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334:"Oryzomys jalapae Allen and Chapman, 1897, from Veracruz; Oryzomys jalapae rufinus Merriam, 1901, from Veracruz; Oryzomys teapensis Merriam, 1901, from Tabasco; Oryzomys goldmani Merriam, 1901, from Veracruz; Oryzomys jalapae apatelius Eliot, 1904, from Veracruz; and Oryzomys richardsoni Allen, 1910, from Nicaragua." When including the binomial authority in a sentence, is this the proper way to do it? For me, it makes the sentence much harder to read. 716:"In 1918, Edward Alphonso Goldman consolidated most into the single species Oryzomys couesi and in 1960 Raymond Hall united this species with its United States relative, the marsh rice rat (O. palustris), into a single widespread species; subsequently, many related, localized species retained by Goldman were also included in this species." Could this be reworded a bit so that the word "species" doesn't appear 5 times? (maybe replace one with "taxon"?) 1274:"Oryzomys couesi is a semiaquatic rodent in the family Cricetidae which occurs from southernmost Texas through Mexico and Central America into northwestern Colombia"—is it O.C. that occurs from Texas to Columbia, or the family? (I know this is explained later on, but it needs to be clear in the lead.); 237:
In the lead, you go from describing the rats to talking about its taxonomic history, and then back to more details about the rats themselves. Maybe you were trying to follow the order of the body text, but it just doesn't flow for me. Personally, I'd suggest putting the lengthy taxonomy text at the
1288:
Regarding the dental pattern, I know "one upper and one lower incisor and three upper and three lower molars" is the standard way of descriping a dental pattern, but for someone not familiar with biology conventions, it appears to suggest that they only have four teeth on each jaw. It could maybe
475:
The first thing I have to say is that it's a very nice article! I love the organization for handling the synonyms. The second things is: Wow! You can sure write about the things I hate the most—taxonomy and skeletal/morphological descriptions. I should hire you to write the lemur articles!
178:
rice rats. We know something about its biology, though a lot less than about the marsh rice rat, and are still learning about its classification—it probably actually consists of four species, if not more. This article treats the subject comprehensively, using all the sources I could find; I am
776:"Additional studies of the palustris–couesi contact zone in Texas published in 1979 indicated that the two species are in fact easily distinguishable there…" If they are so easily distinguishable, why wasn't Hall able to figure that out in 1960? Any comment in the 1979 paper about this? 263:
Do you mean the mid-sentence refs without any punctuation surrounding them? I don't think there is any rule against them, and I believe the people who think there is are misunderstanding the MOS rule which says that you shouldn't place refs before punctuation, like "this, this, and
744:"Oryzomys couesi and at least six more narrowly distributed species with peripheral distributions together form the O. couesi group within the genus Oryzomys, which also includes the O. palustris group, with the marsh rice rat (O. palustris) as its only member" unclear to me… does 1046:
There are many different "other features"—relative length of the nasals and premaxillaries, relative size of the molars, size of the zygomatic arches, form of the interparietal bone, presence of the sphenopalatine vacuities. I don't think it serves any purpose to list those here.
445:"The second lower molar bears a crest, the anterolophid, before the two cusps that form the front edge of the molar in some other oryzomyines, the protoconid and metaconid." At first glance, the "protoconid and metaconid" modify "oryzomyines"... maybe restructure this sentence? 280:"That crinitus, which occurs at over 2000 m (6600 ft) altitude in the Valley of Mexico, was the same species as peninsulae from the lowlands of the Baja California Peninsula they could not accept..." It may be grammatically correct, but I don't like how it reads. 476:
Anyway, take my comments with a grain of salt given my lack of experience at this. Sorry I didn't copy-edit more, but it's getting late and I may be reading things wrong. And by the way... have you asked Hanson or any of the co-authors to review this article? –
248:
The range map is beautiful! Normally I request a reference for range maps, but looking at the sources listed on the image description page, I think I'll have to let this one slide... unless, of course, a single source can be used as a general
732:"Oryzomys couesi as a whole is common and of no conservation concern" should link to conservation status there. I also don't like the phrase "as a whole"; how about "Generally, Oryzomys couesi is common" or "Collectively, …" 1317:
Possibly a silly question, but is there anything in the literature about how they interact with humans, given that they're endemic to such heavily populated areas; are they kept as pets? exterminated as vermin? hunted for
841:
there's a lot of talk of % of sequence difference between various taxa, so it would be worthwhile to include a sentence about what % divergence is typically considered sufficient for species to be considered distinct
396:
The idea of a sortable table sounds good, but when you actually use the ability, all of your colspan location headers get thrown to the top or the bottom, mixing all the populations together. Maybe drop the sorting
435:
put to such good use outside of lemur and other primate articles. Should we protect the template since it's starting to be widely used? (I know... this isn't an FAC issue, but it does affect this article.)
