THE MAMMALS
KANGAROO RATS. Genus Dipodomys13
Field characters.Body
size between that of House Mouse and House Rat, nearer the latter (see
footnote 13 for detailed measurements); tail exceeding head and body in
length, well haired, and with a conspicuous tuft at end (pl.
26e); front feet very small, hind feet and legs
disproportionately long and large; ear rounded, held close to side of
head; a large fur-lined cheek pouch on each side of face opening outside
of mouth; eyes large; pelage silky. Coloration above plain sandy brown
(varying in tone according to subspecies); a white stripe across each
thigh; whole under surface of body pure white; end of nose white with a
blackish crescent on each side; tail four-stripeddark stripe above
and below, with an intervening white stripe on each side.
Workings: Burrows about 2 inches in diameter, in loose soil,
usually about bases of bushes; entrance hole usually filled with earth
during the daytime. Tracks: Paired impressions of hind feet (3 or
4 toes showing forward, connected with a long heel print) in lengthwise
series at intervals of 7 to 36 inches, the tail track as an interrupted
line midway between the footprints (pl. 40c).
Occurrence.Resident
along east side of San Joaquin Valley, at Snelling, near Merced Falls,
and below Lagrange (dixoni), in western foothills about
Coulterville (heermanni), and again east of the Sierra Nevada
around Mono Lake (leucogenys).13 Nocturnal.
13Three races of Kangaroo
Rats are found in the Yosemite region. They are distinct from one
another structurally and occupy separate geographic areas, yet their
habits and general appearance are much alike.
HEERMANN KANGAROO RAT, Dipodomys
heermanni heermanni (Le Conte). Found along the west base of the
central Sierra Nevada. It was recorded from 1 mile west of Coulterville
to 6 miles east of that place, and probably occupies a much wider range
than this indicates. It inhabits the Upper Sonoran Zone, ranging locally
into the lower margin of Transition, and lives chiefly amid chaparral.
Head and body 4-1/4 to 4-7/8 inches (108-123 mm.), tail 6-1/2 to 7-3/8
inches (165-187 mm.), hind foot about 1-3/4 inches (43-44 mm.), ear from
crown about 1/2 inch (12-16 mm.), weight about 2-1/2 ounces (68.6-72.8
grams).
MERCED KANGAROO RAT, Dipodomys
heermanni dixoni (Grinnell). A subspecies inhabiting the east side
of the San Joaquin Valley (Lower Sonoran Zone). It was recorded at
Snelling, near Merced Falls, and below Lagrange. It inhabits open sandy
or dusty places. From heermanni it is distinguished by smaller
size and average lighter color. (See pl. 26e). Head and body
3-7/8 to 4-3/4 inches (98-119 mm.), tail 6 to 6-7/8 inches (155-174
mm.), hind foot about 1-5/8 inches (39-42 mm.), ear from crown about 1/2
inch (12.5-14 mm.), weight 1-1/2 to 2-2/5 ounces (43.4-68.4
grams).
PALE-FACED KANGAROO RAT, Dipodomys
leucogenys (Grinnell). A species distinct from the two preceding in
several particulars, and readily separated from them by larger size and
paler coloration. It is rather common at Mono Mills, on the slopes of
Mono Craters and along Dry Creek; all these localities are near Mono
Lake east of the Sierra Nevada. It inhabits sandy places among the
sagebrush. Head and body 4-5/8 to 5-1/2 inches (117-140 mm.), tail 6-1/3
to 7-1/3 inches (160-185 mm.), hind foot about 1-3/4 inches (44-47 mm.),
ear from crown about 1/2 inch (12-13 mm.), weight 2-3/4 to 3-1/8 ounces
(78.2-88.5 grams).
The Kangaroo Rat is a type of mammal which has
developed in response to the sandy desert conditions obtaining in the
southwestern part of North America. The territory at either end of the
Yosemite cross-section, being rather arid in character and otherwise
suitable, is occupied by a moderate population of this rodent. The name
kangaroo rat refers to the mode of progression which, like that of the
Australian kangaroo, is accomplished by catapultic leaps with the long
hind legs and feet, in which operation the greatly lengthened tail acts
as a stabilizer and support. Another special feature, the external
fur-lined cheek pouch on each side of the face, used, as with the pocket
gopher, for the storage of clean food materials, has led to the name
pocket rat for this rodent.
