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Turkish hamster
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| Turkish hamster | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Mammalia |
| Order: | Rodentia |
| Family: | Cricetidae |
| Subfamily: | Cricetinae |
| Genus: | Mesocricetus |
| Species: | M. brandti
|
| Binomial name | |
| Mesocricetus brandti (Nehring, 1898)
| |
| Synonyms | |
|
Cricetus brandti Nehring, 1898 | |
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti), also referred to as Brandt's hamster,[1][2] Azerbaijani hamster,[2] or avurtlak,[3] is a species of hamster native to Turkey,[2] Azerbaijan and other surrounding nations.[1] The Turkish hamster, first catalogued in 1878,[1] is a fairly close relative of the Syrian or golden hamster,[2] though far less is known about it, and it is rarely kept as a pet. The population of the Turkish hamster is said to be declining in the wild,[1] yet this hamster is often used in laboratory testing.[2] Turkish hamsters have lifespans of about two years[2] and are solitary,[2][4] nocturnal animals, which hibernate.[1][2] They are reported to be more aggressive[2] than other members of the family Cricetidae.[2] They are tan and dark, sandy brown in color.[3] Like all hamsters, the Turkish hamster has cheek pouches that allow it to carry large amounts of food at one time.[3]
It is named after Johann Friedrich von Brandt, a German-born Russian zoologist and first Director of the Zoological Museum of the Academy of Science in St. Petersburg.[5]
Habitat and behavior
[edit]Hamsters are found in the wild throughout Europe and Asia[1][2] and are considered to be extremely adaptable,[1] living in scrublands, sand dunes, desert steppes and farmlands.[1][6] The land where the Turkish hamster lives is extremely dry and open, with fairly little vegetation aside from grasses.[1] Turkish hamsters usually live between 1,000 and 2,200 meters above sea level.[1] This hamster burrows in the ground for shelter,[1] and its burrows can be 20 inches to 6 feet below the ground surface.[1] These burrows are complex, consisting of several tunnels leading to separate cells for nesting, food, and waste.[1] Turkish hamster burrows are well-enough equipped for the hamsters to hibernate for four to 10 months (though sources do differ on this point),[1][2] sometimes sleeping for 30 days at a time,[4] though usually waking weekly for a day or two of activity.[1][2][4]
Diet
[edit]Turkish hamsters have fairly varied diets,[1] subsisting primarily on grains and herbs.[1] They do eat insects on occasion and store roots and leaves in their burrows for hibernation.[1] As Turkish hamsters often live near and among farmlands, they often eat human crops and are considered a pest.[1]
Population and endangerment
[edit]The Turkish hamster is a rare species,[1][3] but is the most widespread of the family Cricetidae. Its ability to live in a variety of environments means the Turkish hamster often lives on farmlands, and is viewed as and controlled as an agricultural pest.[1] In 1996, the Turkish hamster was categorized as an animal with the lowest risk of extinction,[1] but due to cases of direct poisoning by farmers, it is now near threatened.[1] More data are needed to understand the population decline.[1]
Reproduction
[edit]Turkish hamsters are weaned from their mothers after three weeks of nursing.[4] After eight weeks of age, females are sexually mature,[4] but males do not mature until six months of age.[4] According to iucnredlist.org, Turkish hamsters have two to four litters of young per year, with four to 20 young per litter, averaging 10.[1] Petwebsite.com differs on this point, arguing the litter size is between one and 13 young, with an average of 6.[4] The gestation lasts from 14 to 15 days,[2][4] or 16–17 days.[1] The two main breeding seasons are spring and fall,[4] when daylength is about 15–17 hours per day.[4]
Relationship to other hamsters
[edit]Turkish hamsters are most closely related to the Syrian or golden hamster.[2] The Turkish hamster is considered to be the more aggressive of the two, but this could be because the other species has been domesticated.[3][6]
Domestic pets
[edit]Turkish hamsters are kept as a pet by some. Hamsters are aggressive by nature and these hamsters are recent pet species, yet this species is still improving. The domestication of the hamster was a fairly recent development;[6] in 1930, a family of Syrian hamsters was domesticated,[6] and this was the first instance of hamster domestication in history.[6] Since then, only five of the 18 species of hamster[6]— Campbell's dwarf hamster, the Djungarian hamster, the Roborovski hamster, the golden hamster, and the Chinese hamster—have been domesticated and are sold in pet shops.[6] Turkish hamsters are often used in laboratory experiments.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Kryštufek, B.; Yigit, N.; Amori, G. (2008). "Mesocricetus brandti". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2008 e.T13220A3421550. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T13220A3421550.en. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Turkish Hamster". Hamster-Care. Archived from the original on February 13, 2012. Retrieved April 19, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e "Mesocricetus brandti - Turkish Hamster". TrekNature. Retrieved April 19, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Turkish Hamster". Pet Web Site. Retrieved April 19, 2011.
- ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2009). The Eponym Dictionary of Mammals. 2715 North Charles Street Baltimore, Maryland 21218-4363: The Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-8018-9304-9.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ a b c d e f g "Types of Hamsters". About Breeding Knowledge. Archived from the original on December 27, 2010. Retrieved April 19, 2011.
Turkish hamster
View on GrokipediaTaxonomy and description
Taxonomy
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) is classified within the order Rodentia, which encompasses a diverse array of gnawing mammals. Its complete taxonomic hierarchy is Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Chordata, Class: Mammalia, Order: Rodentia, Suborder: Myomorpha, Family: Cricetidae, Subfamily: Cricetinae, Genus: Mesocricetus, and Species: M. brandti.[5][1] The binomial name Mesocricetus brandti was formally described by Alfred Nehring in 1898, originally under the name Cricetus brandti before reassignment to the genus Mesocricetus. The specific epithet "brandti" commemorates Johann Friedrich von Brandt (1802–1879), a German-Russian naturalist and mammalogist whose work advanced the study of Eurasian rodents.[6][7] Phylogenetically, M. brandti belongs to the genus Mesocricetus, forming a clade with M. newtoni that diverged from the clade containing M. auratus and M. raddei approximately 2.7 million years ago. The genus Mesocricetus itself diverged from other hamster genera within the subfamily Cricetinae around 8–11 million years ago, aligning with genetic estimates of its origin.[8][4] No subspecies are recognized for M. brandti, which is regarded as a monotypic species throughout its range.[1][7]Physical description
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) is a medium-sized rodent with a robust, stocky build adapted to its arid habitat. Adults measure 135–195 mm in head-body length, with a tail of 10–39 mm, and weigh 108–175 g in the wild.[2] Like other hamsters, it has short, stumpy legs, a short tail, small rounded ears, and large dark eyes that enhance its nocturnal vision.[9] Its fur is soft and dense, providing insulation against temperature fluctuations, and varies regionally: sand-brown to tawny olive on the back and flanks, with gray-white to white on the belly, a wide black chest band, and a yellowish cheek-shoulder blotch accented by an oblique black subauricular stripe.[2] A key distinctive feature is its prominent, elastic cheek pouches, which extend from the mouth to the shoulders and can expand to hold up to half the animal's body weight in food or bedding for transport to burrows. The dental structure includes continuously growing incisors typical of rodents, enabling efficient gnawing of seeds and vegetation.[11] Physiologically, the Turkish hamster is capable of hibernation lasting about five months (October to March), entering torpor states where body temperature drops to 7–9°C, near ambient levels, with periodic 1–3 day arousals; this adaptation includes autumnal fat accumulation to offset a 24% body mass loss over winter.[2] The species exhibits sexual dimorphism, with females generally larger than males and males exhibiting more prominent flank scent glands used for marking territory.[2] Females possess nipples along the ventral surface for nursing litters.[12]Habitat and distribution
Geographic range
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) is native to central and eastern Anatolia in Turkey, the Caucasus region encompassing Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia, northwestern Iran, and an isolated population in Dagestan, Russia.[13][14][2] It occupies elevations ranging from 300 to 3,000 meters above sea level, primarily in arid and semi-arid steppe landscapes.[2] Specific populations are documented in steppe regions near Lake Van in eastern Turkey and along the Aras River valley spanning Armenia and Azerbaijan.[15] The species is absent from coastal lowlands.[13] In the 19th century, the Turkish hamster maintained a more continuous and widespread distribution across its native regions, but habitat conversion has since led to fragmentation of its range, resulting in isolated subpopulations.[16] No records of translocations or reintroductions exist for the species.[16] Natural dispersal is restricted, with limited migration between populations due to barriers posed by expanding agriculture and urbanization, further exacerbating isolation.[16]Preferred habitats
