Water taken in by giant kangaroo rats from food is stored not only in their kidneys but in their urinary bladders. Their kidneys are extremely efficient and can concentrate urine to the highest degree known among North American mammals.
Perception Channels: tactile ; chemical
The giant kangaroo rat was designated an endangered species by the California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG) in the early 1980s and is currently restricted to about 2% (under 17,000 hectares) of its historic range. The CDFG, together with the Nature Conservancy and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, manages the Carrizo Plain Natural Area, which contains ninety percent of remaining habitat. Although protected in this area, giant kangaroo rats will likely be eliminated from all other areas unless habitat loss caused by urban and agricultural development in central California is stopped.
US Federal List: endangered
CITES: no special status
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: endangered
The burrow complexes of adults create very soft heaps of dirt that can collapse under the pressure exerted by livestock or a human. Because of this, sheep and cattle tend to avoid areas containing burrows; therefore, land inhabited by the rats is deemed less valuable to ranchers.
While providing no direct economic benefits, giant kangaroo rats help maintain the desert habitat in which they live by feeding on and collecting seeds. Kangaroo rats in general were popularized in Walt Disney's film, The Living Desert. As an easily recognizable species of kangaroo rat, the giant kangaroo rat possesses a degree of charisma and is seen as adding aesthetic value to the region.
Giant kangaroo rats are granivorous and prefer to eat the seeds and green parts of native desert plants. They are also known to eat grain and the seeds of commercially grown plants if fields are nearby. Food is cured in shallow pits or piles on the ground called 'haystacks.' It is then stored in the central cave of their burrow. They extract all the water they need from these sources.
The giant kangaroo rat has an extremely small range limited to the west-central region of the U.S. state of California. Specifically, it is currently found only as far north and west as Fresno County and as far east and south as San Luis Obispo and Bakersfield Counties
Biogeographic Regions: nearctic (Native )
Scrub desert and piedmont are the basic habitats of giant kangaroo rats. They prefer relatively flat homogenous terrain with shrubs and rocks being almost totally absent. Typical habitat is stretches of easily excavated sandy loam covered with annual grasses and herbs.
Terrestrial Biomes: desert or dune ; chaparral
The giant kangaroo rat is the largest of all kangaroo rats and has a body length ranging from 15 to 20 cm and a tail length of 18 to 21.5 cm. Unlike many other kangaroo rats, D. ingens possesses five toes on each hind foot, a white stripe running across its hindquarters, and a white belly. It also has a distinctive tail that is dark colored on the top and bottom with white lines on both sides.
Other Physical Features: endothermic ; bilateral symmetry
Breeding takes place in late winter or early spring. Gestation is 28 to 32 days in length. Anywhere from one to six young are born in a burrow in the spring, three being average. The young are cared for by their mothers and fathers and are weaned in 15 to 25 days. They reach sexual maturity in 60 to 84 days. They then leave the burrow and seek new territories within the colony to dig burrows of their own. Giant kangaroo rats have been known to live up to 9.8 years in the wild.
Key Reproductive Features: gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual