| Family  |  Scientific name  |  Common names  |  Range within Georgia  |  Conservation status  | 
  | Didelphidae  |  Didelphis virginiana[1]: 35–38 [2]: 122   |  Virginia opossum  |  Statewide  |  least concern  | 
  | Trichechidae  |  Trichechus manatus[1]: 197 [2]: 131   |  West Indian manatee  |  Vagrant; Savannah harbor, Jekyll Creek, Little Satilla River, and Cumberland Island  |  vulnerable  | 
  | Dasypodidae  |  Dasypus novemcinctus[1]: 76–77 [2]: 125   |  Nine-banded armadillo  |  Common in lower Coastal Plain sand hills  |  least concern  | 
  | Soricidae  |  Blarina brevicauda[1]: 43–45 [2]: 122   |  Northern short-tailed shrew  |  North of the fall line  |  least concern  | 
  | Soricidae  |  Blarina carolinensis[2]: 122–123   |  Southern short-tailed shrew  |  Coastal Plain south of the fall line, and extreme northwest Georgia  |  least concern  | 
  | Soricidae  |  Cryptotis parva[1]: 45–47 [2]: 123   |  Least shrew  |  Statewide, most abundant in the Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Soricidae  |  Sorex cinereus[2]: 122   |  Cinereus shrew  |  Towns County, Georgia  |  least concern  | 
  | Soricidae  |  Sorex fumeus[1]: 39–41 [2]: 122   |  Smoky shrew  |  Uncommon, found in mountains of Fannin, Murray, Rabun, Towns, and Union counties.  |  least concern  | 
  | Soricidae  |  Sorex hoyi[2]: 122   |  American pygmy shrew  |  Rare; identified in Towns County, Georgia  |  least concern  | 
  | Soricidae  |  Sorex longirostris[1]: 41–43 [2]: 122   |  Southeastern shrew  |  Statewide but uncommon  |  least concern  | 
  | Talpidae  |  Condylura cristata[1]: 51–52 [2]: 123   |  Star-nosed mole  |  Very rare; found in Charlton, Chatham, Clinch, Effingham, Jackson, and Union counties  |  least concern  | 
  | Talpidae  |  Parascalops breweri[3]  |  Hairy-tailed mole  |  Appalachian Mountains, extreme northeastern part of the state  |  least concern  | 
  | Talpidae  |  Scalopus aquaticus[1]: 48–51 [2]: 123   |  Eastern mole  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Leporidae  |  Sylvilagus aquaticus[1]: 83–85 [2]: 125   |  Swamp rabbit  |  Piedmont and Ridge and Vallye, and western upper Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Leporidae  |  Sylvilagus floridanus[1]: 79–83   |  Eastern cottontail, cottontail rabbit  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Leporidae  |  Sylvilagus obscurus[4]  |  Appalachian cottontail  |  Appalachian Mountains  |  near-threatened  | 
  | Leporidae  |  Sylvilagus palustris[1]: 85–86 [2]: 125   |  Marsh rabbit  |  Eastern Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Castoridae  |  Castor canadensis[1]: 107–110 [2]: 126   |  American beaver  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Geomyidae  |  Geomys pinetis[1]: 105–107 [2]: 126   |  Southeastern pocket gopher  |  Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Echimyidae  |  Myocastor coypus[2]: 129   |  Coypu, nutria  |  Introduced: swamps of south central Georgia  |  least concern  | 
  | Sciurinae  |  Glaucomys volans[1]: 102–105 [2]: 126   |  Southern flying squirrel  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Sciurinae  |  Marmota monax[1]: 92–94 [2]: 125   |  Groundhog, woodchuck  |  Mountains  |  least concern  | 
  | Sciurinae  |  Sciurus carolinensis[1]: 96–98 [2]: 125   |  Eastern gray squirrel  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Sciurinae  |  Sciurus niger[1]: 98–101 [2]: 125–126   |  Eastern fox squirrel  |  State-wide, but less common in mountains and Piedmont  |  least concern  | 
  | Sciurinae  |  Tamias striatus[1]: 94–96 [2]: 125   |  Eastern chipmunk  |  Mountains, Piedmont, and upper-western Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Sciurinae  |  Tamiasciurus hudsonicus[1]: 101–102 [2]: 126   |  American red squirrel  |  Mountains  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Microtus pennsylvanicus[1]: 143–146 [2]: 128   |  Meadow vole  |  Clarke, Newton, Oconee, and Polk Counties.  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Microtus pinetorum[1][5][2]: 128   |  Woodland vole  |  State-wide, but more common in Piedmont and Mountain regions.  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Myodes gapperi[2]: 128   |  Southern red-backed vole  |  Mountains of Union, Towns, and Rabun counties  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Neofiber alleni[1]: 149–150 [2]: 128   |  Round-tailed muskrat, water rat  |  Southeastern Georgia, near the Okefenokee Swamp.  