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) primarily inhabits arid and semi-arid steppe environments, including dry grassy sites with rocky features, scattered bushes, and agricultural fields such as cereal crops and fallow lands.[2][15] These hamsters favor open landscapes that facilitate burrowing and foraging while avoiding dense forests and damp wetlands.[2] They prefer well-drained, loose soils suitable for excavating complex burrow systems, often selecting elevated sites to prevent water accumulation.[2][17] Associated vegetation includes grasses, herbs like Salvia cryptantha and Thymus spyleus, and shrubs such as wormwood (Artemisia spp.), which provide sparse cover for predator detection in these microhabitats.[18][19] This species is adapted to a temperate continental climate characterized by hot summers and cold winters, with hibernation typically occurring from October to March in response to the first frosts.[2] Populations thrive at elevations ranging from 300 to 3,000 meters, though they are most common between 1,000 and 2,200 meters, tolerating ambient temperatures from approximately -2.5°C in winter to 27.1°C in summer within semi-arid conditions averaging 468 mm annual precipitation.[2][20][18]Behavior and ecology
Activity patterns
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) displays a strictly nocturnal circadian rhythm, with activity primarily concentrated during the night and occasional crepuscular peaks at dusk and dawn, when individuals emerge from burrows to forage before retreating during daylight hours.[2][21] This pattern aligns with its adaptation to avoid diurnal predators and optimize energy use in its arid habitat, as evidenced by wheel-running assays in laboratory settings that confirm robust entrainment to light-dark cycles.[21] Seasonally, the Turkish hamster undergoes prolonged hibernation lasting approximately 5–7 months, typically from November to April, in response to shortening photoperiods and declining temperatures.[22] During this period, it enters deep torpor bouts lasting 4–8 days on average at low temperatures, interrupted by periodic arousals, with bouts extending up to 19 days in winter and occasionally longer depending on conditions.[23][22] Arousals last 1–3 days, during which the animal resumes euthermic metabolism to feed and maintain fat reserves before re-entering torpor.[22] Hibernation physiology involves profound metabolic suppression, with body temperature dropping to 5–10°C and heart rate slowing to 4–5 beats per minute, facilitating energy conservation through reduced oxygen consumption and cellular activity.[24] Studies reveal a positive correlation between hibernation duration and lifespan, with laboratory individuals reaching up to 4 years or more when exhibiting extended torpor, suggesting that this state mitigates aging processes.[3] In captivity, hibernation is often reduced or absent under constant warm conditions and long photoperiods, whereas wild hamsters arouse more frequently during winter thaws to forage, adapting to transient environmental warming.[23][25]Social structure and burrowing
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) is a highly solitary species, with individuals living independently after weaning and rarely tolerating conspecifics outside of brief mating interactions.[26] Adults, especially males, display intense aggression toward intruders, including biting and fighting, though familiarity with neighbors can reduce this hostility via the "dear enemy" effect, where nonagonistic exposure lowers attack latency and intensity.[27] Territorial defense relies heavily on olfactory cues, with individuals scent-marking their ranges using secretions from flank glands to signal ownership and deter rivals.[26] No group living or cooperative social structures have been observed in this species.[26] Burrows form the core of the Turkish hamster's territorial system, constructed in elevated, well-drained sites such as steppe slopes or arable field edges to minimize flooding and predation risks. These underground complexes feature extensive tunnel networks up to 6–10 meters in total length, with galleries descending 60–75 cm and a primary nesting chamber reaching depths of up to 2 meters.[26] The architecture includes 1–3 entrances—often plugged with soil for security—along with 1–2 nesting chambers lined with dry vegetation for insulation and comfort, dedicated food storage cells for hoarding seeds and roots, and separate waste areas to maintain hygiene.[26] Multiple escape routes and blind tunnels enhance survivability, allowing rapid evasion during nocturnal foraging excursions.[26] Communication among Turkish hamsters is primarily olfactory and acoustic, supporting their solitary lifestyle by facilitating individual recognition and territorial boundaries without physical confrontation. Pheromones deposited via scent marking convey identity, sex, and dominance status, while ultrasonic vocalizations—high-frequency calls produced mainly by females—aid in mate attraction and social signaling during reproductive periods. Territorial ranges exhibit minimal overlap between adults, with males maintaining larger areas than females to encompass foraging paths, though exact sizes vary by habitat quality and population density.[26]Diet
Dietary habits
