provençal, from Low Latin mures montani "mountain mouse", from Latin mures monti, from Classical Latin mures alpini "Alps mouse".

Marmots mainly eat greens. They eat many types of grasses, berries, lichens, mosses, roots and flowers.

Species

The following is a list of all Marmota species recognized by Thorington and Hoffman (2005). They divide marmots into two subgenera.

Examples of species

File:Spo marmot.jpg Yellow Bellied Marmot in Spokane, Washington [1]

References

  • Conesa, J., Heffner, R. S. and Heffner, H. E. (1991). Hearing in large rodents: Groundhogs Marmota monax. Poster/abstract presented at the 14th midwinter meeting of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology (ARO).
  • Conesa, J., Koay, G. and Heffner, R. S. (1992). Sound localization in a large rodent, Marmota monax. Abstract in the 15th midwinter meeting of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology (ARO).
  • Thorington, R. W. Jr. and R. S. Hoffman. 2005. Family Sciuridae. Pp. 754-818 in Mammal Species of the World a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. D. E. Wilson and D. M. Reeder eds. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.

External links