Crunomys is a genus of rodent in the family Muridae widespread to the Southeast Asian. They are mid-sized rodents, similar to rats, that live on the ground of tropical rainforests. There they build nests, padded with fallen leaves from trees. They feed on roots, fallen fruit, and other plants, as well as insects. All species are shy and avoid food from humans.

Crunomys
Northern Luzon shrew-rat (Crunomys fallax)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Placentalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Muridae
Subfamily: Murinae
Tribe: Rattini
Genus: Crunomys
Thomas, 1897
Type species
Crunomys fallax
Species

Crunomys celebensis
Crunomys fallax
Crunomys melanius
Crunomys suncoides

Taxonomy

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This genus previously contained only four species, namely C. celebensis, C. fallax, C. melanius,C. suncoides, and C tompotika. Then in 2025 through mitochondrial and nuclear differentiation, the genus Maxomys which was considered a separate species was synonymized to the genus Crunomys and now 24 species have been identified.[1]

Previously Maxomys

References

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  1. Thomas, Anang, Pierre-Henri, Heru, Austin, Mark, Jonathan, Muhd, Julius, Nurul, Endah, Rizaldi, Trias, Kyra, Faisal, Lawrence, Kevin, Jacob (13 June 2025). "Systematics and historical biogeography of Crunomys and Maxomys (Muridae: Murinae), with the description of a new species from Sulawesi and new genus-level classification". Journal of Mammalogy. 106 (4): 832–858. doi:10.1093/jmammal/gyaf006 via Oxford Academy.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)