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East African springhare

East African springhare
Pedetes surdaster, Amboseli NP, Kenya.jpg
In Amboseli National Park, Kenya
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Suborder: Anomaluromorpha
Family: Pedetidae
Genus: Pedetes
Species: P. surdaster
Binomial name
Pedetes surdaster
(Thomas, 1902)
Pedetes surdaster distribution (colored).png
Synonyms
  • P.currax - Hollister, 1918
  • P. dentatus - Miller, 1927
  • P. larvalis - Hollister, 1918
  • P. taborae - G. M. Allen and Loveridge, 1927

Pedetes surdaster, the East African springhare, is not closely related to the hare, but is a member of the Pedetidae, a rodent family.

Pedetes surdaster was recognised by Matthee and Robinson in 1997 as a species distinct from the southern Africanspring hare (P. capensis) based on genetic, morphological, and ethological differences.P. capensis from South Africa has fewer chromosomes (2n= 38) than does P. surdaster which has (2n = 40) and some other genetic variations. The species was confirmed by Dieterlen in 2005.

This species is found in central and southern Kenya and most of Tanzania. A single specimen has been recorded in Uganda near the Kenya border, at Mount Moroto. It is found from sea level up to an altitude over 2,000 m.

The East African springhare resembles a small kangaroo and is about the size of a rabbit. It is mid-brown, has large erect ears, very short fore legs, and long powerful hind legs. It moves in bounds of up to 2 m and has a long tail fringed with black hairs which provides balance. It can sit up on its haunches like a squirrel.

The East African springhare is nocturnal and spends the day in an extensive system of burrows. It lives in semiarid grassland habitats. The diet is the green parts of plants, roots and other vegetable matter, and occasionally insects.


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