724:"After studies of the contact zone in Texas in 1979…" two things: the studies were probably earlier than 1979 (but published that year), and maybe "contact zone" needs to be explained a bit more clearly 386:
Some terms get multiple parenthetical explanations (e.g. zygomatic arch), and others do not. Sorry... it was hard to keep track of which do and don't. I just noticed that one and possibly a few others.
989:
I changed to "published in 2006", which will age better. It's in Medellin and Medellin, and Carleton and Arroyo-Cabrales say directly that the photograph provides evidence that populations referable to
1104:- is that because Texas is the only place both males and females have been measured (and hence may occur elsewhere), or is it a trait unique to Texas? Clarifying that should e straightforward. 576:"a medium rat" doesn't make sense to me, because it could be in medium in color or what not instead of size, and "large-sized" is a tautology, so I don't like either of those constructions. 1325:
Nothing I am aware of except what is in the article—they're considered a pest in some areas. Perhaps they're persecuted in those places, though I doubt they would be separated from other
1289:(emphasis on "maybe") do with an explanatory footnote; remember that if this makes TFA the majority of its readers will be people whose only rat-knowledge will be "like a big mouse"; 421: 516: 1377: 540: 1347: 551: 503: 117: 1356: 1253: 1244: 1230: 1162: 614:
There are two different, and conflicting ranges and averages given in the text. Giving both would be too much for the lead, so I opted for a phrasing that aligns with either.
1202: 1081: 1061: 1027: 931:"Cozumel rice rats rarely cross roads" I chuckled when I read this. Wonder if a poor grad student had to monitor a road to check for rice rat crossings to determine this? 692: 681: 213: 493: 324: 1220: 1192: 183: 259:
I think some people prefer that refs follow punctuation. Personally, I don't care... but it's something that often comes up when my articles are reviewed.
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found evidence to separate species from the Pacific and eastern sides of Mexico and Central America and two additional species from Panama and Costa Rica.
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to offer a comprehensive review, though as you know personally, my ability to search the literature and double-check your sources is extremely limited.
1144:
It's used as such in Dutch (and Spanish—the source says "es considerado como plago"). I'll trust you that using "plague species" is better in English.
672:
Consider all points below stricken. Meets all FA criteria. I checked a few sources, and did a literature scan, but as expected, nothing was amiss.
1211:
I think the use of two different styles of maps in the one article makes the overall feel incoherent, both with itself and with other wp articles
986:"Populations even persist in the Valley of Mexico, as evidenced by a recent photograph." Huh? What photograph? This leaves me hanging... 499:
Thank you for the helpful suggestions and nice comments. I haven't asked Hanson or anyone else, no—but I probably should at some time.
40: 1042:- "other features" seems like a bit of a throwaway line - odd to have two specific criteria and then a nebulous one. Better specified. 270:
I recommend adding non-breaking spaces between stand-alone numbers and the words that follow them... but that's ultimately up to you.
1050:
How about "There is much geographic variation in size, color, and bony features", "skeletal features" or "anatomical features"?
633:
because it was unclear what the subject was (could have been the pregnant females last mentioned), although meaning is unchanged
30: 17: 699:
lead: suggest linking scrubland (BTW, it's "shrubland" in the Ecology section), buff, DNA sequence data, Panama, Costa Rica
1296:
I added "on each side of the jaws" here to clarify; you're right that an unsuspecting reader may be led on the wrong track.
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group? Then "…with the marsh rice rat (O. palustris) as its only member" How can it be a group with only one member?
300:
Serial comma, or no? Sorry to not fix them, but I just starting noticing the lack of consistency half way through.
75: 1008:- beginning a read-through now. Please revert any inadvertent changes to meaning I make. I will jot queries below 779:
Hall had few specimens and didn't look at some of the characters that distinguish the two. I clarified a little.
1188: 1158: 1077: 1023: 883:"In Texas, males are slightly larger than females." Everything is slightly larger in Texas, haven't you heard? 784:
I haven't usually seen gene names written with a mixture of caps and lowercase… is this what the sources use?
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There should be serial commas (except in the refs), but I didn't notice any places where they are missing.
1281:
You're right, it is somewhat ambiguous. I tried replacing "which occurs" with "occurring"; does that work?
