Kangaroo rats
- By Susan Tweit
- Published 01/1/2003
- Outdoors
- Unrated
Susan Tweit
Susan J. Tweit is a scientist who evolved into an award-winning writer and radio commentator. She is the author of five books for adults, including Barren, Wild, & Worthless: Living in the Chihuahuan Desert, personal stories about the history and natural history of Southern New Mexico, The Great Southwest Nature Factbook, a browser's guide to nature in the Southwest, from A to Z, and Seasons in the Desert: A Naturalist's Notebook, from Chronicle books. She has also written two children's books, Meet the Wild Southwest: Land of Hoodoos & Gila Monsters (Alaska Northwest Books) and City Foxes, a picture book which was named one of the Outstanding Science Books for Children for 1998.
Her "Wild Lives" radio commentaries are heard three times weekly on KRWG-FM, Southern New Mexico public radio, and her columns run in the Las Cruces Sun News. Susan's essays and stories have appeared in Harrowsmith Country Life, New Mexico, Sierra, Cricket, Bloomsbury Review, and other magazines. She is the co-founder of Las Cruces' wildly popular - and fun - Border Book Festival. She is currently living in Colorado with her husband, Richard Cabe, and dog, Perdida Imelda.
Susan is a popular public speaker and leader of workshops. Her stories of our natural and human history have captivated a wide variety of audiences, including school classes, workshops, banquets, and professional meetings. As Bloomsbury Review put it, she brings the precision of a scientist and the passion of a poet, and is able to refocus readers' vision and ignite their imaginations.
Susan has a new web site! She invites you to come visit. Her books are available there, at local bookstores, or on-line through http://BarnesandNoble.com and http://Amazon.com (search by author for Susan Tweit).
Kangaroo rats are not rats at all; nor are they kangaroos. These rodents are so named because they look like tiny kangaroos, with an upright, hopping gait, huge hind legs and feet, and a long, furry tail which comprises nearly two-thirds of their foot-or-so total length.
Bipedal locomotion serves these desert residents well, both for nocturnal foraging and for escaping predators. When pursued, a kangaroo rat pushes off swiftly with those big hind legs and leaps in a wild, randomly zigzagging flight much like a bouncing Superball, changing course quickly by swinging its long, rudderlike tail, and springing up to ten feet at a leap.
Kangaroo rats are the ³desert rats² of the rodent order, superbly adapted to this arid country. Elaborate physiological and behavioral adaptations allow them to survive without ever drinking water.
Elongated nasal passages cool their outgoing breath and recapture its moisture. Super-efficient kidneys save water also, concentrating salts and urea from ten to twenty times before eliminating them.
Even kangaroo rats
Bipedal locomotion also helps kangaroo rats save water by minimizing the time and energy that they spend foraging. These big-eyed rodents hop across the desert at night on their hind legs, keeping their front paws free to pick up food - plant seeds.
Instead of stopping to eat, they stuff the seeds into their ³shopping bags,² fur-lined cheek pouches along their lower jaws which can hold about a teaspoon apiece. When their cheek pouches are crammed full, kangaroo rats hop back to their burrows to either store their stash or munch their meal in peace, safe from the many nighttime predators.
Kangaroo rats are well-adapted to nocturnal life. Their big head - equal to one-third of their body - allows space for an inflated middle-ear echo chamber that magnifies sounds, enabling them to easily hear predators like owls and rattlesnakes. Extra-large eyes placed high on their head give them acute night vision.
Unfortunately, although kangaroo rats are elegantly adapted to the harsh desert environment, they are not prepared for urban life. Many, like the bannertail kangaroo rat that we spotted dead on Picacho Avenue, are struck by cars while crossing roads at night; others are killed by free-roaming cats.
