; The following is a brief description of the rat and mouse varieties as recognized by the American Fancy Rat and Mouse Association. This information is taken from the AFRMA brochure. ... Berkshire have a completely white belly similar to the Fox mice; white feet, tail and small spot between the ears. ... (Go to Fancy Mice)
www.afrma.org/fancyrm.htm www.afrma.org/fancyrm.htm
A non-profit international Rat & Mouse club for show and pets ... The American Fancy Rat and Mouse Association (AFRMA) was founded in 1983 and is a non-profit international club. Anyone that has an interest in rats or mice can be a member. The main purpose of AFRMA is to promote and encourage the breeding and exhibition of...
www.afrma.org/
Mouse breeders based in Wigston, Leicestershire, UK. Additional information about breeding, diet, housing, and health of mice as pets. ... Read the NEW ARTICLE - Harvest Mice; Humbug Stud is also breeding harvest mice - babies are currently available. Click on the link for details.
www.fancymice.info/ www.fancymice.info/
Varieties of Fancy Mice at the Website of the London & Southern; Counties Mouse & Rat Club ... The varieties of fancy mice are divided into five sections: ... The Marked Varieties of Fancy Mice...
www.miceandrats.com/standmic.htm www.miceandrats.com/standmic.htm
Today there are many different varieties of pet mice or fancy mice. The most common domestic mice are the white albino ones which were (and still are) used in laboratories.     Various other mice strains have been developed in laboratories from inbreeding.
animal-world.com/encyclo/critters/mouse/mouse.php animal-world.com/encyclo/critters/mouse/mouse.php
Fancy mouse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fancy mice ("fancy", in this context, means "hobby") are domesticated breeds of the common or house mouse ( Mus musculus ). The terms fancy and "feeder mice" are often used interchangeably by retai...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fancy_mouse
Keeping Fancy Mice: English & American ... Show-quality fancy mice are usually called 'show mice' over here; the term 'fancy mice' is probably more accurate, since they are bred within the mouse fancy, but often the term 'fancy' is used to describe any mouse which is more exotic than the pet shop albino.
www.rmca.org/Articles/keepingmice.htm www.rmca.org/Articles/keepingmice.htm
she is one of these types of spiny mice, I belive the first, but she looks a little closer ... Jersey is about 4-5 months old, she is what they call a "Fancy" mouse which are commenly found in pet shops. She lives in a 33 gallon tank which she used to share with Lumch (another fancy mouse) who passes away not too long ago.
www.angelfire.com/ca/LynxLair/mice.html www.angelfire.com/ca/LynxLair/mice.html
When a Massachusetts woman, Abbie Lathrop, began in 1900 to breed fancy mice as pets on her farm, she also bred mice for researchers at Harvard University. ... A sketch of "Miss Abbie C. Lathrop" published in 1913, shows her gazing at one of the fancy mice she bred on her farm as pets. Image:
www.hhmi.org/genesweshare/d110.html