Skip to main content Skip to home page

Spinifex hopping mouse

Spinifex hopping mouse

Spinifex hopping-mice (Notomys alexis) have large eyes and ears, big back feet, long tufted tails and move with a hopping and galloping gait.

Adaptation

Spinifex hopping-mice are nocturnal and stay hidden during the heat of the day. Like many other desert mammals, during dry times, they can survive without drinking. Their very effective kidneys absorb every drop of water from their waste. They have solid urine!

Habitat

Spinifex hopping-mice live in the sand country of Central Australia. They avoid the heat of the day by sheltering in a deep, humid burrow. Their burrow is a horizontal tunnel, about a meter underground, with several vertical shafts to the surface. Entrances are well concealed under clumps of grass.

Wild status

Common.

Least concern conservation status

Least concern (IUCN 3.1)

Diet

Unlike rodents living in less harsh environments, those living in areas of infrequent rain cannot rely solely on grain as a food source. As a result most desert rodents are omnivorous and have a varied diet that also includes leaves, shoots, roots and insects.

Predators

Owls, dingoes, feral cats and red foxes

Size

Spinifex hopping nice grow 7 to 8cm in length and live for four to six years.

Reproduction

Spinifex hopping mouse numbers fluctuate greatly and population explosions often follow periods of heavy rain. They are placental mammals and pregnancy lasts 38 to 41 days. The female usually raises three or four young which are weaned at four weeks and sexually mature at two and a half months.

Extra fun facts

Spinifex hopping mice have been known to migrate up to 15km towards rain.

During summer when temperatures in their burrow rise above their body temperature, hopping mice can raise their body temperature so their surroundings feel cooler.

Back to top