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  2. Naked mole-rat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naked_mole-rat

    The naked mole-rat (Heterocephalus glaber), also known as the sand puppy, [6] is a burrowing rodent native to the Horn of Africa and parts of Kenya, notably in Somali regions. [1] It is closely related to the blesmols and is the only species in the genus Heterocephalus .

  3. Blesmol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blesmol

    The blesmols, also known as mole-rats, or African mole-rats, are burrowing rodents of the family Bathyergidae. They represent a distinct evolution of a subterranean life among rodents much like the pocket gophers of North America, the tuco-tucos in South America, and the Spalacidae from Eurasia.

  4. Spalacidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spalacidae

    Spalacids are mouse- to rat-sized rodents, adapted to burrowing and living underground.They have short limbs, wedge-shaped skulls, strong neck muscles, large incisor teeth, and small eyes and external ears.

  5. I joined an 'elite squad of anti-rat activists.' It was even ...

    www.aol.com/joined-elite-squad-anti-rat...

    Andrew Barrett is hardly a rat sympathizer. He's spent years waging war on the rodents who flock to his community garden in Brooklyn, smashing the entrances to their underground burrows, tearing ...

  6. Fossorial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fossorial

    Cape ground squirrel. A fossorial animal (from Latin fossor 'digger') is one that is adapted to digging and which lives primarily (but not solely) underground. Examples of fossorial vertebrates are badgers, naked mole-rats, meerkats, armadillos, wombats, and mole salamanders. [1]

  7. Rhizomyinae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhizomyinae

    The family Bathyergidae, or African mole-rats (including the well-known naked mole-rat), belong to the other major division of the rodents, the hystricomorphs. [ citation needed ] All the rhizomyines are bulky, slow-moving, burrowing animals, the Rhizomys species being the largest and stockiest.