Northeast African Mole Rat Skull Replica

$61.00

The Northeast African Mole Rat is a species of rodent and is found in Ethiopia, Somalia, and northwest Kenya. It’s natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist montane forests, dry savanna, high-altitude shrubland and grassland.

Description

Northeast African Mole Rat Skull Replica measures 1.7 inches. Northeast African Mole Rat Skull Replica is Museum quality replicas Polyurethane cast made in USA. 2-part skull (separate cranium and jaw). Our precise skull can be used as a teaching tool, museum skull exhibit, home décor skull, or office décor skull.

The Northeast African mole rat or Tachyoryctes splendens is a species of rodent in the family Spalacidae and is found in Ethiopia, Somalia, and northwest Kenya.

Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist montane forests, dry savanna, high-altitude shrubland and grassland. It lives a solitary existence underground and produces a small litter of pups twice a year, in the two rainy seasons.

The Northeast African mole rat is a fossorial species and lives a solitary life in a network of burrows. African mole rats mainly use their bulging teeth, nose, and top of their head to dig channels underground.

Some researchers found that their olfactory systems have increased surface area and are highly complex, an evolved trait that may have occurred due to their lifestyle of living in a community with less individuals.

Female mole-rats become sexually mature at about 120 days and the average time between successive litters is around 173 days. The average size of litters is about two. The arrival of the young is synchronized with the middle of the rainy seasons which occur from April to July and again from November to December.

Sometimes areas where this mole rat lives can become flooded. Tests have shown that when this happens, the Northeast African mole rat can swim for two minutes or more, walk over ground for up to 260 ft. at 23 ft. per minute and dig a new burrow.

The researchers hypothesized that flooding might encourage the animal to disperse to new areas and that the wet ground would make digging the new burrow easier.

They can produce seismic signals by striking its head against the ceiling of their tunnels to communicate. These signals can be fast, probably for identification of individuals, or slow, maybe as a warning.

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Additional information

Weight 1 lbs
Dimensions 1.7 in
Naked Mole Rat Facts:

Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Heterocephalidae
Genus: Heterocephalus
Species: H. glaber
Binomial name: Heterocephalus glaber
Conservation status: Least concern – A least concern species is a species that has been categorized by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as evaluated as not being a focus of species conservation.