Marsupial two-meter jerboa 7 letters. Marsupial jerboa

  • Species: Antechinomys laniger Gould, 1856 = East Australian marsupial jerboa (Photo by P.A.Wooly & D.Walsh)
  • Species: Antechinomys spencer Thomas = Central Australian marsupial jerboa (Photo by B.G. Thomson)
  • Genus: Antechinomys Krefft, 1867 = Marsupial jerboas

    Representatives of the genus Marsupial jerboas are small in size. Body length 8-11 cm. Tail length 11-12 cm. Externally similar to jerboas. Males are larger than females. The hind limbs are greatly elongated. The forelimbs are quite well developed. The tail is long, with a large tuft of dark hair at the end. The muzzle is elongated and pointed. The ears are large, rounded at the tops. The first digit on the hind limbs is missing. The hair is long, thick and soft, grayish, whitish below. On the sides of the head, through the eye, there is usually a dark stripe. In addition to the muzzle, there are unusually long vibrissae on the wrists. During the breeding season, the brood pouch opens backwards and is well developed. Nipple 6-8.

    They live mainly in sandy deserts and semi-deserts. Predators that feed on insects and small vertebrates. They move by jumping, and when moving they rely on their forelimbs. Activity is crepuscular and nocturnal. They spend the day in deep holes.

    Distributed in the central regions and eastern Australia. Few in number everywhere.

    There are two species in the genus:

    View: EAST AUSTRALIAN MARSPAL JERBAE (Antechinomys laniger)

    Inhabits dry savannas of Eastern Australia and rocky or sandy areas of the Central Australian Desert.

    These are strictly nocturnal animals. Insectivores, but on occasion they attack small lizards and rodents; in captivity they feed exclusively on meat.

    The usual number of young is 7. The pouch is poorly developed and opens backwards.

    Antechinomys laniger Gould, 1856 = East Australian marsupial jerboa (Photo by P.A.Wooly & D.Walsh)

    Found from southern Queensland to north-west Victoria.

    The East Australian marsupial jerboa is so low in numbers that it is endangered complete disappearance. Behind last years it was found in approximately ten places in the territory bounded by 30 and 33 degrees S latitude. and 146 and 148 degrees east. The species is included in the Red Book.

    Species: Antechinomys spencer Thomas = Central Australian marsupial jerboa The CENTRAL AUSTRALIAN marsupial jerboa (Antechinomys spencer) inhabits the deserts and semi-deserts of Central Australia. It feeds on insects and small vertebrates. Moves by jumping, leaning on the forelimbs. Spends the day in deep holes.

    The promiscuity of mothers benefits the offspring

    Australian biologists have shown that polyandry (crossing a female with many males) dramatically increases the viability of offspring in marsupial mice. The offspring of females who mated with multiple males lived much longer on average compared to the offspring of females who mated with only one male. This effect is explained by the fact that sperm selection occurs in the female reproductive tract, and sperm with “better” genes have a greater chance of fertilizing the egg.

    Australian marsupial mice (Antechinus stuartii)- perhaps the most “sexually horny” animals in the world. During the rutting season, each female mates with many males, and the male mates with many females, with each sexual act lasting from 5 to 14 hours. The orgy continues until all the males literally die from exhaustion. After this, for some time there are no living males left in the population of this species - only pregnant females.

    Australian zoologists decided that marsupial mice could be a good model object for elucidating the biological meaning of polyandry. This term refers to a widespread behavior of females in the animal kingdom, which consists of a female mating with not one, but several males before producing offspring.

    Previously, polyandry was studied mainly in insects. A number of experiments have shown that the offspring of females mated with several males have a higher average life expectancy. In addition, it turned out that if a female mates with males who are related to her in varying degrees, then the sperm of the most distant relatives have the greatest chance of fertilizing the egg.

    The mechanism of selection of competing sperm in the female reproductive tract is not yet precisely known. In some cases, apparently, immunological means are used for this purpose, making it possible to distinguish “us” from “strangers”. In a number of species, most sperm do not even try to fertilize the egg, since their function has become the hunt for “foreign” sperm (the so-called “sperm wars”).

    To explain the positive effect polyandry has on the health of the offspring, two hypotheses are usually used: 1) the “good genes” hypothesis (those sperm that carry the most “high-quality” genes are selected, regardless of the genetic characteristics of the female) and 2) the “suitable genes” hypothesis (sperm with genes that form the most favorable combination with the genes of a given female are selected). These two hypotheses are not mutually exclusive: when choosing a sperm, both parameters can be taken into account simultaneously. The preference for “unrelated” sperm found in some insects is well explained by the second hypothesis. Only the first hypothesis was tested on marsupial mice. To exclude “related” effects, experimenters selected pairs of marsupial mice in such a way as to avoid inbreeding.

    In the first series of experiments, it was possible to show that the offspring of those female marsupial mice that mated with several males are characterized by increased viability compared to the offspring of females who had only one (randomly chosen by the experimenters) sexual partner. In the first case, there was a decrease in “infant mortality” and an increased survival rate of already grown animals, which scientists tagged and released into the wild.

