Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Mexican woodrat

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Rodentia

Genus
  
Neotoma

Higher classification
  
Pack rat

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Cricetidae

Scientific name
  
Neotoma mexicana

Rank
  
Species

Mexican woodrat httpsc2staticflickrcom4385314226118129e41

Similar
  
Pack rat, Southern Plains woodrat, Mammal, White‑throated woodrat, Rodent

The Mexican woodrat (Neotoma mexicana) is a medium-sized rat occurring in the United States from Utah and Colorado south through New Mexico and parts of Arizona and Trans-Pecos Texas. Its range continues south in the highlands to Honduras. Although occurring at lower elevations during the Pleistocene, it generally is limited now to highlands supporting open coniferous forests or woodlands. In a few places, it occurs in lower country where lava or boulder fields occur; presumably the presence of spaces extending far below the surface enables survival. Like most members of the genus living in rocky areas, dens tend to take advantage of crevices, rock shelters, and caves; stick nests are relatively rare.

The type locality is near Chihuahua, Chihuahua, Mexico. Some 26 species names have been applied to populations of the Mexican woodrat and are now considered synonyms.

The animal averages a bit over 300 mm in total length and weighs 140 to 185 g. Their diets tend to be generalist, with a wide variety of berries, vegetation, nuts, acorns, and fungi, though foliage seems to make up the major food class.

References

Mexican woodrat Wikipedia


Similar TopicsMammal
Pack rat
Rodent