Definition of Neotoma floridana

1. Noun. Large greyish-brown wood rat of the southeastern United States.

Exact synonyms: Eastern Woodrat
Generic synonyms: Wood Rat, Wood-rat
Group relationships: Genus Neotoma, Neotoma

Lexicographical Neighbors of Neotoma Floridana

Neoplatonist
Neoplatonists
Neopolitan
Neoproterozoic
Neopythagorean
Neopythagoreanism
Neopythagoreans
Neorickettsia helmintheca
Neosho
Neosho River
Neospora canium
Neosporin
Neotestudina rosati
Neotoma
Neotoma cinerea
Neotoma floridana
Neotoma fuscipes
Neotropic
Neozoic
Nepal
Nepal trumpet flower
Nepalese
Nepalese monetary unit
Nepalese rupee
Nepali
Nepaulese
Nepenthaceae
Nepeta cataria
Nepeta hederaceae
Nephelium

Literary usage of Neotoma floridana

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. List of North American Land Mammals in the United States National Museum, 1911 by Gerrit Smith Miller (1912)
"*neotoma floridana rabida Bangs. 1898. ... division of lo1 austral zone. f*Neotoma floridana baileyi (Merriam). 1894. Neotoma baileyi MERRIAM, Proc. Biol. ..."

2. Mammals of the Mexican Boundary of the United States: A Descriptive by Edgar Alexander Mearns (1907)
"482). jij. Coloration pallid; skull broad Neotoma venusta (p. 475). neotoma floridana ... neotoma floridana ..."

3. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History by American Museum of Natural History (1895)
"... side of Mj. They are all merely incipient points arising from the cingulum, but are not without morphologic interest. (See Fig. 12.) neotoma floridana ..."

4. History of the Expedition Under the Command of Lewis and Clark: To the by Meriwether Lewis, William Clark, Elliott Coues, Thomas Jefferson (1893)
"I. neotoma floridana, the native wood-rat, which Lewis and Clark knew in the Atlantic States as different from the imported house-rat, and which they found ..."

5. Bulletin by Smithsonian Institution, Dept. of the Interior, United States Dept. of the Interior, United States National Museum, United States (1907)
"The ears are small, like those of neotoma floridana. Tail well covered with hair. Pelage, in winter, long, dense, and soft. Upper surface of body ochraceous ..."

Other Resources:

Search for Neotoma floridana on Dictionary.com!Search for Neotoma floridana on Thesaurus.com!Search for Neotoma floridana on Google!Search for Neotoma floridana on Wikipedia!

Search