    To test whether these results could be explained by the “good genes” hypothesis, the scientists conducted the following experiment. Each male mated sequentially with four females. Other males also mated with the first three of them, but the experimenters deprived the fourth of this opportunity. Then a genetic analysis of the offspring of the first three females was carried out, during which scientists found out which males’ sperm had the greatest “success”. After this, the life expectancy of the offspring of the “fourth” females was compared with the “success” of the sperm of their only partner. A clear direct correlation has emerged: the more competitive the sperm of a given male is, the longer (on average) his offspring from any female lives. Thus, the “good genes” hypothesis was completely confirmed. The authors emphasize that their results do not contradict the “suitable genes” hypothesis; this hypothesis was simply not tested in their experiments. Marsupials are, of course, not the most typical mammal species with regard to sexual behavior, and it is not entirely clear whether these results can be generalized to other animal species and to humans. There are no experimental data of this kind on humans and are not expected (for obvious reasons). However, it should be noted that among our closest relatives, chimpanzees, polyandry and “sperm wars” are a very typical phenomenon. It is with this that primatologists associate the abnormally large size of chimpanzee testes (compared, for example, with gorillas, who practice a harem system, and females, willy-nilly, remain faithful to their “master”). As for humans, in their anatomical and behavioral parameters they are clearly closer to chimpanzees than to gorillas.

    (Antechinomys)

    genus of mammals in the family of carnivorous marsupials. Body length 8-11 cm, tail 11-12 cm. The hind limbs are elongated. The hairline is long and thick. The color is grayish above, whitish below. The brood pouch develops during the breeding season and opens backwards.

    2 types. Distributed in central and eastern Australia. They live in sandy deserts and semi-deserts. Active at night. Burrows serve as shelter. They feed on insects and small vertebrates. There are 6-8 cubs in a litter. The number of eastern Australian S. t. is very small.

    • - sem. mammals neg. rodents Dl. body 5-26 cm, tail - 7-30 cm. 10-15 births, approx. 30 types. Distributed in Eurasia, North. Africa and North America. They live in ch. arr. in the steppes and deserts. There are 17 species in the USSR...

      Agricultural Encyclopedic Dictionary

    • - rodents with long hind legs and a long tail with a brush. Several species live in the USSR, inhabiting primarily. south steppes. T.-nocturnal living; burrows are camouflaged during the day and difficult to find; For the winter, T. go into hibernation...

      Agricultural dictionary-reference book

    • - 11.5.3...

      Animals of Russia. Directory

    • - 11.5.5...

      Animals of Russia. Directory

    • - an order of viviparous mammals. Body length from several. cm to 3 m, the tail of many is well developed. Most S. females have a brood pouch, into which the nipples open...
    • - family of mammals neg. rodents Body length 4-26 cm; the tail is longer than the body. OK. 30 species, in open landscapes of the North. hemispheres. They damage the areas that strengthen the sands...

      Natural science. encyclopedic Dictionary

    • - jerboas are a family of rodents. Includes 10-15 births, approx. 30 types...

      Biological encyclopedic dictionary

    • - see Ulcerative...
    • - a family of small rodents. The head is short and thick. Strongly developed zygomatic bones limit the orbits below and in front and touch the lacrimal bones. The auditory bladders are extremely developed...

      Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron

    • - infraclass of the most primitive living viviparous mammals, including 1 order S. ...
    • - a genus of rodents of the jerboa family. Body length up to 12.5 cm, tail up to 13.5 cm. The latter is often very thickened due to fatty deposits. The color of the top is sandy-ocher...

      Great Soviet Encyclopedia

    • - jerboa, a family of mammals from the order of rodents. Body length 5.5-25 cm; the tail is longer than the body, often with a flat black and white tassel at the end...

      Great Soviet Encyclopedia

    • - a family of rodents. Body length 4 - 26 cm, tail longer than body, with a tassel at the end. The hind legs are elongated, the front legs are shortened. 30 species, in open landscapes of the Northern Hemisphere. Plants that strengthen the sand are damaged...

      Modern encyclopedia

    • - an order of viviparous mammals. Body length ranges from a few cm to 3 m; many have a well-developed tail. The females of most marsupials have a brood pouch into which the nipples open...
    • - family of mammals of the rodent order. Body length 4-26 cm; the tail is longer than the body. OK. 30 species, in open landscapes of the Northern Hemisphere. Plants that strengthen the sand are damaged...

      Large encyclopedic dictionary

    • - marsupials plural A subclass of mammals characterized by the presence of a pouch for carrying their young...

