Crested rats most likely perceive visual, auditory, tactile, and chemical signals, as do most rodents, but no information is available on the relative acuteness of these senses. These rodents are known to make peculiar hissing and growling noises.
Perception Channels: visual ; tactile ; acoustic ; chemical
Lophiomys is not currently considered threatened by the IUCN, but it may nevertheless be rare and more research is needed into its habits and distribution.
Lophiomyinae is an Old World cricetid subfamily containing just one genus and one species, Lophiomys imhausi, or crested rats.
If they truly are toxic, crested rats could pose a hazard to humans or domestic dogs who kill and eat them. Also, they harbor fleas that carry plague.
Negative Impacts: injures humans (carries human disease, poisonous )
There are no known positive effects of crested rats on humans.
Crested rats are primary consumers. They are parasitized by fleas, including Amphopsylla conversa.
Commensal/Parasitic Species:
Crested rats are herbivorous, eating leaves and tender young shoots. They will also eat insects and meat when kept in captivity.
Primary Diet: herbivore (Folivore )
Crested rats are native to eastern Africa, including Sudan, Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya, and Tanzania.
Biogeographic Regions: ethiopian (Native )
Crested rats inhabit mountain forests and woodlands, as well as rocky slopes and ravines. They are generally found at high elevations, up to 3,300 meters.
Habitat Regions: tropical ; terrestrial
Terrestrial Biomes: forest ; mountains
Crested rats may live almost eight years in captivity, but their lifespan in the wild has not been reported.
Crested rats are large rodents, ranging from 255 to 360 mm in head and body length. The tail adds another 140 to 215 mm, and these rodents weigh 590 to 920 grams. Females are generally larger than males. Crested rats are stockily built, with short snouts, broad heads, short legs, and wide feet. They have short ears. Their fur is long, thick, and fine-textured, except for a middorsal crest of coarse hairs that can be erected. Flanking the crest are prominant rows of scent glands. When it has its crest raised, a crested rat resembles a miniature porcupine. The coat is boldly patterned with black and white (or brown and white) stripes or patches. The underparts are gray to black, and the feet are black. The tail is short and bushy, and the soles of the feet are hairless. Crested rats have semi-opposable big toes, making them well-suited to their arboreal lifestyle.
The dental formula of crested rats is 1/1, 0/0, 0/0, 3/3 = 16. The incisors are smooth and orthodont, and the molars are rooted and cuspidate. Each zygomatic plate bears a prominant tubercle where the superficial masseter attaches. Crested rats have long incisive foramina, which extend back beyond the anterior margins of the molar rows. They also have a long, wide mesopterygoid fossa that extends between the third molars. There are small sphenopalatine vacuities, and a wide region of the squamosal separates the foramen ovale and masticatory foramen. The paroccipital processes are long and thick. The tympanic bullae are medium-sized, and there is an accessory tympanum. The malleus is of parallel construction, and a small orbicularis apophysis is present.
Other Physical Features: endothermic ; homoiothermic; bilateral symmetry
Sexual Dimorphism: female larger
These rodents have several unique adaptations for avoiding predation. Each crested rat possesses a row of erectile hairs lined by scent glands in a strip down the back. Each hair resembles a tiny sponge; when laid flat, it soaks up scent from the adjacent gland (Stoddart 1979). When the animal feels threatened, it raises the crest, diffusing its foul scent into the air, making itself look larger, and exposing large, aposematic white patches. In addition, some have suggested that the raised crest is meant to make the animal look like a porcupine, or that the glands or saliva of crested rats contain toxins. The latter has been backed up by reports of dogs foaming at the mouth and dying after attacking crested rats. Finally, the extra roofing of bone in the crested rat skull probably protects the brain and orbits from damage should a predator attack the head.
There have been no reports of a predator successfully attacking and eating a crested rat.
Anti-predator Adaptations: mimic; aposematic
The mating system of crested rats has not been reported.
Little information is available on reproduction in crested rats. All that is known is that litter sizes range from one to three young, and that females nurse their young for about 40 days.
Key Reproductive Features: iteroparous ; gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual ; viviparous
Young crested rats are relatively precocial; they are covered with hair at birth and grow quickly. Female crested rats nurse their young for about 40 days. No other information is available on the investment that these rodents make in their offspring.
Parental Investment: precocial ; pre-fertilization (Provisioning, Protecting: Female); pre-hatching/birth (Provisioning: Female, Protecting: Female); pre-weaning/fledging (Provisioning: Female, Protecting: Female)