Giant pouched rat (Redirected from Cricetomys)

Giant pouched rat
Temporal range: Recent
Emin's pouched rat (Cricetomys emini)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Nesomyidae
Subfamily: Cricetomyinae
Genus: Cricetomys
Waterhouse, 1840
Species

The giant pouched rats (genus Cricetomys) of sub-Saharan Africa are large muroid rodents.

Description

Their head and body lengths range from 25–45 cm (10–17.5 in) with scaly tails ranging from 36–46 cm (14–18 in). They weigh between 1.0 and 1.5 kg (2.2 and 3.3 lb).

Taxonomy

Giant pouched rats are only distantly related to the true rats, although until recently they had been placed in the same family, Muridae. Recent molecular studies, however, place them in the family Nesomyidae, part of an ancient radiation of African and Malagasy muroids. The name "pouched rat" refers to their large cheek pouches.

The species are:

Image Common name Scientific name Distribution
Southern giant pouched rat Cricetomys ansorgei Zimbabwe, Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Emin's pouched rat Cricetomys emini Tropical Africa, Madagascar
Gambian pouched rat Cricetomys gambianus Senegal to Kenya and from Angola to Mozambique
Kivu giant pouched rat Cricetomys kivuensis Southern Africa

Behaviour

Females have been said to be capable of producing up to 10 litters yearly. Gestation is 27–36 days. The animals generally have between six and eight nipples. One to five young are born at a time.

The animals are nocturnal omnivores, and feed on vegetation and small animals, especially insects. They have a particular taste for palm nuts.

Interaction with humans

In many African countries, giant pouched rats are valued as an important food item.

They are easily tamed as pets, but were associated with an outbreak of monkeypox in the USA in 2003, and have since been banned from importation to the U.S.

A HeroRAT finds a land mine in a training field in Morogoro, Tanzania

Detecting explosives and tuberculosis by scent

These rats are also becoming useful in some areas for detecting land mines; their acute sense of smell is very effective in detecting explosives such as TNT, and at the same time they are light enough to not detonate any of the mines. The rats are being trained by APOPO, a nonprofit social venture based in Tanzania.

The procedure for training rats to detect land mines was conceived of and developed by Belgian Bart Weetjens. Training starts at four weeks of age, when the rats are handled to accustom them to humans and exposed to a variety of sights and sounds. They learn to associate a clicker with a food reward of banana or banana-peanut paste. They are then trained to indicate a hole that contains TNT by nosing it for five seconds. Then they learn to find the correct hole in a line of holes. Finally, the rat is trained to wear a harness and practises outdoors on a lead, finding inactive mines under soil. At the end of their training, they are tested; they must find all the mines in an area of 400 m2 (480 sq yd) that has been seeded with inactivated mines. It is a blind test; their handlers do not know where the mines are. If they succeed, they are certified as bomb-sniffing rats.

APOPO is also training the rats to detect tuberculosis by sniffing sputum samples. The rats can test many more samples than a scientist can—hundreds in a day, compared with 30 to 40 by traditional methods. Land mine and tuberculosis sniffing rats are called HeroRATs.

In popular culture

Ben, in the 2003 remake of Willard, was a Gambian pouched rat.


This page was last updated at 2023-10-01 01:27 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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