2011: Third lineage of rodent eimerians: morphology, phylogeny and re-description of Eimeria myoxi (Apicomplexa: Eimeriidae) from Eliomys quercinus (Rodentia: Gliridae).
Despite the increase of such studies on rodents, there is only one dental microwear analysis applied to the family Gliridae (Hautier et al., 2009), a very important group in the European Miocene rodent faunas.
The nomenclature and measurement methods are those of Martin-Suarez and Freudenthal (1993) for the family Muridae, Mein and Freudenthal (1971) for the Cricetidae, Daams (1981) and Freudenthal (2004) for the Gliridae, Weerd (1979), Adrover (1986) for the Trilophomyidae and Cuenca-Bescos (1988) and Reumer and van de Hoek Ostende (2003) for the Sciuridae.
The nomenclature used in the description of the teeth and the measurement methods are taken from Fahlbusch (1970), Alvarez-Sierra (1988) (Eomyidae), Mein and Freudenthal (1971) (Cricetidae), Cuenca (1988) (Sciuridae), Hugueney (1999b) (Castoridae) and Freudenthal (2004) (Gliridae).
2006: An observation on the reproductive biology of Glis glis (Linnaeus, 1766) (Rodentia; Gliridae) and body weight gaining of pups in the Istranca Mountains of Turkish Thrace.
Four dormouse (Gliridae) species--hazel dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius), forest dormouse (Dryomys nitedula), fat dormouse (Glis glis) and garden dormouse (Eliomys quercinus)--have large distributional ranges that extend across Europe and, in the first three species, extend into Asia.