Lesser bandicoot rat

Species of rodent

Lesser bandicoot rat
Conservation status

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Muridae
Genus: Bandicota
Species:
B. bengalensis
Binomial name
Bandicota bengalensis
Gray, 1835

The lesser bandicoot rat, Sindhi rice rat, Bengal rat or Indian mole-rat (Bandicota bengalensis) is a giant rat of Southern Asia, not related to the true bandicoots which are marsupials. They can be up to 40 cm long (including the tail), are considered a pest in the cereal crops and gardens of India and Sri Lanka, and emit piglike grunts when attacking. The name bandicoot is derived from the Telugu language word pandikokku, which translates loosely to "pig-rat".[2] Like the better known rats in the genus Rattus, bandicoot rats are members of the family Muridae. Their fur is dark or (rarely) pale brown dorsally, occasionally blackish, and light to dark grey ventrally. The head-body length is around 250 mm, and the uniformly dark tail is shorter than the head-body length.

Distribution and habitat

These rats are also known to inhabit houses in villages and are particularly aggressive when threatened. The controls are done by mechanical (mouse trap etc.), rodenticides and biological control (by introducing rodent diseases etc.)

Behaviour and ecology

Commonly, it lives in cultivated plains and gardens and is one of the most destructive pests to crops and cultivation. It digs burrows with characteristic pile of earth around the entrance, hence its name. The burrow system is extensive and elaborate, consisting of numerous chambers (sleeping, storing, etc.), galleries and exits or 'bolt-holes', which are covered with loose earth, facilitating an easy escape during emergencies. The storage chambers are stocked with large amounts of grain, specially during harvest time. Usually, one mole-rat is found in one burrow, except when a mother is with young. It has a habit of erecting its long guard hairs scattered over the back and emitting harsh grunts when disturbed.[3]

Reproduction

The lesser bandicoot and two other species are nocturnal or most active at twilight. They construct burrows to nest and bear their litters. The number of bandicoot babies can range from two to 18. Their staple diet is grains, fruit, and invertebrates. They are prone to destroying cultivated crops in fields. Of all the three species, the lesser bandicoot is an especially aggressive burrower and has been reported to make tunnels in concrete cellars.[4] Female can have up to 10 litters. Young (10-12 per litter) are born blind. Young reach sexual maturity around 60 days after birth. Lifespan of adults is about 8–9 months.

As a vector

It is a carrier of and spreads many diseases such as[citation needed]

Susceptibility to drugs

Warfarin is a first-generation anticoagulant that relies on multiple feeding events to achieve lethality in susceptible rodents. The majority of lesser bandicoot rats are highly susceptible to warfarin, where according to one experiment, one female animal has survived a high dose of active ingredient (79.1 mg kg-1).[5]

Triptolide has been reported to cause sterility in male rats and mice. Triptolide treatment affected the histomorphology of the uterus of these rats by causing a decrease in lumen and columnar cell height and number of uterine glands and ovary by increasing the number of atretic follicles and decreasing the number of developing follicles.[6]

Lesser bandicoot rats appear to be averse to scilliroside at all concentrations in food baits. Maximum mortality attained on free-choice feeding on scilliroside is 90% among the individuals.[7]

References

  1. ^ Aplin, K.; Lunde, D.; Frost, A. & Molur, S. (2016). "Bandicota bengalensis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T2540A115062388.
  2. ^ Yule, Henry, Sir (New ed. edited by William Crooke, B.A.) (1903) Hobson-Jobson: A glossary of colloquial Anglo-Indian words and phrases, and of kindred terms, etymological, historical, geographical and discursive. J. Murray, London. online Archived 2012-07-11 at archive.today
  3. ^ "Know Your Pest : Rodent - Indian Mole-Rat or Lesser Bandicoot-Rat". Archived from the original on 2015-01-16. Retrieved 2015-01-15.
  4. ^ "Bandicoot (Rat)". Britannica encyclopedia. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  5. ^ "Warfarin susceptibility in the lesser bandicoot rat (Bandicota bengalensis)". Rats, Mice and People: Rodent Biology and Management. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research. February 2003. pp. 465–468. ISBN 9781863203562.
  6. ^ Dhar, P; Singla, N (Oct 2014). "Effect of triptolide on reproduction of female lesser bandicoot rat, Bandicota bengalensis". Drug Chem Toxicol. 37 (4): 448–58. doi:10.3109/01480545.2014.884111. PMID 24490988. S2CID 207437241.
  7. ^ Brooks, JE; Htun, PT (1980). "Laboratory evaluation of scilliroside used as a rodenticide against the lesser bandicoot rat, Bandicota bengalensis". J Hyg (Lond). 85 (2): 227–34. doi:10.1017/s0022172400063269. PMC 2133936. PMID 7451959.

Further reading

Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article "Bandicoot-Rat".
  • v
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Extant species of subfamily Murinae (Rattus)
Abditomys
  • Luzon broad-toothed rat (A. latidens)
Bandicota
(Bandicoot rats)
  • Lesser bandicoot rat (B. bengalensis)
  • Greater bandicoot rat (B. indica)
  • Savile's bandicoot rat (B. savilei)
Berylmys
(White-toothed rats)
  • Small white-toothed rat (B. berdmorei)
  • Bower's white-toothed rat (B. bowersi)
  • Kenneth's white-toothed rat (B. mackenziei)
  • Manipur white-toothed rat (B. manipulus)
Bullimus
  • Bagobo rat (B. bagobus)
  • Camiguin forest rat (B. gamay)
  • Lagre Luzon forest rat (B. luzonicus)
Bunomys
  • Andrew's hill rat (B. andrewsi)
  • Yellow-haired hill rat (B. chrysocomus)
  • Heavenly hill rat (B. coelestis)
  • Fraternal hill rat (B. fratrorum)
  • Karoko hill rat (B. karokophilus)
  • Inland hill rat (B. penitus)
  • Long-headed hill rat (B. prolatus)
  • Tana Toraja hill rat (B. torajae)
Diplothrix
  • Ryukyu long-tailed giant rat (D. legatus)
Kadarsanomys
  • Sody's tree rat (K. sodyi)
Komodomys
  • Komodo rat (K. rintjanus)
Limnomys
  • Gray-bellied mountain rat (L. bryophilus)
  • Mindanao mountain rat (L. sibuanus)
Nesokia
  • Bunn's short-tailed bandicoot rat (N. bunnii)
  • Short-tailed bandicoot rat (N. indica)
Nesoromys
  • Ceram rat (N. ceramicus)
Palawanomys
  • Palawan soft-furred mountain rat (P. furvus)
Papagomys
  • Flores giant rat (P. armandvillei)
Paruromys
  • Sulawesi giant rat (P. dominator)
Paulamys
  • Flores long-nosed rat (P. naso)
Rattus
(Typical rats)
  • Enggano rat (R. enganus)
  • Philippine forest rat (R. everetti)
  • Polynesian rat (R. exulans)
  • Hainald's rat (R. hainaldi)
  • Hoogerwerf's rat (R. hoogerwerfi)
  • Korinch's rat (R. korinchi)
  • Nillu rat (R. montanus)
  • Molaccan prehensile-tailed rat (R. morotaiensis)
  • Kerala rat (R. ranjiniae)
  • New Ireland forest rat (R. sanila)
  • Andaman rat (R. stoicus)
  • Timor rat (R. timorensis)
  • R. norvegicus group: Himalayan field rat (R. nitidus)
  • Brown rat (R. norvegicus)
  • Turkestan rat (R. pyctoris)
  • R. rattus group: Sunburned rat (R. adustus)
  • Sikkim rat (R. andamanensis)
  • Ricefield rat (R. argentiventer)
  • Summit rat (R. baluensis)
  • Aceh rat (R. blangorum)
  • Nonsense rat (R. burrus)
  • Hoffmann's rat (R. hoffmanni)
  • Koopman's rat (R. koopmani)
  • Lesser ricefield rat (R. losea)
  • Mentawai rat (R. lugens)
  • Mindoro black rat (R. mindorensis)
  • Little soft-furred rat (R. mollicomulus)
  • Osgood's rat (R. osgoodi)
  • Palm rat (R. palmarum)
  • Black rat (R. rattus)
  • Sahyadris forest rat (R. satarae)
  • Simalur rat (R. simalurensis)
  • Tanezumi rat (R. tanezumi)
  • Tawitawi forest rat (R. tawitawiensis)
  • Malayan field rat (R. tiomanicus)
  • R. xanthurus group: Bonthain rat (R. bontanus)
  • Opossum rat (R. marmosurus)
  • Peleng rat (R. pelurus)
  • R. salocco
  • Yellow-tailed rat (R. xanthurus)
  • R. leucopus group: Vogelkop mountain rat (R. arfakiensis)
  • Western New Guinea mountain rat (R. arrogans)
  • Manus Island spiny rat (R. detentus)
  • Sula rat (R. elaphinus)
  • Spiny Ceram rat (R. feliceus)
  • Giluwe rat (R. giluwensis)
  • Japen rat (R. jobiensis)
  • Cape York rat (R. leucopus)
  • Eastern rat (R. mordax)
  • Moss-forest rat (R. niobe)
  • New Guinean rat (R. novaeguineae)
  • Arianus's rat (R. omichlodes)
  • Pocock's highland rat (R. pococki)
  • Spiny rat (R. praetor)
  • Glacier rat (R. richardsoni)
  • Stein's rat (R. steini)
  • Van Deusen's rat (R. vandeuseni)
  • Slender rat (R. verecundus)
  • R. fuscipes group: Dusky rat (R. colletti)
  • Bush rat (R. fuscipes)
  • Australian swamp rat (R. lutreolus)
  • Dusky field rat (R. sordidus)
  • Pale field rat (R. tunneyi)
  • Rattus villosissimus (R. villosissimus)
Sundamys
(Giant Sunda rats)
  • Annandale's rat (S. annandalei)
  • Mountain giant Sunda rat (S. infraluteus)
  • Bartels's rat (S. maxi)
  • Müller's giant Sunda rat (S. muelleri)
Taeromys
  • Salokko rat (T. arcuatus)
  • Lovely-haired rat (T. callitrichus)
  • Celebes rat (T. celebensis)
  • Sulawesi montane rat (T. hamatus)
  • Small-eared rat (T. microbullatus)
  • Sulawesi forest rat (T. punicans)
  • Tondano rat (T. taerae)
Tarsomys
  • Long-footed rat (T. apoensis)
  • Spiny long-footed rat (T. echinatus)
Tryphomys
  • Luzon short-nosed rat (T. adustus)
See also
Aethomys–Chrotomys
Colomys–Golunda
Hadromys–Maxomys
Melasmothrix–Mus
Oenomys–Pithecheir
Pogonomys–Pseudomys
Stenocephalomys–Xeromys
Otomys
Others
Taxon identifiers
Bandicota bengalensis