The long-tailed vole is a small terrestrial mammal. They are around long with an tail. They weigh on average . They have a thick body and a relatively long tail. The tail is bicolored and extends greater than one-third the animal's total length. The type specimen measured , with a tail and a hind foot. The ear measured x x . The long-tailed vole is similar in size to the
meadow vole (
Microtus pennsylvanicus). However, it has a longer tail, bigger ears, and grayer coat. In addition, the skull is flatter, and the cranium is wider. The middle upper
molar lacks a posterior-internal loop or spur. Merriam also noted some "peculiarities", not otherwise specified, in the original description, which distinguish the long-tailed vole from other species known in the late 1800s. This first specimen Merriam described had large ears, with folds capable of closing the
ear canal opening. Relative to the overall length of the animal, the tail was longer than any other vole described at that time. The fur is a sooty yellow-brown with some grizzled aspects. There are hints of rust coloring on the mid back. The whitish underside fur is a leaden gray towards the base. The underside fur blends seamlessly with the fur on the sides of the vole. The undersides of the tail are darker. The feet are plumbeous, a leaden gray. The genitalia of the long-tailed vole have been described. The
baculum has broad and straight proximal bone. It is similar in structure to that of the meadow vole, but with different proportions. The basal shaft is dumb-bell shaped in cross section and tapers to a blunt point at the end. The shaft is broad in dimension and connects via cartilaginous linkages to three lateral segments. The
glans penis has a dorsal lobe elevated above a ventral rim. The rim has spiny fingerlike processes, but not the dorsal lobe. A rod shaped
os clitoridis may be present, in front of the urethra. Long-tailed voles can be found with unusual dentition. A female with grooved incisors was found in the Yukon. Several other voles from Oregon were found with flattened incisors and
malocclusion of their incisors and molars. A specimen in New Mexico was reported with an extra tooth in the right lower jaw. An albino vole was also found in New Mexico. Long-tailed voles do not usually have the hip glands, which are found in other members of the genus
Microtus. These can develop if the animal is injected with
testosterone. Each eyelid of the long-tailed vole has around 3-4
meibomian glands.
Fossil record Fossil remains date towards the end of the
Wisconsinian glaciation. Fossils have been collected from: Moonshiner Cave in Idaho; Agate Basin and Little Box Elder Cave in Wyoming; Chimney Rock Animal Trap in Colorado; and
Burnet Cave and Dry Cave in New Mexico. The fossil remains of long-tailed voles may be difficult to distinguish from those of similar small voles, such as the meadow vole and the
montane vole. As such, collected fossils are identified based on probabilities of occurrence within the geographic range or with other associated species. ==Distribution and habitat==