| Damaraland mole-rat | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Mammalia |
| Order: | Rodentia |
| Family: | Bathyergidae |
| Genus: | Fukomys |
| Species: | F. damarensis |
| Binomial name | |
| Fukomys damarensis (Ogilby, 1838) | |
| Synonyms | |
Cryptomys damarensis | |
TheDamaraland mole-rat (Fukomys damarensis[2]),Damara mole rat orDamaraland blesmol, is a burrowingrodent found in southernAfrica.[3] Along with the smaller, less hairy,naked mole rat, it is a species ofeusocialmammal.

Like otherblesmols, the Damaraland mole-rat has a cylindrical body with short, stout limbs, large feet, and a conical head. It is also similar in size to most other African mole-rats, having a head-body length of 14 to 20 cm (5.5 to 7.9 in), with a short, 2 to 3 cm (0.79 to 1.18 in), tail, and weighing between 100 and 280 grams (3.5 and 9.9 oz). There are noexternal ears, and the blue-coloured eyes are tiny with thick eyelids. Theincisor teeth are large and prominent, with flaps of skin behind them to prevent soil from falling into the throat while the animal is using them to dig.[4]
The fur is short and thick, and varies from fawn to almost black, with shades of brown being most common. There is always a white patch on the top of the head, although its exact shape varies, and there may also be additional blotches of white fur elsewhere on the body. Longer sensory hairs project above the fur over much of the body, with the facial whiskers being particularly long. Females have six teats.[4]
Although named specifically forDamaraland, the mole-rats are found across much of southern Africa, includingBotswana,Namibia,South Africa,Zambia, andZimbabwe.[1] They inhabit warm, semi-arid environments dominated by savannah scrubland or sandy grasslands. They are most commonly associated with red Kalaharipsamments, and are found only where there is a sufficient supply of plants with subterraneanstorage organs.[4]

Damaraland mole-rats are herbivorous, feeding solely ontubers,corms, andbulbs. Favoured foods include such plants asAcanthosicyos,Star-of-Bethlehem,Ledebouria, andTalinum. Their natural predators includemole snakes, and occasionally other local snakes, such ascobras.[4] They do not drink, obtaining all their water from their food, which is also an important source of minerals. Unlike most other mammals, they can effectively metabolise these minerals without access tovitamin D, which they lack because they are normally never exposed to sunlight.[5] Thebasal metabolic rate of Damaraland mole rats is also unusually low for mammals of their size, at just 0.66 cm3 O2 / g · h.[4]
Despite living in an entirely subterranean environment, Damaraland mole-rats exhibitcircadian rhythms, and are active primarily during the day.[6] Their levels of the hormonemelatonin can be altered by artificially changing the length of apparent daylight, suggesting that they are at least able to distinguish light from dark, although their eyesight may otherwise be very poor.[7]
Damaraland mole-rats live in networks of tunnels,[8] which they dig with their front teeth. The tunnels are 65 to 75 mm (2.6 to 3.0 in) in diameter, and may stretch for up to 1 km (0.62 mi). They have no connection to the surface, although their presence can be inferred from dome-shapedmolehills of excavated earth pushed up to the surface.[9] As a result, the tunnels develop their ownmicroclimate, containing warm, moist air, withlow oxygen levels.[10] Most digging occurs after rainfall, since dry soil is too difficult to excavate. Because they live in arid environments, this means that Damaraland mole-rats can be extremely active over short periods; a typical colony has been estimated to excavate three tons of soil over a two-week period.[11]
The burrow system consists primarily of foraging tunnels, which the rats dig in search of food. While particularly large tubers and bulbs are at least partially eaten where they are found, smaller ones are dragged to food storage chambers beneath the foraging tunnels. The foraging tunnels are typically only 5 to 25 cm (2.0 to 9.8 in) beneath the soil surface, but are connected to a smaller number of deep tunnels that lead down to the storage chambers,latrines, and a central nest that may be as much as 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in) underground.[4]
Each burrow system is inhabited by a single colony of mole rats, typically with about twelve members, although colonies can range from as little as two to as many as forty members. The colony iseusocial, consisting of a single breeding pair and their non-reproductive offspring. The non-reproductive members of the colony spend their time foraging and maintaining the tunnel system, in particular closing any breaches that may occur. Intruders from other colonies are generally rejected,[4] although DNA paternity studies show that at least some non-reproductive members of a colony may have been fathered by outsiders.[12] The colony has a clearly defined hierarchy, with the breeding male dominant, followed by the breeding female, then non-reproductive males, and finally non-reproductive females.[13]
Colonies fragment if the breeding female dies, with most surviving members dispersing to new locations. Particularly large individuals may also leave the colony to establish a new burrow system. In such cases, dispersal usually only occurs during rainy weather, ensuring that digging will be relatively easy once a suitable location has been found.[14] New colonies are established by unrelated males and females, which become the new breeding pair. Dispersing individuals travel above ground, and are therefore vulnerable to predation from a wide range of animals; some studies have shown that only around 10 percent of dispersing individuals are later found in new colonies.[15] For example, while small groups of siblings may sometimes leave a burrow system at the same time, normally only one survives to found a new colony.[4]
The Damaraland mole-rat is less vocal than the naked mole-rat, making only some birdlike chirps.[8]
As eusocial animals, only the breeding pair within a colony is capable of reproduction. Non-reproductive individuals are not truly sterile, however, and become capable of reproduction if they establish a colony of their own. The reproductive systems of non-reproductive females are underdeveloped, with small, unvasculariseduteri and tiny ovaries that contain undevelopedgerm cells, but which are incapable ofovulation.[4] Non-reproductive males have smallertestes than their reproductive counterparts and produce little, if any, viable sperm.[16] The non-reproductive status of other adults is maintained by the presence of the breeding female.[17] While her removal causes previously non-reproductive females to become fully fertile, they will only mate with unrelated males, thus avoiding incest within the colony.[18]
The breeding female initiates courtship by calling and drumming with her hind feet. The pair then chase each other in a right circle before mating. Mating occurs frequently over a ten-day period, and gestation lasts 78 to 92 days.[19] Females can produce up to three litters of one to six pups per year.[17] The pups are initially hairless, with closed eyes, and only weigh 8 to 9 grams (0.28 to 0.32 oz). They are weaned after 28 days, and reach adult size after around 14 months.[4]
The Damaraland mole-rat'skaryotype shows 74 or 78 chromosomes (2n). Itsfundamental number is 92.[3]