875:"…the moderately large eyes emit reddish eyeshade." "emit" doesn't seem like the correct verb to use here 206: 133: 109: 959:"…the life cycle is short." maybe link life cycle, but is this being used as a synonym for lifespan? 348:, but there are no consistent differences." Differences between what? The the marsh rice rat and 867:"The fur is shorter, brighter, and more intense than in the marsh rice rat." How is fur intense? 63: 1373: 485: 432: 413: 316: 307:
I can't even find the one that tipped me off, let alone any others. Maybe I was just tired. –
105: 809:"extended the range of the species by 400 mi (640 km)" your other converts are metric first 290:"but it has been supposed to be from the Valley of Mexico." Again, sounds like bad grammar. 1342: 1240: 1216: 404:
I also wish it could have been sortable. I just wish there was a way to make it work... –
376:; according to Schmidt and Engstrom, earlier authors had misidentified the Y chromosome in 79: 101: 8: 736: 535: 455:"It probably breeds around the year..." Do you mean, "It probably breeds year-round..."? 373: 1136:
I've not seen 'plague' used as a noun thus to describe an organism. I might say 'plague
1182: 1152: 1071: 1017: 344:"The form of the sex chromosomes has been used to distinguish the marsh rice rat from 1366: 976: 912: 479: 407: 310: 53: 719:
I replaced the two uses where "species" is not essential to the meaning with "taxon"
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They become reproductively active when seven months old and have a short life cycle
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is distinguished by relative tail length, so I added "proportions" to the list.
1365:
Why are the "Taxonomic synonyms" tables causing extra white space above them?
1118::I'd link 'oxbow lakes' to something, especially as the local word is redlinked 528: 169: 1053:
All are in the skull, so used that instead. After I did so, I remembered that
606:— I'd prefer either the range or the average rather than unnecessary vagueness 1178: 1148: 1067: 1013: 469:
I like to end everything with a period, but that can be changed if necessary.
673: 658: 858:"… is buff to reddish above and becomes paler towards the sides…" -: --> 193: 1038:
There is much geographic variation in size, color, and other features.
903:
I did not know that a baculum was a penis bone… that should be linked
812:
This was miles in the original; the others are metric in the original.
708:"is" to "can be" (unless we know that every individual is infected) 439:
Perhaps, don't know what the threshold for that is considered to be.
380:, and it seems that some people have also been confusing FN and FNa. 338:
I am afraid it is; it's also how Carleton and Arroyo-Cabrales do it.
39:
Subsequent comments should be made on the article's talk page or in
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Reworded. As for the one-member group, ask the sources, not me. :)
739:; it doesn't fit the sentence, and the link doesn't add that much. 1226:
The second map is historical and thus uses the historical style.
1336:
All minor and the answer to all may well be "we don't know". –
1108:
Only place where it's measured. I attempted a clarification.
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I don't think any of the skull pic captions need fullstops
587:— I don't think the meaning of this is immediately apparent 510:
Checked images. All have good licenses and description. --
735:
I used "generally". I don't really see a need to link to
143: 817:"The types of regillus and aztecus" link type species? 465:
Incomplete sentences in footnotes treated as sentences?
934:
All the sources for ecological information on Cozumel
526:
A few nitpicks, but mostly minor so supporting anyway
238:
end, after you've told us about these little critters.
401:
Done so. Being able to sort was instructive, though.
895:
link chromosome (hasn't been linked since the lead)
707:"The animal is infected by several different" -: --> 118:
Featured article candidates/Oryzomys couesi/archive1
994:still exist. I don't know what else to make of it. 886:Texas marsh rice rats are pretty small, actually. 368:. Clarified. You can see some of the confusion on 1388:The above discussion is preserved as an archive. 1102:In Texas, males are slightly larger than females 962:Introduced the link; the source doesn't specify 938:trace back to a few MA theses, so probably yes. 253:No; I really had to use all the sources listed. 43:. No further edits should be made to this page. 1394:No further edits should be made to this page. 1352:Thanks for the support and helpful comments. 29:The following is an archived discussion of a 1176:and just some minor quibbles to deal with. 1147:Funny the little idioms in each language. 