Sicista is the only extant genus in the
rodent family
Sminthidae. It was first identified as a distinct genus from the
Mus genus of mice by British zoologist
John Edward Gray in an 1827 English edition by Edward Griffith of
Le Règne Animal. It was formerly classified as part of the
subfamily Sicistinae in the family
Dipodidae alongside the
jerboas and
jumping mice, but beginning in 1971 there were proposals based on
karyotypic evidence to split the family into three, with jerboas remaining in Dipodidae, the jumping mouse subfamily Zapodinae promoted to the family Zapodidae, and the birch mouse subfamily promoted to the family Sminthidae. Supporting phylogenetic evidence presented in the 2010s resulted in the split being adopted. Sminthidae and its two sibling families make up the superfamily
Dipodoidea. It is one of the two superfamilies in the suborder
Myomorpha, which collectively contains over 1,500 species of mouse-like rodents, more than half of the entire order Rodentia. ==Characteristics==