Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/Small Mammal Pets/Answer Key"

From Pathfinder Wiki
< AY Honors‎ | Small Mammal PetsAY Honors/Small Mammal Pets/Answer Key
(→‎External links: Promotional links, not related to content)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{Taxobox
 
{{Taxobox
 
| color = pink
 
| color = pink
| name = Syrian or Golden Hamster
+
| name = Roborovski Hamster
| status = EN
+
| image = Roborovski Dwarf Hamster - Colour Corrected.jpg
| status_system = iucn2.3
+
| image_width = 220px
| image = Golden_hamster_front_1.jpg
 
| image_width = 250px
 
 
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
 
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]]
+
| phylum = [[Chordata]]
| subphylum = [[Vertebrate|Vertebrata]]
 
 
| classis = [[Mammal]]ia
 
| classis = [[Mammal]]ia
 
| ordo = [[Rodent]]ia
 
| ordo = [[Rodent]]ia
| subordo = [[Myomorpha]]
 
| superfamilia = [[Muroidea]]
 
 
| familia = [[Cricetidae]]
 
| familia = [[Cricetidae]]
 
| subfamilia = [[Cricetinae]]
 
| subfamilia = [[Cricetinae]]
| genus = ''[[Mesocricetus]]''
+
| genus = ''[[Phodopus]]''
| species = '''''M. auratus'''''
+
| species = '''''P. roborovskii'''''
| binomial = ''Mesocricetus auratus''
+
| binomial = ''Phodopus roborovskii''
| binomial_authority = [[George Robert Waterhouse|Waterhouse]], 1839
+
| binomial_authority = ([[K. A Satunin|Satunin]], 1903)
 
}}
 
}}
  
The '''Syrian Hamster''' or '''Golden Hamster''', ''Mesocricetus auratus'', is the best known member of the [[rodent]] [[subfamily]] [[Cricetinae]], the [[hamster]]s.  In the wild they are now considered endangered <ref>{{IUCN2006|assessors=Baillie|year=1996|id=13219|title=Mesocricetus auratus|downloaded=09 May 2006}} Listed as Endangered (EN B1+2c v2.3)</ref>, but are popular as housepets and scientific research animalsAdults grow from 5 to 7 inches (12.5 to 17.5 cm ) in length, and will usually have a lifespan of 2 to 3 years.
+
'''Roborovskis''' ('''''Phodopus roborovskii''''') are the smallest and fastest of all [[hamster]]s which are commonly kept as [[pet]]s.  Distinguishing characteristics of the Roborovskis are the white spots where the eyebrows would be, and the lack of the dorsal stripe seen in all other dwarf hamstersThey live, on average, to three and a half years of age - the longest of any domestic hamster. Recently, a mutation has arisen producing a "husky", also known as "white-faced", phase. Breeding these lines with agouti Roborovskis produces a diluted appearance of their natural brown colour.
  
==Biology==
+
==Habitat==
Like most members of the subfamily, the Syrian Hamster has expandable cheek pouches, which extend from its cheeks to its shoulders.  In the wild, hamsters are [[larder hoarding|larder hoarders]]; they use their cheek pouches to transport food to their burrows.  Their name in the local [[Arabic language|Arabic]] dialect where they were found translates to "father of saddlebags" due to the remarkable amount of storage space in their cheek pouches.  If food is plentiful, they will store it in large amounts--it has been reported that 25 kg of grain was found in the burrow of a single hamster.
 
 
 
[[Image:Peach_2.jpg|thumb|left|Syrian hamster]]
 
Sexually mature female hamsters come into season ([[oestrus]]) every four days.  Putting a male and female hamster together when the female is not in heat may result in the female attacking the male.  Syrian Hamsters have the shortest gestation period in any known mammal at only 16 to 18 days.  They can produce large litters of 20 or more young, although the average litter size is 8.  If a mother hamster is inexperienced or feels threatened, she may abandon or even cannibalise her pups. It is inadvisable for inexperienced owners to breed them.
 
