Life History of the Kangaroo Rat by Charles Taylor Vorhies;Walter P. (Walter Penn) Taylor
page 64 of 75 (85%)
page 64 of 75 (85%)
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exception of the parasitic insects the most common are wingless
locustids (_Ceuthophilus_ spp.) and the peculiar wingless females of a species of cockroach (_Arenivaga erratica_). These two are seldom absent when a burrow is excavated, the female cockroaches being abundant, although the winged males have never been taken in the burrows. Cary's observations at Monahans, Tex., and those of others at numerous localities, combined with our own, show that at various times the dens furnish protection and shelter for various species of cottontail rabbits (_Sylvilagus_), ground squirrels (_Citellus_ and _Ammospermophilus_), wood rats (_Neotoma_), grasshopper mice (_Onychomys_), rattlesnakes (_Crotalus_), and most of the common lizards. Of these the ground squirrels _Citellus tereticaudus_ and _Ammospermophilus harrisii_ are most often noted on the Range Reserve using the dens as a retreat, the _Ammospermophilus_ seldom being observed to enter any other kind of burrow. It should be added that the total observations include dens which have been deserted by their rightful owners. NATURAL CHECKS. The enemies of the kangaroo rat are not determined in detail, or as to relative importance, but the badger (_Taxidea taxus berlandieri_) and the kit fox, or swift (_Vulpes macrotis neomexicana_), may well be foremost. Dens which have been deeply excavated by badgers are frequently seen, and sometimes two or three badger tunnels penetrate one burrow system. Dens thus despoiled are probably soon reoccupied even if the original owner is captured, and in the course of a few months the reworking of the abode obliterates the signs of destruction. |
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