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Jerboa (Family: Dipodidae) - Wiki
Subject: Jerboa (Family: Dipodidae) - Wiki
Small Five-toed Jerboa, Allactaga elater-0001.jpg
Resolution: 600x473 File Size: 63631 Bytes Upload Date: 2007:12:10 10:41:49

Jerboa (Family: Dipodidae) - Wiki


Jerboa
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Order: Rodentia
Superfamily: Dipodoidea
Family: Dipodidae

[Photo] Small Five-toed Jerboa, Allactaga elater. Author: Milos Andrea (www.naturephoto-cz.com/photographer-milos-andera.html) / www.naturephoto-cz.com/ Source: www.naturephoto-cz.com/small-five-toed-jerboa:allactaga-elater-photo-3101.html

Jerboas are the members of the family Dipodidae; they are small jumping desert rodents of Asia and northern Africa that resemble mice with a long tufted tail and very long hind legs. The small forelegs are not used for locomotion. In general, Asiatic jerboas have five toes on their hind feet and African jerboas have three; the shapes of their ears vary widely between species. Jerboa fur is long, soft and silky. Diet varies considerably: some are specialist seed, insect, or plant eaters, others are omnivores.

The English word jerboa may have been derived from the similar sounding Arabic word jerbu'a (??????????) or the Hebrew word yarboa (????????????????????) which denote this animal.

The ancestors of the modern jerboas probably separated from the more generalised rodents about 8 million years ago on the arid plains of Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan and Mongolia, and then spread to Europe and northern Africa. With the exception of Europe, where they died out, this remains their current range.

Their ability to hop is presumed to be an adaptation to help them escape from predators, and perhaps to assist with the longer journeys a desert-living animal must make to find food. Although jerboas are not closely related to the hopping mice of Australia or the kangaroo rats of North America, all three groups have evolved a similar set of adaptations to life in the deep desert.

Jerboas are nocturnal. During the heat of the day, they shelter in burrows. They create four separate types of burrow: two temporary, and two permanent. The temporary burrows are plain tubes: those used to escape from predators during the night are just 10 to 20 cm deep, unsealed and not camouflaged; the permanent daytime burrows are well-hidden and sealed with a plug of sand to keep heat out and moisture in, and are 20 to 50 cm long.

Permanent burrows are also sealed and camouflaged, and often have multiple entrances. They are much more elaborate structures with a nesting chamber. The winter burrows have food storage chambers 40 to 70 cm below ground level, and a hibernation chamber an astonishing 1.5 to 2.5 metres down.

Perhaps the best-known species is the Lesser Egyptian Jerboa (Jaculus jaculus) which occupies some of the most hostile deserts on the planet. It does not drink at all, relying on its food to provide enough moisture for survival. Found in both the sandy and stony deserts of north Africa, Arabia and Iran, this small creature estivates (a form of hibernation) during the hottest summer months, and has the ability to leap a full metre to escape a predator.

Two species are considered threatened: the Five-toed Pygmy Jerboa and the Thick-tailed Pygmy Jerboa, which are both classified as vulnerable (VU). Many other species have been placed in a "lower risk" category, and one species (Thomas's Pygmy Jerboa) lacks the data for assessment.

Classification

ORDER RODENTIA
Family Dipodidae
Subfamily Zapodinae: jumping mice, 4 species in 3 genera
Subfamily Sicistinae: birch mice

Subfamily Cardiocraniinae
Five-toed Pygmy Jerboa, Cardiocranius paradoxus
Thick-tailed Pygmy Jerboa, Salpingotus crassicauda
Heptner's Pygmy Jerboa, Salpingotus heptneri
Koslov's Pygmy Jerboa, Salpingotus kozlovi
Baluchistan Pygmy Jerboa, Salpingotus michaelis
Pallid Pygmy Jerboa, Salpingotus pallidus
Thomas' Pygmy Jerboa, Salpingotus thomasi

Subfamily Dipodinae
Northern three-toed Jerboa, Dipus sagitta
Lichtenstein's Jerboa, Eremodipus lichensteini
Blanford's Jerboa, Jaculus blanfordi
Lesser Egyptian Jerboa, Jaculus jaculus
Greater Egyptian Jerboa, Jaculus orientalis
Turkmen Jerboa, Jaculus turcmenicus
Andrew's Three-toed Jerboa, Stylodipus andrewsi
Mongolian Three-toed Jerboa, Stylodipus sungorus
Thick-tailed Three-toed Jerboa, Stylodipus telum

Subfamily Euchoreutinae
Long-eared Jerboa, Euchoreutes naso

Subfamily Allactaginae
Balikun Jerboa, Allactaga balikunica
Gobi Jerboa, Allactaga bullata
Small Five-toed Jerboa, Allactaga elater
Euphrates Jerboa, Allactaga euphratica
Iranian Jerboa, Allactaga firouzi
Hotson's Jerboa, Allactaga hotsoni
Great Jerboa, Allactaga major
Severtzov's Jerboa, Allactaga severtzovi
Mongolian Five-toed Jerboa, Allactaga sibirica
Four-toed Jerboa, Allactaga tetradactyla
Vinogradov's Jerboa, Allactaga vinogradovi
Bobrinski's Jerboa, Allactodipus bobrinskii
Lesser Fat-tailed Jerboa, Pygeretmus platyurus
Dwarf Fat-tailed Jerboa, Pygeretmus pumilo
Greater Fat-tailed Jerboa, Pygeretmus shitkovi

Subfamily Paradipodinae
Comb-toed Jerboa, Paradipus ctenodactylus

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerboa
The text in this page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article shown in above URL. It is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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