  
Most hamsters in American and British pet stores are Syrian Hamsters.  Originally, Syrian Hamsters came in just one colour — the mixture of brown, black, and gold which gave them their "Golden" name — but they have since developed a myriad of colour mutations such as cream, white, blonde, banded, tortoiseshell, calico, and sableTherefore in pet stores today, ''Golden Hamster'' is only used to label the original coloration (also known as agouti).  Other-coloured short-hairs are banded under the label ''Fancy Hamster''.  ''Teddy Bear'' is a term used to describe the long-haired variety of the Syrian Hamster, named so for their remarkable resemblance to toy teddy bearsThey are also sometimes known as "angora hamsters". The fur on a long-haired hamster is thick and fluffy, like a cotton wool, rather than the velvety feel of short-haired fur. For this reason, people who are not allergic to short-haired hamsters can be allergic to long-hairs. Male teddy bear hamsters usually have much longer fur than the female variety, culminating in a "skirt" of longer fur around their backsides. ''Black Bears'' are a recent off-shoot of teddy bear hamsters (mutation discovered in 1985), with their major difference being their black-coloured fur. It can be argued that black bears are just black teddy bears rather than their own breed; on the other hand, black bears were originally selectively bred for their larger size and more docile nature as well as their colour.  However, in current stock, this may or may not still be the case.
+
Roborovski hamsters live in the wild around the [[Gobi Desert]], throughout [[Mongolia]]'s desert steppe and parts of northern [[China]]They are particularly suited to the steppe, as they are highly efficient in their use of water (as evidenced by how they may pass particularly concentrated urine), so little vegetation is requiredHere, they dig burrows to inhabitThese are usually steep tunnels and they live between 60 and 200cm. below ground.<ref>[http://roborovski.tk Website specifically about Roborovski hamsters]</ref>
  
[[Image:Petgoldensyrrianhamster.PNG|thumb|left|A pet Syrian hamster]]
+
==History of Human Contact==
Syrian Hamsters are wildly popular as housepets due to their docile, inquisitive natures and small size.  They are popular as "first pets" for young children, as well as being classroom animals, because of their hardiness and relative ease of care.  Some pet owners find them more attractive in relation to rats and other rodents due to their lack of visible tails.  Syrian Hamsters are notoriously territorial, however.  Even tame Syrian Hamsters will frequently attack and, indeed, kill, other adult hamsters.  When kept as pets, Syrians must be housed in single sex groups after the age of six weeks, and housed individually by the time they are ten weeks old. 
 
  
Syrian Hamsters have also been used in scientific research — in the study of many diseases, as well as in the study of behaviour.  They have a number of [[fixed action pattern]]s that are readily observed, including scent-markingThey are particularly used in airway and respiratory physiology research.
+
Unsurprisingly, it was Lt. Roborovski who first made note of these hamsters.  He discovered them on an expedition in July of [[1894]], though they were not studied scientifically for the best part of another decade, till Satunin made observations in [[1903]].  [[London Zoo]] imported them into the [[U.K.]] in the [[1960s]]<ref>[http://www.petwebsite.com/hamsters/roborovski_hamsters.htm www.petwebsite.com] is about Roborovskis generally.</ref>, but the first studied in [[United Kingdom|Britain]] were imported in the [[1970s]] from [[Moscow Zoo]]. (None of these hamsters, however, bore offspring.)<ref>[http://roborovski.tk Website specifically about Roborovski hamsters]</ref>  Continental European countries had more success in breeding Roborovskis, however, and the Roborovskis currently in the [[U.K.]] are descendants of a batch imported from [[the Netherlands]] in [[1990]].  They were imported in the [[U.S.A.]] in [[1998]]<ref>[http://roborovski.tk Website specifically about Roborovski hamsters]</ref>, where they remain uncommon, though they are now commonly found in pet shops in several countriesIn [[South Korea]], they are almost as common as [[Winter_White_Russian_Hamsters|Winter White Russian Dwarf Hamsters]] in shops.
  
== Discovery ==
+
==Pet Ownership==
  
[[Image:hamster.jpg|thumb|right|Albino hamster]]
+
Roborovskis are very curious, easily startled, and generally timid with people and afraid of human contact and as such are usually not as appropriate as other varieties of hamster for people, especially children, who wish to play with them.  Their suitability as pets to be handled is further diminished by their size and speed. Roborovskis are, however, extremely social and affectionate with each other, and when housed together from an early age, sleep in one place and indeed eat, play, etc. things togetherThey have a very good temperament and rarely bite either each other or peopleRoborovskis' affection for each other, size, speed and curiosity, and that they are startled easily, though making them unsuitable for tactile pet ownership, make them favourites among owners who prefer observing animals rather than holding them.
In [[1839]] [[United Kingdom|British]] [[zoologist]] [[George Robert Waterhouse]] reportedly found an elderly female hamster in Syria, naming it ''Cricetus auratus,'' the Golden HamsterThe hamster's fur was on display at the [[British Museum (Natural History)]]The Syrian Hamster was then ignored by European science for the next century.
 
  
In 1930, [[Israel Aharoni]], a zoologist and professor at the [[Hebrew University of Jerusalem]], captured a mother hamster and her litter of babies in the [[Syria|Syrian]] desert.  By the time he got back to his lab, most had died or escaped.  The remaining three hamsters were given to his university, where they were successfully bred.  Because they were a bit bigger than the ones Waterhouse found, they were named ''Mesocricetus auratus''.  ''Mesocricetus auratus'' is the currently accepted scientific name of the Syrian Hamster.
+
===Housing===
  
Descendants of these hamsters were shipped to scientific labs around the world for use as research animals.  They arrived in the [[United Kingdom]] in 1931, and reached the United States in 1938.  Soon after their initial discovery, they were found to make great petsJust about all captive Syrian Hamsters today are descended from the original litter found in Syria, except for a few that were brought into the United States by travellers who found them in the desertA separate stock of hamsters was imported into the US in 1971, but it is not known if any of today's North American pets are descended from them.
+
As they grow to be on average 4.5cm long - roughly the length of an adult's thumb - Roborovskis can easily squeeze through the bars of a standard hamster cage, and so careful consideration needs to be given to housingThe gaps between bars should be approximately 7mm in widthFirst-time owners are advised to enquire of pet shop owners or breeders as to the suitability of cages.
  
==Surviving in the wild==
 
In the beginning of the 20th century, the Syrian golden hamster was considered to be virtually extinct in the wild by unknown reason until Professor Aharoni collected one female and her 12 broods in [[Aleppo]].<ref name="Hochman">Hochman B, Ferreira LM, Vilas Bôas FC, Mariano M. Experimental model in hamster (Mesocricetus auratus) to study heterologous graft of scars and cutaneous diseases in plastic surgery. Acta Cir Bras [serial online] 2004 Vol 19 Special Edition. [http://www.scielo.br/pdf/acb/v19s1/v19s1a12.pdf Online pdf]</ref> After that some later sightings and captures were reported. Since the 1980s this species was not seen in the wild, until two expeditions were carried out during September [[1997]] and March [[1999]] to confirm the current existence of the wild golden hamster in northern [[Syria]]. The researchers mapped 30 burrows. None of the inhabited burrows contained more than one adult. They caught six females and seven males. One female was pregnant and gave birth to six pups. All these 19 caught wild golden hamsters, together with three wild individuals from the University of Aleppo, were shipped to [[Germany]] to form a new breeding stock.<ref name="Gattermann">Gattermann et al. 2001. Notes on the current distribution and the ecology of wild golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus). Journal of Zoology, 254: 359-365 (Cambridge University Press). [http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=78463 Online abstract]</ref>
 
 
==Gallery==
 
 
<gallery>
 
<gallery>
Image:100_983.jpg|A Golden Hamster
+
Image:Roborovski Face.jpg|Roborovskis' facial markings and features differ notably from those of other hamsters.
Image:Golden_hamster_side_1.jpg|Golden Hamster
+
Image:Roborovskis Sleeping Together.jpg|Roborovskis are extremely social and like to sleep together.
Image:Peach_3.jpg|A pet Golden Hamster
+
Image:Roborovski - Normalised.jpg|Roborovskis are the smallest and fastest of all hamsters.
Image:Peach.jpg
 
Image:Hamster with babies.jpg|A female teddy bear hamster with her two babies, who are less than one week old
 
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
==See also==
+
==Breeding==
*[[Hamster]]
 
  
==References==
+
If kept together in mixed sex pairs or groups, Roborovski Hamsters usually start to breed in the spring following the year in which the female was born.  Females often become sterile at around 24 months of age but males usually remain fertile for most of their life.  Roborovski hamsters gestate for around 23-30  days.  When born, they resemble pink beans.  At around 5-6 days the skin may start to pigment and at 6-8 days hair begins to emerge.  By 10-12 days they are covered in short fur and the eyelids are beginning to mature.  At this time they may also start wandering around the cage, even though still blind.  The mother will usually collect the wandering young and return them to the nest - this may be accompanied by squealing from the young, but is not usually anything to worry about.  At 14-16 days of age the eyes open and the babies are fully covered in fur.  They are fully weaned and can be removed from the mother at 4 weeks of age.
<references/>
+
 
 +
==Footnotes==
 +
{{reflist|2}}
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
{{commons|Mesocricetus auratus|Golden Hamster}}
+
*[http://www.petwebsite.com/hamsters/roborovski_hamsters.htm Pet Web Site (formerly The Complete Hamster Site) section on Roborovski Hamsters]
 
+
*[http://www.hamster-heaven.com Hamster Heaven]
 
+
*[http://roborovski.tk/ R&R Hamsters (a.k.a. Roborovski Hideout)]
 
+
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BR0kfuw0ZBw A rare example of a Roborovski being handled with ease.  This is a white-faced Roborovski.]
  