      Explanatory Dictionary by Efremova

    "Marsupial jerboas" in books

    DATE 14. Marsupials

    author Dawkins Clinton Richard

    Marsupials with and without pouches

    From the book Freaks of Nature author Akimushkin Igor Ivanovich

    Rendezvous No. 14 Marsupials

    author Dawkins Clinton Richard

    DATE 14. Marsupials

    From the book An Ancestor's Tale [Journey to the Dawn of Life] author Dawkins Clinton Richard

    DATE 14: MARSPUPIALS We have now reached the beginning of the Cretaceous, 140 million years ago, when Ancestor 14, our ancestor at about 80 million years ago, lived in the shadow of the dinosaurs. As stated in The Elephant Bird's Tale, South America, Antarctica, Australia, Africa, and India,

    Marsupials with and without pouches

    From the book Freaks of Nature author Akimushkin Igor Ivanovich

    Marsupials with and without pouches Exactly! It turns out that there are also such “marsupial-less” marsupials living in the world. An excellent example is murasheaters, or in local terms, numbats. There are only two types of them - ordinary and red. Both are residents of South and South-Western Australia, both, by the way, almost

    Rendezvous No. 14 Marsupials

    From the book An Ancestor's Story [Pilgrimage to the Origins of Life] author Dawkins Clinton Richard

    Rendezvous No. 14 Marsupials In the Beginning Cretaceous period, about 140 million years ago, ancestor number 14, our ancestor at about 80 million years ago, languished in the shadow of the dinosaurs. At that time, South America, Antarctica, Australia, Africa and Hindustan began to break away from the southern

    What are marsupials?

    From the book Everything about everything. Volume 2 author Likum Arkady

    What are marsupials? When European travelers came to New World, they often brought with them what seemed strange and new to them. Thus, the South American opossum was brought from Brazil in 1500, and in 1770 Captain Cook spoke about the kangaroos he saw in

    Jerboas

    From the book Encyclopedic Dictionary (T-F) author Brockhaus F.A.

    Jerboas Jerboas - (Dipodidae) - a family of small rodents. The head is short and thick. The strongly developed zygomatic bones (jugalia) limit the orbits below and in front and touch the lacrimal bones (lacrymalia). The auditory vesicles (bulla ossea, actually its pars) are extremely well developed

    Dwarf jerboas

    From the book Big Soviet Encyclopedia(KA) author TSB Jerboas The characteristic appearance of these rodents is determined by the combination of a small body, very long hind legs and shortened front legs, and a long tail. All this is an adaptation to rapid movement on the hind limbs, most often huge for such small ones.

    Marsupials

    From the book Crossword Guide author Kolosova Svetlana

    California ground cuckoo is a North American bird from the cuckoo family (Cuculidae). It lives in deserts and semi-deserts in the south and southwest of the United States and northern Mexico.

    Adult ground cuckoos reach a length of 51 to 61 cm, including the tail. They have a long, slightly downward curved beak. The head, crest, back and long tail are dark brown with light splashes. The neck and belly are also light. Very long legs and a long tail are adaptations to the desert running lifestyle.

    Most representatives of the cuckoo suborder stay in the crowns of trees and shrubs, fly well, and this species lives on the ground. Thanks to the peculiar build of the body and long legs, the cuckoo moves completely like a chicken. As she runs, she stretches her neck somewhat, slightly opens her wings and raises her crest. Only when necessary does the bird fly into trees or fly short distances.

    The California ground cuckoo can reach speeds of up to 42 km/h. The special arrangement of her toes also helps her in this, since both outer toes are located back, and both inner toes are located forward. However, due to its short wings, it flies very poorly and can stay in the air for only a few seconds.

    The California ground cuckoo has developed an unusual, energy-efficient way to spend cold nights in the desert. At this time of day, her body temperature drops and she falls into a kind of motionless hibernation. On its back there are dark areas of skin not covered with feathers. In the morning, she spreads her feathers and exposes these areas of skin to the sun, due to which her body temperature quickly returns to normal levels.

    This bird spends most of its time on the ground and hunts snakes, lizards, insects, rodents and small birds. She is fast enough to kill even small vipers, which she grabs by the tail with her beak and hits her head on the ground like a whip. She swallows her prey whole. Yours English name This bird received the Road Runner because it used to run after postal carriages and grab small animals disturbed by their wheels.

    The ground cuckoo fearlessly appears where other desert inhabitants are reluctant to penetrate - into the domain of rattlesnakes, since these poisonous reptiles, especially young ones, serve as prey for birds. The cuckoo usually attacks the snake, trying to hit it in the head with its powerful long beak. At the same time, the bird constantly jumps, dodging the opponent’s throws. Ground cuckoos are monogamous: during the period of hatching the chicks, a pair is formed, and both parents incubate the clutch and feed the cuckoos. Birds build a nest from twigs and dry grass in bushes or thickets of cacti. There are 3 - 9 white eggs in a clutch. Cuckoo chicks are fed exclusively by reptiles.

    Death Valley

    - the driest and hottest place in North America and a unique natural landscape in the southwestern United States (California and Nevada). It was in this place, back in 1913, that the highest temperature on Earth was recorded: on July 10, not far from the miniature town of Furnace Creek, the thermometer showed +57 degrees Celsius.

