Manx mice for computers?

sagehen sagehen at WESTELCOM.COM
Sat Oct 7 02:56:36 UTC 2006


>At 10/6/2006 07:58 PM, you wrote:
>>Probably not found since it is likely only a clever gag.  Searching through
>>/Les Mammiferes Sauvages d'Europe/ I find no tailless mice, not that that
>>necessarily rules out their possible existence...just raises a doubt.
>>There is a *nearly* tailless  related species, /Mesocricetus  auratus/,
>>properly a  golden hamster, whose very short tail is often  hidden ("cachee
>>dans les poils  allonges  de la partie posterieure  de la corps.")
>>Since "mouse" turned out to be, rather to my disappointment, NOT a clever
>>acronym,  "hamster" could as well be invoked for the cordless relative.
>>AM
>
>I assumed the following was not a gag.   Perhaps I have been hoaxed,
>but if so so have others, including perhaps Paul Gallico (who
>certainly knows their--I mean the mice's--nemeses).  From
>http://sg.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20060822152840AA9YMzb:
>
>Has anyone ever heard of a 'manx mouse'?
>
>I didn't until this past weekend; we were at a petshop and we were
>looking at the mice, and the pet shop owner, who we're pretty close
>to, said, 'hey, get a load of this,' and he took out a 'manx mouse'.
>They're like a hamster, only they definately look more like a mouse;
>and they sometimes have a little stump or a tail that's curled kind
>of like a piggies, lol, and they have a little waddle-hop more like a
>guinea pig than a typical mouse. And there's no way it's a hamster;
>down here in Australia, we don't have hamsters, not allowed to bring
>them here. Anyone else ever seen one? And want to tell me a bit more
>about them?
>
>Best Answer - Chosen by Asker
>
>Manx, also known as "tailless", is a gene in mice which causes a
>shortened tail. When bred towards shorter and shorter tails, a mouse
>with absolutely no tail can be created.
>
>Or from http://www.mayleen.com/rcentral/mmanx.htm:
>
>Manx, also known as "tailless", is a gene in mice which causes a
>shortened tail. When bred towards shorter and shorter tails, a mouse
>with absolutely no tail can be created.
>
>Manx in mice (at least in my own experience) is a dominant gene with
>additional modifier(s) which control exactly how long the tail should
>be. You need the main manx gene to see any tail shortening. It works
>line an on-off switch; without the main gene the tail is always full length.
>
>Or from the Australian Rodent Fanciers Society of NSW, Inc., at
>http://www.ausrfsnsw.com/index.php?page=/pages/showresults.php:
>
>Best Long Coat Rex Mouse: Mountain Blue Prince of Siam, exhibited by
>Georgia Luff Best Manx Mouse: Elwyn, exhibited by Kylie Allen
>
>And the computer Manx mouse is no hoax (it surely will have to enter
>the OED at some point), whether or not there is a mammalian Manx mouse.
>
>Joel
 ~~~~~~~~~
Yeah, well, um, of course if we're gonna talk about  critters specially
bred for taillessness, that's a whole nother kettle of fish!
AM
@:>  @:>  @:>  @:>  !

~@:>   ~@:>   ~@:>   ~@:>

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