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Neotoma floridana[1]: 141–143 [2]: 127–128   |  Eastern woodrat  |  Coastal Plain and mountains  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Neotoma magister[6]  |  Allegheny woodrat  |  north-western part of the state  |  near-threatened  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Ochrotomys nuttalli[1]: 131–134 [2]: 127   |  Golden mouse  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Ondatra zibethicus[1]: 150–152 [2]: 128   |  Muskrat  |  Mountains, Ridge and Valley Province, Piedmont, and upper Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Oryzomys palustris[1]: 111–113 [2]: 126   |  Marsh rice rat  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Peromyscus gossypinus[1]: 128–131 [2]: 127   |  Cotton mouse  |  Primarily Coastal Plain, but can also be found in Ridge and Valley Province and Piedmont  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Peromyscus leucopus[1]: 123–128 [2]: 127   |  White-footed mouse, woodmouse  |  Restricted to Piedmont and mountains  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Peromyscus maniculatus[1]: 118–120 [2]: 127   |  Deer mouse  |  Summits of higher mountains  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Peromyscus polionotus[1]: 121–123 [2]: 127   |  Oldfield mouse, beach mouse  |  State-wide, except high mountain areas  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Reithrodontomys humulis[1]: 113–117 [2]: 126   |  Eastern harvest mouse  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Cricetidae  |  Sigmodon hispidus[1]: 134–141 [2]: 127   |  Hispid cotton rat, cotton rat  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Dipodidae  |  Napaeozapus insignis[1]: 164–165 [2]: 128   |  Woodland jumping mouse  |  Rare, Mountains  |  least concern  | 
  | Dipodidae  |  Zapus hudsonius[1]: 160–163 [2]: 128   |  Meadow jumping mouse  |  Rare in Georgia.  Recorded in Clarke, Oconee, Hall, and Meriwether Counties.  |  least concern  | 
  | Muridae  |  Mus musculus [1]: 157–160 [2]: 128   |  House mouse  |  Introduced: state-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Muridae  |  Rattus norvegicus[1]: 153–156 [2]: 128   |  Brown rat, Norway rat, wharf rat  |  Introduced: state-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Muridae  |  Rattus rattus [1]: 156–157 [2]: 128   |  Black rat, roof rat  |  Introduced: the lower Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Lemuridae  |  Lemur catta  |  Ring-tailed lemur  |  Introduced to St. Catherines Island[7][8][9]  |  Endangered  | 
  | Bovidae  |  Bison bison[2]: 132   |  American bison  |  Extirpated from Georgia since the early 1800s[10]  |  near threatened  | 
  | Cervidae  |  Cervus canadensis[2]: 132   |  Elk  |  Reintroduced; eastern elk subspecies (C. c. canadensis) is extinct, Rocky Mountain elk subspecies (C. c. nelsoni) introduced[11]  |  least concern  | 
  | Cervidae  |  Dama dama[2]: 131   |  European fallow deer  |  Introduced: Little St. Simons Island[12]  |  least concern  | 
  | Cervidae  |  Odocoileus virginianus[1]: 199–204 [2]: 132   |  White-tailed deer  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Suidae  |  Sus scrofa[1]: 198–199 [2]: 131   |  Wild boar  |  Introduced: lower Coastal Plain and mountains  |  least concern  | 
  | Canidae  |  Canis latrans[1]: 172–175 [2]: 130   |  Coyote  |  Primarily in the western half of Georgia  |  least concern  | 
  | Canidae  |  Canis rufus[2]: 132   |  Red wolf  |  Extirpated  |  critically endangered  | 
  | Canidae  |  Urocyon cinereoargenteus[1]: 177–180 [2]: 130   |  Gray fox  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Canidae  |  Vulpes vulpes[1]: 175–177 [2]: 130   |  Red fox  |  Piedmont and mountainous regions, occasionally in the Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Felidae  |  Lynx rufus[1]: 195–196 [2]: 131   |  Bobcat  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Felidae  |  Puma concolor[1]: 194–195 [2]: 131   |  Cougar  |  Extirpated; eastern cougar population is extinct, occasional vagrant from Florida reported[13]  |  least concern  | 
  | Mephitidae  |  Mephitis mephitis[1]: 190–192 [2]: 131   |  Striped skunk  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Mephitidae  |  Spilogale putorius[1]: 188–190 [2]: 131   |  Eastern spotted skunk  |  State-wide, except not on the eastern portion of the Coastal Plain  |  vulnerable  | 
  | Mustelidae  |  Lontra canadensis[1]: 192–194 [2]: 131   |  North American river otter  |  Coastal Plain and salt marshes.  Rare above the fall line.  |  least concern  | 
  | Mustelidae  |  Neogale frenata[1]: 184–186 [2]: 130   |  Long-tailed weasel  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Mustelidae  |  Neogale vison[1]: 186–188 [2]: 130–131   |  American mink  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Procyonidae  |  Procyon lotor[1]: 182–184 [2]: 130   |  Raccoon  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Ursidae  |  Ursus americanus[1]: 180–181 [2]: 130   |  American black bear  |  Mountains, Ocmulgee River area, along the fall line, and in the Okefenokee Swamp.  |  least concern  | 