    Death Valley got its name from the settlers who crossed it in 1849, trying to the shortest route reach the gold mines of California. The guidebook briefly reports that “some stayed there forever.” The dead were ill-prepared for crossing the desert, did not stock up on water and lost their orientation. Before dying, one of them cursed this place, calling it Death Valley. The few survivors withered mule meat on the wreckage of dismantled carts and reached their goal. They left behind them “cheerful” geographical names: Death Valley, Funeral Ridge, Last Chance Ridge, Coffin Canyon, Dead Man's Passage, Hell's Gate, gorge Rattlesnake and etc.

    Death Valley is surrounded on all sides by mountains. This is a seismically active region, the surface of which shifts along fault lines. Huge blocks earth's surface move in the process of underground earthquakes, the mountains become higher, and the valley goes lower and lower in relation to sea level. On the other hand, erosion is constantly occurring - the destruction of mountains as a result of the influence of natural forces. Small and large stones, minerals, sand, salts and clay washed away from the surface of the mountains fill the valley (now the level of these ancient layers is about 2,750 m). However, the intensity of geological processes far exceeds the force of erosion, so in the next millions of years the trend of “growth” of mountains and lowering of valleys will continue.


    The Badwater Basin is the lowest part of Death Valley, located at 85.5 m below sea level. Sometime after Ice Age Death Valley was a huge lake with fresh water. The local hot and dry climate contributed to the inevitable evaporation of water. Annual short-term, but very intense rains wash tons of minerals from the surface of the mountains into the lowlands. The salts remaining after the evaporation of water settle at the bottom, reaching their highest concentration in the lowest place, in a reservoir with poor water. Here, rainwater lingers longer, forming small temporary lakes. Once upon a time, the first settlers were surprised that their dehydrated mules refused to drink water from these lakes, and marked “bad water” on the map. This is how this area got its name. In fact, the water in the pool (when it is available) is not poisonous, but it tastes very salty. It also has its own unique inhabitants that are not found in other places: algae, aquatic insects, larvae, and even a mollusk named after its place of residence, Badwater Snail.

    In a vast area of ​​the valley, located below the level of the World Ocean, and which was once the bottom of a prehistoric lake, one can observe the amazing behavior of salt deposits. This area is divided into two different zones that differ in the texture and shape of the salt crystals. In the first case, salt crystals grow upward, forming bizarre pointed piles and labyrinths 30-70 cm high. They form an interesting foreground with its chaos, well emphasized by the rays of the low sun in the morning and evening hours. Sharp as knives, growing crystals on a hot day emit an ominous, unique crackling sound. This part of the valley is quite difficult to navigate, but it is better not to spoil this beauty.


    Nearby is the lowest area in the Valley Badwater Basin. Salt behaves differently here. A uniform salt grid 4-6 cm high is formed on an absolutely flat white surface. The grid consists of figures gravitating towards a hexagon in shape, and covers the bottom of the Valley with a huge web, creating an absolutely unearthly landscape.

    In the southern part of Death Valley is a flat, level clay plain - the bottom of the dry lake Racetrack Playa - called Racetrack Playa. According to the very phenomenon found in this area - “self-propelled” stones.

    Sailing stones, also called sliding or crawling stones, are a geological phenomenon. The stones move slowly along the clayey bottom of the lake, as evidenced by the long tracks left behind them. The stones move independently without the help of living creatures, but no one has ever seen or recorded the movement on camera. Similar movements of stones have been noted in several other places, but in terms of the number and length of tracks, Racetrack Playa stands out from the rest.

    In 1933, Death Valley was declared a national monument, and in 1994 it received the status National Park and the park's territory was expanded to include another 500 thousand hectares of land.


    The park's territory includes the Salina Valley, most of the Panamint Valley, as well as areas of several mountain systems. In the west rises Mount Telescope Peak, in the east – Mount Dante’s View, from the height of which a beautiful view of the entire valley opens.

    There are many picturesque places here, especially on the slopes adjacent to the desert plain: the extinct Ubehebe volcano, the Titus Canyon. 300 m and length 20 km; a small lake with very salty water, in which a small shrimp lives; there are 22 species in the desert unique plants, 17 species of lizards and 20 species of snakes. The park has a unique landscape. This is an unusual wild beautiful nature, graceful rock formations, snow-capped mountain peaks, scorching salt plateaus, shallow canyons, hills covered with millions of delicate flowers.

    coati- a mammal from the genus Noshu of the raccoon family. This mammal received its name for its elongated and very funny movable snout-nose.
    Their head is narrow, their hair is short, their ears are round and small. There is a white rim on the edge of the inside of the ears. Nosukha is the owner of a very long tail, which is almost always in a vertical position. The animal uses its tail to balance itself when moving. The characteristic color of the tail is alternating light yellow, brown and black rings.


