User:Gaff/Citation sandbox

CPG Archive 1 References:
 * "Allen, Joel Asaph (1893). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History (PDF). The Museum. Retrieved 27 November 2014." This should be cited as a journal article (with the article title and volume number).
 * * fixed.  --Gaff (talk) 05:09, 7 February 2015 (UTC)


 * Similarly for Coues (1875).
 * Elliot (1905) was published by the Field Columbian Museum (=Field Museum of Natural History), not the AMNH. Also, it should probably cite a serial title. My own database cites it as "Elliot, D.G. 1905. A checklist of mammals of the North American continent, the West Indies, and the neighboring seas. Field Columbian Museum, Zoölogical Series 6:1–761."
 * Merriam (1895) is a North American Fauna article and should be cited similar to Bailey (1915).

Possible additional sources: Ucucha (talk) 07:19, 5 February 2015 (UTC)
 * http://biostor.org/reference/82822 is interesting historically but doesn't seem to add to the account given in the article.
 * Elftman, H.O. 1931. Pleistocene mammals of Fossil Lake, Oregon. American Museum Novitates 481:1–21. Writes that the fossil Thomomys from Fossil Lake, Oregon, was identified as T. bulbivorus by Cope in 1883 and 1889. That identification was overturned by 1902 though.
 * Whitaker, J.O., Jr., Walters, B.L., Castor, L.K., Ritzi, C.M. and Wilson, N. 2007. Host and distribution lists of mites (Acari), parasitic and phoretic, in the hair or on the skin of North American wild mammals north of Mexico: records since 1974. Faculty Publications from the Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology 1:1–173. Lists mites of T. bulbivorus as Androlaelaps geomys (but not A. fahrenholzi, contra your source) and Echinonyssus femoralis (p. 15 and p. 16 respectively).
 * http://www.jstor.org/stable/1380397 is the only information I've been able to find so far on the species's phylogenetic relationships. It claims that it is sister to a group of T. bottae, T. townsendii, and T. umbrinus, which would make this a relatively ancient species. It would be nice to confirm this with more recent genetic data.








 * O'Neill, M. B., D. W. Nagorsen, and R. J. Baker. "Mitochondrial DNA variation in water shrews (Sorex palustris, Sorex bendirii) from western North America: implications for taxonomy and phylogeography." Canadian Journal of Zoology 83, no. 11 (2005): 1469-1475.



Cited text examples

 * width="50%" align="" valign="" style="border:0"|
 * Allen.
 * Audubon
 * Verts Carraway 1987 page 1.
 * V/C 1987 p.2.
 * Land mammals verts and carr.
 * Experiment Station Record.
 * Walker's mammals of the world.
 * width="50%" align="" valign="" style="border:0"|
 * IUCN.
 * Vaughan.
 * Bailey.
 * Kays.
 * Wight.
 * Elbroch.
 * Richardson.
 * Elliot.

That is all.