  | Otariidae  |  Zalophus californianus[2]: 131   |  California sea lion  |  Introduced  |  least concern  | 
  | Phocidae  |  Cystophora cristata[2]: 131   |  Hooded seal  |  Known only from records – presumed extirpated  |  vulnerable  | 
  | Balaenidae  |  Eubalaena glacialis[2]: 129–130   |  North Atlantic right whale, black right whale  |  Known from three stranding records  |  critically endangered  | 
  | Balaenopteridae  |  Balaenoptera brydei[2]: 129   |  Bryde's whale  |  Known from a 1978 stranding  |  least concern  | 
  | Balaenopteridae  |  Megaptera novaeangliae[2]: 129   |  Humpback whale  |  Known from a stranding on Sapelo Island  |  least concern  | 
  | Delphinidae  |  Globicephala macrorhynchus[1]: 169 [2]: 129   |  Short-finned pilot whale  |  Known from 17 stranding events  |  least concern  | 
  | Delphinidae  |  Pseudorca crassidens[1]: 169 [2]: 129   |  False killer whale  |  Known from a single stranding  |  near threatened  | 
  | Delphinidae  |  Stenella frontalis[1]: 168 [2]: 129   |  Atlantic spotted dolphin  |  Known from sightings off of Georgia's shore  |  least concern  | 
  | Delphinidae  |  Steno bredanensis[2]: 129   |  Rough-toothed dolphin  |  Known from a stranding event involving two individuals  |  least concern  | 
  | Delphinidae  |  Tursiops truncatus[1]: 168 [2]: 129   |  Common bottlenose dolphin, Atlantic bottlenose dolphin  |  Known from over forty strandings  |  least concern  | 
  | Kogiidae  |  Kogia breviceps[1]: 168 [2]: 129   |  Pygmy sperm whale  |  Known from 24 strandings  |  least concern  | 
  | Kogiidae  |  Kogia simus[2]: 129   |  Dwarf sperm whale  |  Known from strandings  |  least concern  | 
  | Ziphiidae  |  Mesoplodon densirostris[2]: 129   |  Blainville's beaked whale, tropical beaked whale  |  Known from a stranding on Cumberland Island  |  data deficient  | 
  | Ziphiidae  |  Mesoplodon europaeus[2]: 129   |  Gervais' beaked whale  |  Known from a stranding on Ossabaw Island  |  data deficient  | 
  | Ziphiidae  |  Ziphius cavirostris[1]: 168 [2]: 129   |  Cuvier's beaked whale, goose-beaked whale  |  Known from six stranding records.  |  least concern  | 
  | Molossidae  |  Tadarida brasiliensis[2]: 125   |  Mexican free-tailed bat  |  Uncommon, in Piedmont and Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Corynorhinus rafinesquii[2]: 124–125   |  Rafinesque's big-eared bat  |  Uncommon, state-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Eptesicus fuscus[1]: 66–67 [2]: 124   |  Big brown bat  |  Common state-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Lasionycteris noctivagans[1]: 64–65 [2]: 124   |  Silver-haired bat  |  Common, except in lower Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Lasiurus borealis[1]: 67–69 [2]: 124   |  Eastern red bat  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Lasiurus cinereus[1]: 71–72 [2]: 124   |  Hoary bat  |  Uncommon, state-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Lasiurus intermedius[2]: 124   |  Northern yellow bat  |  Rare, Coastal Plain  |  least concern  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Lasiurus seminolus[1]: 69–70 [2]: 124   |  Seminole bat  |  State-wide, mostly Coastal Plain and Piedmont  |  least concern  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Myotis austroriparius[1]: 60–62 [2]: 123   |  Southeastern myotis  |  Southwestern Georgia  |  least concern  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Myotis grisescens[1]: 62 [2]: 123   |  Gray bat, gray myotis  |  West Georgia  |  vulnerable  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Myotis leibii[2]: 124   |  Eastern small-footed myotis  |  Rare, Dade and Union counties  |  endangered  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Myotis lucifugus[1]: 57–60 [2]: 123   |  Little brown bat  |  Bartow, Dade, Polk, Towns, and Walker counties  |  endangered  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Myotis septentrionalis[1]: 63 [2]: 123 [14]  |  Northern long-eared bat  |  Rare, in Mountain and Piedmont regions. Often confused with Myotis keenii, Keen's myotis, in older literature.  |  near threatened  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Myotis sodalis[1]: 63 [2]: 124   |  Indiana bat  |  Dade County in Northwestern Georgia.  |  near threatened  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Nycticeius humeralis[1]: 72–74 [2]: 124   |  Evening bat  |  State-wide  |  least concern  | 
  | Vespertilionidae  |  Perimyotis subflavus[1]: 65 [2]: 124   |  Tricolored bat, eastern pipistrelle  |  State-wide  |  vulnerable  |