    The color of the nose is varied: from orange to dark brown. The muzzle is usually a uniform black or brown color. There are light spots on the face, below and above the eyes. The neck is yellowish, the paws are black or dark brown.

    the catch is elongated, the paws are strong with five fingers and non-retractable claws. The nose digs the ground with its claws, obtaining food. The hind legs are longer than the front legs. The length of the body from the nose to the tip of the tail is 80-130 cm, the length of the tail itself is 32-69 cm. The height at the withers is about 20-29 cm. They weigh about 3-5 kg. Males are almost twice as large as females.

    Nosukhi live on average 7-8 years, but in captivity they can live up to 14 years. They live in tropical and subtropical forests South America and southern USA. Their favorite place These are dense bushes, low-lying forests, rocky terrain. Due to human intervention, lately nosos prefer forest edges and clearings.

    They say that nosuhs used to be called simply badgers, but since real badgers moved to Mexico, the true homeland of nosuhs, this species received its own individual name.

    Coatis move on the ground in a very interesting and unusual way; first they rest on the palms of their front paws, and then waddle forward with their hind paws. For this manner of walking, noses are also called plantigrades. Nosukhas are usually active during the day, most of which they spend on the ground in search of food, while at night they sleep in trees, which also serve to make a den and give birth to offspring. When they are threatened by danger on the ground, they hide from it in the trees; when the enemy is on a tree, they easily jump from a branch of one tree to a lower branch on the same or even another tree.

    All noses, including coatis, are predators! Coatis get food for themselves with their noses, diligently sniffling and groaning, they inflate the foliage in this way and look for termites, ants, scorpions, beetles, and larvae under it. Sometimes it can also feed on land crabs, frogs, lizards, and rodents. During the hunt, the coati clamps its prey with its paws and bites its head. In difficult times of hunger, the Nosukhi allow themselves vegetarian cuisine; they eat ripe fruits, which, as a rule, are always in abundance in the forest. Moreover, they do not make reserves, but return to the tree from time to time.

    Nosuhs live both in groups and alone. In groups there are 5-6 individuals, sometimes their number reaches 40. In groups there are only females and young males. Adult males live alone. The reason for this is their aggressive attitude towards children. They are expelled from the group and return only to mate.

    Males usually lead a solitary lifestyle and only during the mating season do they join family groups of females with young ones. During the mating season, which is usually from October to March, one male is accepted into the group of females and young ones. All mature females living in the group mate with this male, and soon after mating he leaves the group.

    In advance, before giving birth, the pregnant female leaves the group and is busy arranging a den for the future offspring. The shelter is usually located in tree hollows, in depressions in the soil, among stones, but most often in a rocky niche in a forested canyon. Caring for the young rests entirely with the female; the male does not take part in this.
    As soon as young males turn two years old, they leave the group and subsequently lead a solitary lifestyle, females remain in the group.

    Nosukha gives birth to cubs once a year. Usually there are 2-6 cubs in a litter. Newborns weigh 100-180 grams and are completely dependent on the mother, who leaves the nest for a while to find food. The eyes open at approximately 11 days. The babies remain in the nest for several weeks, and then leave it with their mother and join the family group.
    Lactation lasts up to four months. Young noses stay with their mother until she begins to prepare for the birth of the next offspring.

    Red Lynx is the most common wild cat on the North American continent. In general appearance, this is a typical lynx, but it is almost twice as small as an ordinary lynx and is not so long-legged and wide-legged. Its body length is 60-80 cm, height at the withers is 30-35 cm, weight is 6-11 kg. You can recognize a red lynx by its white

    a mark on the inside of the black tip of the tail, smaller ear tufts and a lighter color. The fluffy fur may be reddish brown or gray. In Florida, there are even completely black individuals, the so-called “melanists”. The wild cat's face and paws are decorated with black markings.

    You can meet the red lynx in dense subtropical forests or in desert areas among prickly cacti, on high mountain slopes or in swampy lowlands. The presence of humans does not prevent it from appearing on the outskirts of villages or small towns. This predator chooses areas where it can feast on small rodents, nimble squirrels or timid rabbits and even prickly porcupines.

    Although the bobcat is a good tree climber, it only climbs trees in search of food and shelter. It hunts at dusk; only young animals go hunting during the day.

    Vision and hearing are well developed. Hunts on the ground, sneaking up on prey. The lynx holds its prey with its sharp claws and kills it with a bite to the base of the skull. In one sitting, an adult animal eats up to 1.4 kg of meat. He hides the remaining surplus and returns to it the next day.For rest, the red lynx chooses a new place every day, without lingering in the old one. This could be a crack in the rocks, a cave, a hollow log, a space under a fallen tree, etc. On the ground or snow, the red lynx takes a step approximately 25 - 35 cm long; The size of an individual footprint is approximately 4.5 x 4.5 cm. When walking, they place their hind paws exactly in the tracks left by their front paws. Thanks to this, they never make very loud noise from the crackling of dry twigs under their feet. Soft pillows on their legs help them calmly sneak up to the animal at close range. Bobcats are good tree climbers and can also swim across a small body of water, but they only do this on rare occasions.

