Smoky
Mouse
Apperance
The Smoky Mouse is a
blue-grey to black native mouse, the size of a
small rat with a grey - white belly. It has a ring
of dark hairs around each of its large, bulging
eyes, pink feet with white fur and a tail that is
darker above and
lighter below. It has long soft smoky grey fur above with greyish white hair
below. The ears are dustincly purple.

Weight
Length
The smoky mouse has a
body length of 90 millimetres and a tail of 140
millimetres.
Habitat
The smoky mouse lives in
coastal heaths, adjacent lowlands, and heathy woodlands. The Smoky
Mouse has been found in a
wide range of vegetation types mostly
with a diversity of heath-like
shrubs.
Eating and Diet
Habits
The Smoky Mouse apparently relies on three very nitrogen rich food sources, legume seeds,berries and bogong moths, but in winter when these are unavailable it digs for truffle-like fungi.
Predators
It is a food source for the
wild cats and foxes in the surrounding
areas.
Breeding
Habits
Locations
The smoky
mouse lives in a rather small area (20, 000 ha.). It lives in only 1.7% of that
region. . It is found in East Gippsland in Victoria and south eat
NSW.

Numbers
There are approximately 200 left in the
world.
Problems
- Populations are subject to large annual
fluctuations in abundance possibly due to variations in food availability or due to social
conflict. The female component of the
population fluctuates less.
- vegetation clearance.
- changing fire regimes, resulting in changes to the shrub
vegetation.
- introduction of
predators.
- The change in
fire regimes altered the soil and plant litter that reduces the fungal
fruiting that the Smoky mouse feeds
on.
Solutions
- No fire trails or walking tracks will be constructed near areas most likely to comprise Smoky Mouse
habitat.
- Feral pig control programs involving poisoned wheat baits will continue to be managed so as to avoid areas of likely
Smoky Mouse habitat.
- The conservation requirements of the species will be a consideration in the Bush
Fire Fuel Management Plan.
- inform
people about the Smoky Mouse.
- encourage habitat retention and restoration.
- ongoing
habitat management.
- captive
breeding of Smoky Mouse and establishing new
colonies.
- support
your local environment
groups.
- raise money for the rehabilitation of sites for Smoky
Mouse.
- learn
more about endangered animals, particularly those native to your
area.
- be
a responsible pet owner so they do not impact on Smoky Mouse or other
wildlife.
- help
in the eradication of foxes, cats and
rabbits.
- protect
remnant native vegetation under Heritage Agreement and by excluding
stock .
- revegetate
cleared land with indigenous
plants.