Tipton kangaroo rat

The Tipton kangaroo rat (Dipodomys nitratoides nitratoides), is a subspecies of the San Joaquin kangaroo rat, a rodent in the family Heteromyidae.[1][2][3]

Tipton kangaroo rat

Endangered (ESA)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Heteromyidae
Genus: Dipodomys
Species:
Subspecies:
D. n. nitratoides
Trinomial name
Dipodomys nitratoides nitratoides
Merriam, 1894

Description

Adult Tipton kangaroo rats have small forefeet, exceptionally large hind feet, and long tail.[4] They have a head and body length of about 100 to 110 millimeters and weigh approximately 35 to 38 grams. The tail length is about 125 to 130 millimeters in length. This subspecies is larger than the Fresno kangaroo rat and smaller than the short-nosed kangaroo rat (D. nitratoides brevinasus).[5]

Distribution

This subspecies lives in ground burrows between the Kern National Wildlife Refuge, Delano, and the natural lands surrounding Lamont (southeast of Bakersfield), Kern County, at the Coles Levee Ecosystem Preserve and in other scattered areas to the south in Kern County, in areas west of Tipton, Pixley, and Earlimart, Pixley National Wildlife Refuge, Allensworth Ecological Reserve, and Allensworth State Historical Park in Tulare County.[6]

Diet

Tipton kangaroo rats eat mainly seeds. They also consume some insects and small amounts of herbaceous vegetation when available.

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gollark: There are theories of how they might work, but any useful ones involve ridiculously complex maths and not vague ideas of extra dimensions.
gollark: Also, I don't think that "the universe is the 3-dimensional surface of a 4-sphere" thing is actually... true?
gollark: You can totally understand it ish, just not very intuitively.
gollark: And apparently (I read about it here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_decay#Bound-state_%CE%B2%E2%88%92_decay) fully ionized atoms of one thing have a very different half life too.

See also

Kangaroo rat

Further reading

  • Jameson et al. 1988. California Mammals.
  • Wilson et al. (editors). 1999. The Smithsonian Book of North American Mammals.
  • Whitaker (editor). 1998. National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Mammals, Revised Edition.
  • Zeiner et al. (editors). 1990. California's Wildlife, Volume III, Mammals.

References


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