    The red lynx is a territorial animal. The lynx marks the boundaries of the site and its paths with urine and feces. In addition, she leaves marks of her claws on trees. The male learns that the female is ready to mate by the smell of her urine. A mother with cubs is very aggressive towards any animal or person that threatens her kittens.

    IN wildlife males and females love solitude, meeting only during the breeding season. The only time when individuals of different sexes look for meetings is during the mating season, which occurs at the end of winter - the beginning of spring. The male mates with all the females that are in the same area with him. The female's pregnancy lasts only 52 days. Cubs are born in the spring, blind and helpless. At this time, the female tolerates the male only not far from the den. After about a week, the babies' eyes open slightly, but for another eight weeks they remain with their mother and are fed with her milk. The mother licks their fur and warms them with her body. The female red lynx is a very caring mother. In case of danger, she moves the kittens to another shelter.

    When the cubs begin to eat solid food, the mother allows the male to approach the den. The male regularly brings food to the cubs and helps the female raise them. This kind of parental care is unusual for males wild cats. When the kids grow up, the whole family travels, stopping for a short time in various hiding places of the female's hunting area. When the kittens are 4-5 months old, the mother begins to teach them hunting techniques. During this time, kittens play a lot with each other and through games they learn about different ways of obtaining food, hunting and behavior in difficult situations. The cubs spend another 6-8 months with their mother (before the start of a new mating season).

    A male bobcat often occupies an area of ​​100 km2, and border areas may be shared by several males. The female's area is half the size. Within the territory of one male, 2-3 females usually live. A male red lynx, whose territory is often home to three females and cubs, must provide food for 12 kittens.

    Among the almost two and a half thousand species of higher plants found in the flora of the Sonoran Desert, the most widely represented are species from the family of Compositae, legumes, cereals, buckwheat, euphorbia, cactus and borage. A number of communities characteristic of the main habitats make up the vegetation of the Sonoran Desert.


    The extensive, slightly sloping alluvial fans support vegetation, the main components of which are clumps of creosote bush and ragweed. They also include several types of prickly pear, quinoa, acacia, fuqueria, or ocotillo.

    On the alluvial plains below the fans, the vegetation cover mainly consists of sparse forest of mesquite trees. Their roots, penetrating into the depths, reach groundwater, and roots located in the surface layer of soil, within a radius of up to twenty meters from the trunk, can intercept precipitation. A mature mesquite tree reaches a height of eighteen meters and can be more than a meter wide. In our time, only the pitiful remnants of the once majestic mesquite forests remain, long cut down for fuel. The mesquite forest is very similar to the black saxaul thickets in the Karakum Desert. The forest composition, in addition to mesquite, includes clematis and acacia.

    Near the water, along the banks of rivers, near the water, there are poplars, with ash and Mexican elder mixed in with them. Plants such as acacia, creosote bush and celtis grow in the beds of arroyos, drying up temporary streams, as well as in the adjacent plains. In the Gran Desierto Desert, near the Gulf of California coast, ragweed and creosote bush dominate the sandy plains, while ephedra and tobosa, ragweed, grow on the sand dunes.

    Trees here grow only on large dry riverbeds. The mountains are mainly inhabited by cacti and xerophilous shrubs, but the cover is very sparse. The saguaro is quite rare (and completely absent in California) and its distribution here is again limited to riverbeds. Annuals (mainly winter ones) make up almost half of the flora, and in the driest areas up to 90% of the species composition: they appear in huge quantities only in wet years.

    In the Arizona Highlands, northwest of the Sonoran Desert, the vegetation is especially colorful and varied. The denser vegetation cover and diversity of vegetation is due to more precipitation here than in other areas of Sonora, as well as the ruggedness of the terrain, a combination of steep slopes of different exposures and hills. A peculiar cactus forest, in which the main place is occupied by the giant columnar saguaro cactus, with a low-growing encelia shrub located between the cacti, is formed on gravelly soils with a large amount of fine earth. Also among the vegetation there are large barrel-shaped ferocactus, ocotillo, paloverde, several types of prickly pear, acacia, celtis, creosote bush, as well as mesquite tree, in the floodplains.

    The most common tree species here are foothill paloverde, ironwood, acacia and saguaro. Under the canopy of these tall trees 3-5 tiers of shrubs and trees of different heights can be developed. The most characteristic cacti - tall choyas - form a real "cactus forest" in rocky areas.

    The trees and shrubs of the Sonoran Desert that attract attention with their unique appearance include ivory tree, ironwood and idria, or buium, growing only in two areas of the Sonoran Desert, located in Mexico, which is part of the region of Latin America.

    A small area in the center of Sonora, which consists of a series of very wide valleys between mountain ranges. It has denser vegetation than the Arizona Highlands because it receives more rain (mostly in the summer) and the soils are thicker and finer-grained. The flora is almost the same as in the highlands, but some tropical elements are added, since frosts are more rare and mild. There are a lot of legume trees, especially mesquites, and few columnar cacti. There are isolated “islands” of thorny bushes on the hills. Most of district in last decades transferred to agricultural land.