 
{{Hamster}}
 
{{Hamster}}
Line 74: Line 58:
 
[[Category:Mammals of Asia]]
 
[[Category:Mammals of Asia]]
  
[[bg:Златист хамстер]]
+
[[de:Roborowski-Zwerghamster]]
[[da:Guldhamstere]]
+
[[es:Phodopus roborovskii]]
[[de:Goldhamster]]
+
[[fr:Hamster de Roborovski]]
[[fr:Hamster doré]]
+
[[ko:로보로브스키 햄스터]]
[[it:Mesocricetus auratus]]
+
[[it:Phodopus roborovskii]]
[[he:אוגר זהוב]]
+
[[ja:ロボロフスキーハムスター]]
[[nl:Goudhamster]]
+
[[pl:Chomik Roborowskiego]]
[[ja:ゴールデンハムスター]]
+
[[pt:Hamster Roborovski]]
[[nn:Syrisk hamster]]
+
[[fi:Roborovskinkääpiöhamsteri]]
[[pl:Chomik syryjski]]
+
[[zh:沙漠侏儒倉鼠]]
[[fi:Kultahamsteri]]
 
[[sv:Guldhamster]]
 
[[zh:敘利亞倉鼠]]
 

Revision as of 16:27, 26 May 2007

Template:Taxobox

Roborovskis (Phodopus roborovskii) are the smallest and fastest of all hamsters which are commonly kept as pets. Distinguishing characteristics of the Roborovskis are the white spots where the eyebrows would be, and the lack of the dorsal stripe seen in all other dwarf hamsters. They live, on average, to three and a half years of age - the longest of any domestic hamster. Recently, a mutation has arisen producing a "husky", also known as "white-faced", phase. Breeding these lines with agouti Roborovskis produces a diluted appearance of their natural brown colour.

Habitat

Roborovski hamsters live in the wild around the Gobi Desert, throughout Mongolia's desert steppe and parts of northern China. They are particularly suited to the steppe, as they are highly efficient in their use of water (as evidenced by how they may pass particularly concentrated urine), so little vegetation is required. Here, they dig burrows to inhabit. These are usually steep tunnels and they live between 60 and 200cm. below ground.&

History of Human Contact

Unsurprisingly, it was Lt. Roborovski who first made note of these hamsters. He discovered them on an expedition in July of 1894, though they were not studied scientifically for the best part of another decade, till Satunin made observations in 1903. London Zoo imported them into the U.K. in the 1960s&, but the first studied in Britain were imported in the 1970s from Moscow Zoo. (None of these hamsters, however, bore offspring.)& Continental European countries had more success in breeding Roborovskis, however, and the Roborovskis currently in the U.K. are descendants of a batch imported from the Netherlands in 1990. They were imported in the U.S.A. in 1998&, where they remain uncommon, though they are now commonly found in pet shops in several countries. In South Korea, they are almost as common as Winter White Russian Dwarf Hamsters in shops.

Pet Ownership

Roborovskis are very curious, easily startled, and generally timid with people and afraid of human contact and as such are usually not as appropriate as other varieties of hamster for people, especially children, who wish to play with them. Their suitability as pets to be handled is further diminished by their size and speed. Roborovskis are, however, extremely social and affectionate with each other, and when housed together from an early age, sleep in one place and indeed eat, play, etc. things together. They have a very good temperament and rarely bite either each other or people. Roborovskis' affection for each other, size, speed and curiosity, and that they are startled easily, though making them unsuitable for tactile pet ownership, make them favourites among owners who prefer observing animals rather than holding them.

Housing

As they grow to be on average 4.5cm long - roughly the length of an adult's thumb - Roborovskis can easily squeeze through the bars of a standard hamster cage, and so careful consideration needs to be given to housing. The gaps between bars should be approximately 7mm in width. First-time owners are advised to enquire of pet shop owners or breeders as to the suitability of cages.

Breeding

If kept together in mixed sex pairs or groups, Roborovski Hamsters usually start to breed in the spring following the year in which the female was born. Females often become sterile at around 24 months of age but males usually remain fertile for most of their life. Roborovski hamsters gestate for around 23-30 days. When born, they resemble pink beans. At around 5-6 days the skin may start to pigment and at 6-8 days hair begins to emerge. By 10-12 days they are covered in short fur and the eyelids are beginning to mature. At this time they may also start wandering around the cage, even though still blind. The mother will usually collect the wandering young and return them to the nest - this may be accompanied by squealing from the young, but is not usually anything to worry about. At 14-16 days of age the eyes open and the babies are fully covered in fur. They are fully weaned and can be removed from the mother at 4 weeks of age.

Footnotes

External links

Template:Hamster

de:Roborowski-Zwerghamster es:Phodopus roborovskii fr:Hamster de Roborovski ko:로보로브스키 햄스터 it:Phodopus roborovskii ja:ロボロフスキーハムスター pl:Chomik Roborowskiego pt:Hamster Roborovski fi:Roborovskinkääpiöhamsteri zh:沙漠侏儒倉鼠