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) exhibits an omnivorous diet, though it is predominantly herbivorous, consuming mainly grains, seeds, roots, leaves, and herbs.[20] Occasional protein supplementation comes from insects and other small invertebrates.[28] This varied intake supports their energy needs in arid steppe environments.[20] Dietary patterns show seasonal variation, with a focus on fresh greens and herbs during summer to capitalize on availability, shifting to stored tubers and roots in winter for sustenance during hibernation periods of approximately 5 months.[20] In areas near agriculture, human crops supplement the wild diet.[20] The digestive system features a two-compartment stomach (forestomach and glandular portion) that aids in urea recycling and nutrient efficiency, complemented by a cecum that ferments plant material to extract additional energy from fibrous components.[29] Expansible cheek pouches enable safe transport of food without immediate consumption risks, allowing selective intake to match nutritional demands.[29]Foraging and storage
The Turkish hamster forages primarily during nocturnal and crepuscular periods, making surface excursions to gather food resources, which it transports using expandable cheek pouches back to its burrow for immediate consumption or storage.[2][28] Food storage occurs in dedicated chambers within the burrow system, where the hamster hoards dry goods such as grains, grasses, leaves, tubers, bulbs, and occasionally bones to build reserves. Winter caches in these chambers can reach 1-6 kg, providing sustenance during extended hibernation periods from October to March.[2] This hoarding behavior enhances survival in seasonal food-scarce environments by minimizing the need for risky outings during cold months.[26] Foraging and storage activities carry inherent risks, including predation by owls, foxes, and other carnivores during surface excursions, as well as potential competition from sympatric rodent species for limited resources. Daily food intake typically ranges from 10-20 grams in related Mesocricetus species, with excess beyond immediate needs directed toward hoard accumulation to support metabolic demands during torpor.[30][2]Reproduction
Mating and gestation
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) is a photoperiodic long-day breeder, with reproduction occurring from March to October, aligning with periods of longer photoperiods (typically 14-16 hours or more) and increased food availability, optimizing survival for offspring. Females may produce up to three litters per breeding season.[2] During the breeding period, solitary adult males seek out females by following scent trails, primarily from the male's flank gland, which serves as a key chemical signal for attracting receptive partners.[31] Mating is polygynous, with males forming brief pairings lasting 1 to 2 days to allow copulation before separating to prevent aggression. Females exhibit a 4-day estrous cycle and are receptive for 12 to 24 hours during estrus, facilitating efficient mating opportunities.[13][32] Gestation lasts 15-17 days following mating, with 15 days observed in captivity, during which the female experiences spontaneous ovulation and develops the embryos in a prepared burrow nest.[2] Litter sizes range from 1-13 (average 6-10, varying by region and influenced by factors such as female age and nutritional condition).[2] Sexual maturity is reached by females at approximately 6-8 weeks of age and by males at 6-8 weeks, though late-summer births may delay maturity until the following spring due to shortening photoperiods.[13][33] The reproductive lifespan is limited to 1 to 1.5 years for females, after which fecundity declines.[34]Offspring development
The offspring of the Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) are altricial, born hairless and blind after a gestation period of 15-17 days, with litters averaging 6-10 pups weighing approximately 2.6 grams at birth.[2][35] The female constructs a nest in a dedicated burrow chamber, lining it with plucked fur for insulation and protection.[13] Maternal care is provided solely by the female; in the wild, males do not cohabitate with the family unit. In captivity, males are separated shortly after mating to prevent aggression and potential harm to the litter.[13] The mother nurses the pups for about three weeks, during which she remains highly protective; disturbance can lead to cannibalism of the young.[13] Weaning occurs around 20-30 days, marking the transition to solid foods, though full independence follows shortly thereafter.[13][35] Key growth milestones include rapid development of a fur coat within the first 7-10 days and eye opening between 12-15 days of age.[13][35] By 4-5 weeks, the juveniles achieve independence, dispersing from the maternal burrow to establish their own territories, driven by increasing maternal aggression toward subadults.[13] Siblings can be housed together until approximately 6 weeks but must be separated thereafter to avoid fights (in captivity). Infanticide is uncommon under undisturbed conditions but may occur in response to environmental stress.[13]Conservation status