Further description of the kangaroo rat may be of
interest, particularly as the animal itself is rarely seen in the wild
alive though it has been found to submit readily to captivity. The form
is somewhat tapered, the nose being pointed and leading back to a rather
flattish head. The forelegs and feet are small, but the hind legs and
feet, the leaping apparatus, comprise quite the largest part of the
animal (pl. 26e). The tail is long, well exceeding the head and
body in length, and is covered with hair which, toward the tip, becomes
long and forms a tuft, or better, a 'brush.' The nose is provided with
an elaborate set of vibrissae or 'whiskers,' the longest of which reach
out far beyond the side of the body. The ears are rather small though
the hearing ability of these animals is probably acute to judge from the
enlargement of the back portions of the skull which house the internal
ear structures. The whole pelage of the animal is soft, even silky in
texture. The kangaroo rat habitually travels and rests on its hind feet,
the fore ones being devoted to the handling of food materials and to
cleaning the fur.
Most species of kangaroo rats inhabit sandy
situations, so that, as a rule, naturalists have come regularly to look
for the animals in such places. The Merced and Pale-faced kangaroo rats
of the Yosemite region frequent sandy ground. But the Heermann Kangaroo
Rat which lives in the western foothill country dwells in the chaparral
where there is seldom any sand and where usually the ground is gravelly
or even rocky in nature. Its niche is evidently much like that of the
California Pocket Mouse. The special requirement of the kangaroo rat is
a location in which it can place its burrow; the animal does all its
foraging out on the surface of the ground. No burrows were opened up by
us in the Yosemite region, but in other places the underground retreats
have been found to be of relatively simple nature, used as shelters
during the daytime and in cold or rainy weather, and as storehouses for
food to be eaten when the animals cannot well venture out.
The distance which a kangaroo rat can cover in one
leap is apt to be over-estimated. On any of the relatively few occasions
when we have seen one of these animals abroad during the daytime, it has
made off so suddenly that we were practically at a loss to describe what
transpired during the few seconds that the animal continued in sight. In
cases where the actions of an animal have been observed successfully the
extent of a single leap has been found to be moderate; one jump followed
another so rapidly, however, that the rat's progress was amazingly
swift. Speedy escape is likely to be interpreted as due to the animal's
ability to jump prodigious distances, whereas the real basis is rapidity
of action. Animals frightened or turned out of their burrows when ground
was being plowed have been seen to cover 3 to 4 feet at a leap. Under
extremely favorable circumstances this might be slightly exceeded. The
tracks of an undisturbed Heermann Kangaroo Rat seen in a dusty road near
Coulterville were (heel to heel) from 7-1/2 to 9 inches (190-230 mm.)
apart. Where something in the road had claimed its attention and the
animal had loitered the tracks were even closer. (Sec pl.
40c).
The normal activity of the kangaroo rat is confined
to the hours of darkness. Unless disturbed by man or some native enemy,
it rarely or never ventures out in the daytime. But as soon as dusk has
fallen it leaves its burrow and goes hunting for food. The animal
subsists almost entirely upon small seeds of particularly sought kinds.
Material is gathered and stuffed into the cheek pouches, then the rat
retires to its burrow where the food materials are deposited in a
special chamber, to be shucked out and consumed at leisure. Examination
of the cheek pouch contents of captured animals indicates that a variety
of wild seeds are used as food; but when cultivated grains are available
the animals turn to these, especially where the fields adjoin wild land.
Kangaroo rats readily take the poisoned grain put out for ground
squirrels and many meet death from this cause. Ploughing of new land
destroys their burrows and quickly drives them out, so that this rodent
rarely becomes an important enemy of man.
Our specimens of the Heermann Kangaroo Rat were all
taken in the neighborhood of Coulterville, from Blacks Creek on the west
to Smith Creek, 6 miles east of the town. But the species enjoys a much
wider local range, for we found tracks in the dust of roads at Pleasant
Valley, closed burrows on the greasewood slopes about El Portal in
December (when the rats are loath to come forth), and got reports of the
presence of the animals in fields near the town of Mount Bullion. It was
our experience that this chaparral-inhabiting species was more difficult
to trap than those which live on the sandy plains and deserts.
Furthermore, the population of heermanni is sparser than that of
the other species; perhaps two to the acre would represent the
population on favorable slopes. In a few places, as about clearings in
the chaparral, there are probably somewhat more than the number
indicated.
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