Great jerboa
The great jerboa (Allactaga major) is a species of rodent in the family Dipodidae. It is found in Kazakhstan, Russia, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan. It mainly lives in deserts.
Description
The great jerboa is the biggest of all species of jerboa.<ref name="Kurtén1968">Template:Cite book</ref> The length of its body is 180 mm and its tail is 260 mm.<ref name="Kurtén1968" />
Distribution and habitat
The great jerboa is native to the steppes and northern deserts of western Ukraine and European Russia, through Kazakhstan and northern Uzbekistan to eastern Siberia and western Xinjiang, China. Its typical habitat is sparse grassland, sloping areas in ravines, road verges and field edges. It is also present in a range of arid and semi-arid habitats, particularly those with some succulent plant growth.<ref name=iucn/> The great jerboa prefers ground that is made up of clay.<ref name="Kurtén1968" />
Behaviour
The great jerboa has three types of burrows, permanent ones for summer and winter and temporary retreats.<ref name=iucn/> It likes to eat the bulbs of plants.<ref name="Kurtén1968" /> The plant bulbs it most commonly eats are the bulbs of Gagea.<ref name="Kurtén1968" /> To get to the bulbs the great jerboa uses its teeth. This allows it to dig out the bulb.<ref name="Kurtén1968" /> Other foods this animal will eat, but less commonly, are grains and bark.<ref name="Kurtén1968" /> It hibernates from the first frosts until the spring and it is common for several great jerboas to hibernate together in one nest.<ref name="Kurtén1968" /> Breeding takes place in late spring and summer during which time there may be two litters, each of about three to six young.<ref name=iucn/>
Status
The great jerboa has a very wide range and over much of that range is common in suitable habitat. However it is threatened in Ukraine and European Russia by intensification of agriculture and other alterations to its habitat. It has become extinct in the Moscow district where dachas have been built and other man-made alterations have occurred to the landscape. The International Union for Conservation of Nature have listed it as being of "least concern" but thinks populations should continue to be monitored.<ref name=iucn/>
References
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