    The Vizcaino region is located in the central third of the California Peninsula. There is little precipitation, but the air is cool, as humid sea breezes often bring fogs, weakening the aridity of the climate. Rain falls mainly in winter and averages less than 125 mm. Here in the flora there are some very unusual plants, bizarre landscapes are characteristic: fields of white granite boulders, cliffs of black lava, etc. Interesting plants– bujams, ivory tree, 30 m high cordon, throttle ficus growing on the rocks and blue palm. In contrast to the main Vizcaino Desert, the Vizcaino Coastal Plain is a flat, cool, foggy desert with 0.3 m tall shrubs and fields of annuals.

    District Magdalena is located south of Vizcaino on the California Peninsula and is similar in appearance to Vizcaino, but the flora is slightly different. Most of the meager rainfall occurs in the summer, when the Pacific breeze blows from the sea. The only noticeable plant on the pale Magdalena Plain is the creeping devil's cactus (Stenocereus eruca), but away from the coast on the rocky slopes the vegetation is quite dense and consists of trees, shrubs and cacti.


    Riverine communities are usually isolated ribbons or islands of deciduous forest along temporary streams. There are very few permanent or dry watercourses (the largest is the Colorado River), but there are many where water appears only a couple of days or even a few hours a year. Dry beds, or "washes", of arroyos - "arroyos" - are places where many trees and shrubs are concentrated. Xerophilic open forests along dry riverbeds are highly variable. Along some ephemeral streams, almost pure mesquite forest occurs, others may be dominated by blue paloverde or ironwood, or develop a mixed forest. Characteristic is the so-called "desert willow", which is actually a catalpa.

    Our planet is amazing and rich in diversity of incredible representatives of living things! Carnivorous, herbivorous, poisonous and harmless - they are our brothers. The task of man is to treat the animal world with care, to know and respect its laws. After all, some species are so unique that they have inhabited the Earth since ancient times! Today we will talk about just such an animal. His name is jerboa. It has been known since the Oligocene period (33.9 - 23.03 million years ago). Scientists suggest that the ancestors of modern jerboas emerged in Asia about eight million years ago. From there they spread to North Africa and Europe. But in Europe the jerboa has become completely extinct.

    Description of the jerboa

    Small, mouse-like mammals. They are representatives of the order of rodents. There are about 50 species in nature. The most famous include: African, five-fingered, big jerboa, marsupial, long-eared, hairy-legged, fat-tailed, as well as the jumping jerboa.

    Appearance

    Externally, jerboas resemble either a kangaroo or a mouse. The head is large relative to the body, with an almost indistinguishable neck. Round, slightly flattened muzzle with large dark eyes. Large eyes allow you to capture a greater flow of light information. Huge fan-shaped vibrissae. This is the main organ of touch in many animals. As a rule, they have long and rounded ears, which carry the function of heat transfer and reception of auditory information. The hair on the ears is sparse.

    • Body length: from 4 to 26 cm.
    • Tail length: from 6 to 28 cm.
    • Weight: from 10 to 300 grams.

    The body is short. The hind limbs are much longer than the front ones, which is necessary for active running. The animal uses short forelimbs with sharp, elongated claws for digging holes and manipulating food. The fur is thick and soft. Color ranges from sandy to brown, mostly monochromatic. There is a light color on the belly.

    This is interesting! The jerboa's tail may contain a reserve of fat necessary to maintain the body during hibernation or during periods of lack of food.

    The tail has a flat tassel at the end, which acts as a kind of rudder when moving. Individual characteristics of color and limb structure depend on the species and habitat. For example, the color and size of the body as a whole or its individual parts change.

    Lifestyle and behavior

    Jerboa nocturnal beast. Wary to such an extent that after sunset it leaves its hole only an hour later. Searches for food all night, going up to 5 km away. And in the morning, exactly an hour before sunrise, they return to the shelter. Such reinsurance often saves lives. However, there are species that are active and search for food during the day, and at dusk they rush to their house underground.

    One type of housing is summer. With separated rooms covered with grass. Often, practical animals make a “back door” in their underground apartments and, if threatened, escape through it.

    In winter, the animal goes into hibernation, which lasts up to six months. A hibernation hole differs from a regular “living” hole. It is located much deeper, reaching 2.5 meters. Some species store food reserves for the winter, while others store them directly within themselves, in the form of fat.

    This is interesting! Jerboas are real builders. These hardworking animals build more than one house for themselves. They have summer and winter holes, permanent and temporary, a hole for hibernation and holes for the birth of offspring.

    Also these incredible creatures There can be houses for permanent and temporary stay. Permanent houses always have an entrance covered with a clod of earth. This peculiar corridor is quite long deep into the interior.

