Fukomys damarensis (Ogilby, 1838)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6584692 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6584550 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038F4B5A-FFA1-FFD6-A892-FDF8B80ECA7D |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Fukomys damarensis |
status |
|
16. View Plate 22: Bathyergidae
Damara Mole-rat
French: Bathyergue de Damara / German: Damara-Graumull / Spanish: Rata topo de Damara
Other common names: Botswanan Mole-rat, Damara Mole Rat, Damaraland Blesmol
Taxonomy. Bathyergus damarensis Ogilby, 1838 ,
Damaraland, Namibia.
This species is monotypic.
Distribution. S Angola, S Zambia, E Namibia, most of Botswana, W Zimbabwe, and NW South Africa (Northern Cape). View Figure
Descriptive notes. Head-body 169-9-178-7 mm (males) and 155-2-163 mm (females), tail 23-6-24-4 mm (males) and 21-5-22-5 mm (females); weight 119-8-210-2 g (males) and 113-6-169-4 g (females). The Damara Mole-rat is medium-sized, with short legs, cylindrical body, short tail, and vibrissae on tail and feet. Dorsal pelage is dark brown to black; large head has white head spot. Chromosomal complement is 2n = 74 or 78, FN = 92.
Habitat. Open sandy soils in semiarid thornscrub, savanna, and grassland areas.
Food and Feeding. The Damara Mole-rat is herbivorous and eats geophytes, tubers, and bulbs; it does not drink standing water.
Breeding. Breeding of the Damara Mole-rat is aseasonal. Gestation is 78-92 days;litter size averages three young (range 1-6), with up to three litters per year. Sex ratio is skewed toward males.
Activity patterns. The Damara Mole-rat burrows and digs with upper incisors. It is most active after rainfall and has a circadian rhythm.
Movements, Home range and Social organization. Non-reproductive and unrelated Damara Mole-rats in a colony disperse. Home range averages 1-3 ha. Colonies of Damara Mole-rats are eusocial, with a single breeding female and 1-2 breeding males, overlapping generations, and non-reproductive individuals. Offspring are cared for cooperatively, and non-reproductive individuals forage, defend burrow systems, and care of young. Reproductive female suppresses ovulation of other females. There is widespread multiple paternity and unrelated immigrants in colony; colony size averages eleven individuals (range 2-14); and sex ratio is male-biased.
Status and Conservation. Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List.
Bibliography. Barnett et al. (2003), Bennett & Faulkes (2000), Bennett & Jarvis (1988a, 2004), Bennett, Faulkes & Molteno (1996), Bennett, Jarvis, Millar et al. (1994), Burland et al. (2004), De Graaff (1972), Faulkes & Bennett (2001), Hazell et al. (2000), Lovegrove (1988), Lovegrove et al. (1993), Maree & Faulkes (2008b), Nevo et al. (1986), Roper et al. (2001).
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