845:I added the benchmarks Hanson et al. used. 192:- No dab links, no broken external links. 41:Knowledge talk:Featured article candidates 1303:Do we know what the typical lifespan is? 946:No, no hyphens after -ly, saith the MOS. 1010:(I need to get a template to say this!) 967:"The introduced snake" link introduced 859:"above, becoming paler", sound better? 787:Yes, that's directly from Hanson et al. 14: 1235:Is that an editorial decision or MOS? 352:, or between different populations of 943:"ecologically similar" needs hyphen? 18:Knowledge:Featured article candidates 242:You're right, moved it around a bit. 226:This being my second review, I will 23: 820:Just used "holotype" again instead 24: 1406: 560:— personally I'd prefer either 800:"In the same paper…" paper-: --> 179:looking forward to any reviews. 274:Most did already; I added some. 1174:Overall looking very polished 604:give birth to about four young 13: 1: 558:a medium-sized to large rat. 7: 825:link hybridization, Belize 31:featured article nomination 10: 1411: 1378:14:56, 27 April 2010 (UTC) 1357:16:21, 25 April 2010 (UTC) 1348:15:39, 25 April 2010 (UTC) 1267:with comments (all minor): 1254:21:38, 26 April 2010 (UTC) 1245:21:34, 26 April 2010 (UTC) 1231:13:06, 25 April 2010 (UTC) 1221:12:44, 25 April 2010 (UTC) 1203:13:06, 25 April 2010 (UTC) 1193:12:53, 25 April 2010 (UTC) 1163:14:06, 25 April 2010 (UTC) 1082:15:10, 25 April 2010 (UTC) 1062:14:24, 25 April 2010 (UTC) 1028:08:43, 25 April 2010 (UTC) 693:11:44, 24 April 2010 (UTC) 682:14:23, 24 April 2010 (UTC) 667:04:06, 24 April 2010 (UTC) 552:19:44, 23 April 2010 (UTC) 541:15:03, 23 April 2010 (UTC) 517:14:46, 22 April 2010 (UTC) 504:12:50, 22 April 2010 (UTC) 494:04:33, 22 April 2010 (UTC) 422:14:05, 24 April 2010 (UTC) 325:14:05, 24 April 2010 (UTC) 214:19:01, 21 April 2010 (UTC) 184:00:39, 21 April 2010 (UTC) 161:00:39, 21 April 2010 (UTC) 1310:Not as far as I am aware. 951:link population density? 752:group, or does the genus 566:medium to large-sized rat 1391:Please do not modify it. 890:is a large form, though. 36:Please do not modify it. 850:link/define ochraceous 748:+ six also include the 688:Thanks for the review! 1198:Thanks for reviewing! 792:link genetic distance 433:Template:DentalFormula 390:I think I fixed those. 562:a medium to large rat 284:Really? I do like it. 56:15:10, 27 April 2010 524:Support and comments 923:link coastal plain 888:O. couesi aquaticus 737:conservation status 459:Yes, that's better. 431:I'm glad to see my 374:User:Ucucha/Sandbox 168:Together with the 915:should be linked 913:Process (anatomy) 756:also include the 164: 151: 150: 1402: 1393: 1370: 1345: 1340: 768:link classified 538: 531: 514: 491: 488: 482: 419: 416: 410: 322: 319: 313: 212: 209: 203: 196: 154: 123: 122: 113: 95: 48:The article was 38: 1410: 1409: 1405: 1404: 1403: 1401: 1400: 1399: 1398: 1389: 1368: 1343: 1338: 1066:Much better :) 536: 529: 512: 486: 480: 478: 414: 408: 406: 354:Oryzomys couesi 350:Oryzomys couesi 346:Oryzomys couesi 317: 311: 309: 207: 201: 198: 194: 86: 72:Oryzomys couesi 70: 68: 65:Oryzomys couesi 34: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 1408: 1397: 1396: 1383: 1381: 1380: 1362: 1361: 1360: 1359: 1334: 1333: 1332: 1331: 1330: 1320: 1319: 1314: 1313: 1312: 1311: 1305: 1304: 1300: 1299: 1298: 1297: 1291: 1290: 1285: 1284: 1283: 1282: 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397:feature. 370:Oryzomys 360:Between 222:Comments 220:Support 208:contribs 175:Oryzomys 134:Analysis 50:promoted 1369:Georgia 1265:Support 836:Removed 650:Support 190:Comment 126:Toolbox 89:protect 84:history 1354:Ucucha 1251:Ucucha 1228:Ucucha 1209:Images 1200:Ucucha 1059:Ucucha 853:Linked 690:Ucucha 674:Sasata 659:Sasata 549:Ucucha 501:Ucucha 378:couesi 366:couesi 264:that". 181:Ucucha 158:Ucucha 93:delete 1367:Sandy 1344:scent 1339:iride 1327:ratas 1318:food? 1124:Done. 1055:lambi 975:link 954:Done. 926:Done. 918:Done. 906:Done. 898:Done. 804:Done. 795:Done. 564:or a 487:talk 415:talk 318:talk 195:Esuzu 110:views 102:watch 98:links 16:< 1374:Talk 1241:talk 1217:talk 1183:talk 1153:talk 1072:talk 1018:talk 981:Done 970:Done 862:Yes. 828:Done 771:Done 711:Done 702:Done 678:talk 663:talk 631:they 364:and 202:talk 106:logs 80:talk 76:edit 657:by 229:try 52:by 1376:) 1243:) 1219:) 1191:) 1161:) 1080:) 1026:) 680:) 665:) 533:- 205:• 108:| 104:| 100:| 96:| 91:| 87:| 82:| 78:| 59:. 33:. 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Index

Knowledge:Featured article candidates
featured article nomination
Knowledge talk:Featured article candidates
SandyGeorgia

Oryzomys couesi
Oryzomys couesi
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Ucucha
00:39, 21 April 2010 (UTC)
marsh rice rat
Oryzomys
Ucucha
00:39, 21 April 2010 (UTC)
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