    Next, as a rule, a branch appears leading to the living room, in which the surface is covered with grass and there is a place for a “bed” in the form of a ball of wool, moss, feathers - all suitable materials collected on the surface. Several unfinished passages already lead from it to the surface. They are necessary in case of emergency evacuation.

    Among the jerboas there are those who, instead of building their own house, “rent” it from the gophers. The jerboa contacts its relatives only during the mating season. You can call him a loner. This is one of the strategies that are used for survival by different representatives of the flora.

    Some stay in a group and survive, having a developed system of communication and coherence among themselves. And some, on the contrary, prefer to develop individually, passing on the genes of the most adapted, fastest, invulnerable, cautious and intelligent to the next generation. And if the individual turns out to be clumsy, slow or inattentive, then it dies. This ensures the survival of the species.

    How long do jerboas live?

    However, diseases, influence natural conditions and predators shorten this time significantly. In captivity, lifespan increases significantly. The average life expectancy in the wild is no more than 3 years.

    Range, habitats

    What is worth envying other animals among jerboas is their prevalence in completely different conditions life. They live on almost all continents, where there are steppes, deserts and semi-deserts. These regions include North Africa to the south of the Sahara, south of Europe, Asia north of the Himalayas.

    However, jerboas can be found even in forest-steppes and mountainous areas. Some subspecies live even at an altitude of up to 2 thousand meters above sea level. In Russia you can find some representatives of the genus: the large jerboa, the small jerboa, the jumping jerboa, the common emur, the bushy jerboa and the five-fingered jerboa.

    Jerboa diet

    The daily food intake for a jerboa is 60 grams. Their diet includes seeds and roots of plants, which they obtain by digging holes.

    They enjoy eating insect larvae. They love to feast on fruits, cereal grains, and vegetables. Jerboas practically do not drink water! All moisture comes from plants.

    Important! The tail of a jerboa says a lot about the state of health and nutrition. If it is round, then the animal eats well and regularly. The tail is thin, with protruding vertebrae, indicating exhaustion.

    Diet consists mainly of seeds and plant roots. Their jerboas dig out, leaving holes. Insects and their larvae are also eaten. The animals practically do not drink water. They get moisture from plants. During the night, in search of food, one rodent can travel up to 10 km along its food trails.

    One animal requires 60 g of various feeds per day. This population has big influence on the soil and vegetation of deserts, semi-deserts and steppes, and also serves as food for local predators. At the same time, animals can spread dangerous infectious diseases, including the plague.

    Infraclass - Marsupials / Order - Carnivorous marsupials / Family - Carnivorous marsupials

    History of the study

    The marsupial jerboa (Antechinomys laniger) is the only species of the marsupial jerboa genus.

    The marsupial jerboa was first described in 1856 by the English ornithologist John Gould, who included it in the genus of mousebirds. The species was subsequently classified within the genus Sminthopsis until molecular studies confirmed that the species belonged to a distinct genus of marsupial jerboas, or Antechinomys, which was described in 1867 by Australian zoologist Gerard Krefft.

    In the past, the genus of marsupial jerboas was often divided into two species: Antechinomys laniger (or East Australian marsupial jerboa) and Antechinomys spenceri (or Central Australian marsupial jerboa). The latter of these has recently been reclassified to subspecies status. The Latin word laniger means "woolly".

    Spreading

    Marsupial jerboas are a fairly rare species found in the arid regions of Australia. In recent years, the animal's range has declined sharply. Small populations in the Cedar Bay area of ​​Queensland and southern New South Wales are now extinct.

    Marsupial jerboas are found on desert plains covered with clayey sediments or desert crust; limited populations live in the salt marshes.

    Appearance

    The body length of the marsupial jerboa is 7-10 cm, and the length of the tail reaches 10-15 cm. Weight - 20-30 g; males are larger and heavier than females. Distinctive features marsupial jerboas have elongated four-toed hind legs and protruding ears. The color of the upperparts ranges from yellowish-gray to sandy brown; bottom is white. The hairline is long and thick.

    Reproduction

    The breeding season of jerboas lasts from winter to spring. The brood pouch in females develops during the breeding season; it opens backwards and has 6-8 nipples. The brood consists of 3 to 6 cubs, born in the fall. The cubs are fed milk for three months. Sexual maturity in the species occurs after a year.

    Lifestyle

    The animals are active mainly at night. They are hermit animals, and only in autumn and winter periods They gather in common nests, which helps save energy. They spend daylight hours in deep burrows. Females with young do not tolerate the presence of males. They are a terrestrial species. Nests are built near tree stumps or near rocks. When there is not enough food, it can fall into torpor.

    Nutrition

    Jerboas are usually insectivorous (eg locusts, beetles), but on occasion they can attack rodents and small lizards; in captivity they feed on meat. The accepted food fully covers the need for water.

    Number

    Marsupial jerboas are a rare species that are found in arid areas in Australia. Recently, the animal's range has been greatly reduced. And small populations that lived in Queensland and southern New South Wales are now extinct.