Dipodomys
ordii
(Ord's Kangaroo Rat)
Description:
The Ord’s Kangaroo Rat is one
of the most widely distributed of all the kangaroo rats, but it is usually found
in sandy soils. It is yellowish buff with some black mixed
in on top and white below. It has stripes on its tail that are dark on top and
bottom and white on the sides. The bottom tail stripe tapers to a point at the
tip. It has 5 toes on its hind feet, other kangaroo rats can have 4 toes. It
has distinct white spots at the base of its ears and above the eyes. Total body
length is about 8 to 11 inches (200-275 mm), the tail is 4 to 6.5 inches (100-165
mm).
Range:
From
southern Alberta and Saskatchewan, south to portions of Mexico, west to southern
Washington, Oregon, northeastern California and Arizona, and east to Oklahoma,
western Texas, and portions of Midwest.
Habitat:
This kangaroo rat prefers open, bare, sandy soil in grasslands, shrub steppe,
or woodlands (e.g. sagebrush, rabbitbrush, greasewood, shadscale, pinyon/juniper,
oak, mesquite). In Idaho, can be found in habitats dominated by sagebrush, shadscale,
crested wheatgrass, kochia, greasewood, and halogeton. The key factor determining
its distribution seems to be sandy soils.
Diet:
Feeds on seeds (mainly grasses and
forbs). May also eat green vegetation,
some insects, and other arthropods. In Idaho, diet includes seeds and leaves
of halogeton, shadscale, Russian thistle, and several mustards.
Ecology:
Ord’s kangaroo rats
are active most of the year but are dormant below ground in the winter in their
northern range. They are strictly nocturnal and individuals are active
only a maximum of 2 hours per night. In Utah, spring activity peaks shortly
after sunset with a secondary peak occurring shortly before dawn. In Nevada,
activity occurs only after midnight in winter, and mainly after midnight in
summer. Activity increases under cloud cover, especially in winter, and decreases
in inclement weather, on clear nights, and under bright moonlight, and ceases
when temperatures are less than -11° C, or when snow cover is greater than 40%.
This species often burrows at the base of shrubs or grasses. It stores food
in the burrow. It is solitary except during the breeding season. Recorded population
densities were 1 to 5 per 6.8 acres (2.7 ha) in Nevada, 10 to 27 per 2.5 acres
(1ha) in Texas, and up to 53 per 2.5 acres (1 ha) in other areas. Their annual
home range is about 2.5 acres (1 ha) or less. Individuals may live at least
2 years. As mentioned above, they prefer sandy soils. Kangaroo rats regularly
dust bathe, or wallow, in the sandy soils, probably to protect against ectoparasites
and to condition their
fur which is quite oily.
Reproduction:
Females breed more than
once in a year, but their reproductive patterns vary geographically: February
to June in New Mexico; August to February in Texas; spring in Canada. Gestation lasts 29 to 30 days, their
average litter
size is 3. Young reach
adult size in about 35 to 40 days, but reach sexual maturity in about 83 days.
In Oklahoma, females may produce 2 litters per year in favorable years, and
females born early in season may produce a litter before the end of the same
season. Drought may inhibit reproduction.
Conservation:
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Global Rank: |
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State Rank: |
S5 |
Important State References:
Larrison, E.J. and D.R. Johnson. 1973.
Density changes and habitat affinities of rodents of shadscale and sagebrush.