Greater cane rat
Greater cane rat | |
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File:Thryonomys swinderianus - Museo Civico di Storia Naturale Giacomo Doria - Genoa, Italy - DSC02839.JPG | |
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T. swinderianus
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Thryonomys swinderianus (Temminck, 1827)
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File:Thryonomys swinderianus range map.png |
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The greater cane rat (Thryonomys swinderianus) is one of two species of cane rats, a small family of African hystricognath rodents.[2] The cane rat lives by reed-beds and riverbanks in Sub-Saharan Africa. Cane rats can grow to nearly 2 ft (0.61 m) in length and weigh a little less than 19 lb (8.6 kg). It has rounded ears, a short nose, and coarse bristly hair. Its forefeet are smaller than its hind feet, each with three toes.
Cane rats live in small groups led by a single male. They are nocturnal and make nests from grasses or burrow underground. Individuals of the species may live in excess of four years. If frightened, they grunt and run towards water. So far, their conservation status is lower risk.
As humans expanded into the cane rat's native habitats, the cane rats likewise expanded from their native reeds into the plantations, particularly the sugar cane plantations from which they derive their name. Their tendency to adopt plantations as habitat, where they feed on agricultural crops such as maize, wheat, sugar-cane and cassava, often earns them the label of agricultural pest. However, the peoples of the region also utilize the cane rat as a food source (as bushmeat), considering the meat a delicacy. Consequently, grasscutters (as they are often called in Ghana and other regions of West Africa) are beginning to be raised in cages for sale.[3]
See also
References
Wikispecies has information related to: Thryonomys swinderianus |
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- Matthews, Jaman. "The Value of Grasscutters," World Ark, (January–February, 2008), pp. 23–24.
External links
- How to start Grasscutter farming in Nigeria and Ghana
- BBC article on "grasscutter" rearing in Ghana
- "The New Livestock: Rodents of Unusual Size in Heifer Projects in Ghana" in World Ark, August, 2012 | Heifer.org
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- ↑ micro-livestock Micro-livestock: Appropedia - Little-known Small Animals with a Promising Economic Future 7