Life history account for Desert Woodrat - California It is found in northeastern California in Great Basin areas of eastern Modoc Co to southeastern Lassen Co Inhabits virtually all of southern California, with range extending northward along the coast to Monterey Co , and along the Coast Range to San Francisco Bay
Neotoma lepida intermedia (San Diego Desert Woodrat) — CDFW Special . . . The San Diego Desert Woodrat (Neotoma lepida intermedia) is a subspecies of the desert woodrat, a medium-sized rodent endemic to southwestern California Adults measure 120-170 mm (4 7-6 7 inches) in head and body length, with tails adding another 110-165 mm (4 3-6 5 inches)
Neotoma lepida intermedia | NatureServe Explorer San Diego Desert Woodrat - Natureserve Global Rank: T3: Restricted to a portion of southern California and northwestern Baja California; status is not well known; presumably has declined in southwestern California due to habitat loss from commercial residential agricultural development
Desert woodrat - Wikipedia Desert woodrats breed in the spring and summer, and give birth to litters of up to five young after a gestation period of 30 to 36 days The young weigh about 10 g (0 35 oz) at birth, and are blind, with only the tips of their hairs visible
Desert Woodrat | Online Learning Center | Aquarium of the Pacific The desert woodrat, Neotoma lepida, is one of 22 species of woodrats found in North and Central America The smallest of southern California’s woodrats, it is related to cotton rats and deer, harvest, and grasshopper mice
PowerPoint Presentation San Diego Desert Woodrat Litter size is 2-3 pups Females can bear up to four litters per year Can breed year round Life span is not well studied but may live up to two years in the wild
Middens, a window into the past? No kiddin’! - Cabrillo National . . . Woodrats, also known as packrats, are a pretty common resident in San Diego’s natural open spaces They aren’t true rats like the ones people typically see in the city These ones are more closely related to mice and are much cuter-- with large, stout bodies and big, round ears
Desert Woodrat Range - CWHR M126 [ds1914] | CDFW Open Data Portal Presently, they are used to help generate a tabular location database for the system software Outside the system software, the GIS layers are used to support species richness assessments for statewide conservation planning
ECOSphere: Species Profile - FWS U S FWS Species profile about species listing status, federal register publications, recovery, critical habitat, conservation planning, petitions, and life history