Natural history of the giant mole-rat, Cryptomys mechowi (rodentia: Bathyergidae), from Zambia

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Abstract

We present the 1st detailed field study on the giant mole-rat (Cryptomys mechowi), a eusocial subterranean bathyergid rodent from mesic areas of subequatorial central Africa. In Copperbelt Province, Zambia, we found giant mole-rats in a variety of habitats including agricultural fields, bushland, marshes, and forests. Soil types varied in hardness and air content, and varied vertically and horizontally. Burrow systems of single colonies were 0.2-2.5 ha. The diameter of burrows was about 8 cm, and the maximum depth was about 200 cm. Nests were found at an average depth of 91 cm (n = 8). Further characteristics of nests, food and defecation chambers, diet, helminth parasites, and commensals are described. Colony size ranged from 3 to >20 with a sex ratio of 1:1.2 (n = 65) in favor of females, with 8% juveniles, 39% subadults, and 53% adults. A significant sexual dimorphism was found in the body mass (345 g ± 95 SD in males versus 252 ± 34 g in females). A defined breeding season was not apparent. Because C. mechowi occurs in a variety of habitats across a broad geographic range, generalizations based on the examination of selected study sites and consequent linking of behavioral ecology with habitat parameters should be done with caution.

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Scharff, A., Locker-Grütjen, O., Kawalika, M., & Burda, H. (2001). Natural history of the giant mole-rat, Cryptomys mechowi (rodentia: Bathyergidae), from Zambia. Journal of Mammalogy, 82(4), 1003–1015. https://doi.org/10.1644/1545-1542(2001)082<1003:NHOTGM>2.0.CO;2

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