Population trends
The global population size of the Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) is unknown, but the species is considered rare, with ongoing declines inferred from habitat loss and fragmentation.[36] In optimal steppe and foothill habitats, population densities are low, typically 1–5 individuals per hectare.[2] Demographic factors contribute to the species' vulnerability, with females producing up to three litters per breeding season but facing high juvenile mortality, resulting in low recruitment. Wild individuals have an average lifespan of 2–3 years, limiting overall population resilience.[3] Monitoring efforts are constrained, with limited field surveys conducted primarily in Turkey and Armenia, and no comprehensive census available; camera trap studies indicate stable subpopulations in isolated pockets but underscore the need for expanded research. Geographic fragmentation further complicates tracking, as populations are increasingly isolated across their range.[36]Threats and conservation efforts
The Turkish hamster faces primary threats from habitat loss driven by agricultural expansion and urbanization. These changes in land use, particularly the decline in cereal fields essential for burrowing and foraging, have led to significant population declines in regions like Georgia (over 50% in recent decades) and Dagestan.[2] Rodenticide poisoning from pest control in farmlands is another major risk, as the species is sometimes persecuted as a crop pest. Predation by foxes and birds of prey, including the Eurasian eagle-owl (which takes up to 33.5% of small mammal prey in some areas), adds to mortality pressures, especially for low-density populations.[2] Secondary threats encompass roadkill in agricultural zones and climate change impacts on hibernation cues, though these require further study. The species holds Near Threatened status on the IUCN Red List (assessed 2008), with no reassessment as of 2025, and is listed in national red data books including those of Turkey and Georgia.[2] Conservation measures are limited but include legal protection in select Armenian reserves and Georgia's protected areas, where habitat preservation efforts target steppe ecosystems. In Turkey, farmer education initiatives promote reduced rodenticide application to mitigate non-target effects. Captive breeding research remains minimal, focusing on genetic diversity rather than large-scale reintroduction. It is also protected in Azerbaijan's red list.[2][37]Relation to humans
As agricultural pests
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) is historically regarded as an agricultural pest owing to its presence in cereal and multiannual crop fields, where it feeds on grains, grasses, roots, and herbs while storing substantial food caches in burrows. These habits result in direct consumption of crops and indirect damage through extensive burrowing systems that can undermine soil stability and irrigation infrastructure in steppe and semi-desert farmlands.[2] The species' impact is most notable in eastern Turkey and adjacent regions of Azerbaijan and Armenia, where it inhabits arable lands alongside natural habitats, occasionally amplifying yield losses in wheat and other grain fields during peak foraging periods tied to breeding seasons. Although specific quantitative estimates vary, such conflicts have prompted traditional management approaches like trapping and rodenticides, with emerging trials of non-lethal strategies such as habitat alteration to reduce crop incursions while preserving populations classified as Near Threatened.[2][38]Use in research and as pets
The Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti) serves as a valuable model organism in scientific research, particularly for investigating hibernation physiology and associated biological mechanisms. Studies from the 1980s revealed a positive correlation between the duration of hibernation and lifespan in this species, where individuals spending more time in hibernation exhibited extended longevity compared to non-hibernators.[39] Researchers have utilized Turkish hamsters to examine the regulatory roles of reproductive hormones in hibernation; for instance, castration in males prolonged the hibernation season by several weeks under short photoperiods, highlighting the influence of testicular factors.[40] The species has also advanced understanding of circadian rhythms and torpor, with investigations showing that photoperiod and temperature control annual cycles of reproduction and torpor bouts, including persistent free-running activity rhythms during inter-bout arousals.[41] Although effective for these niche applications, Turkish hamsters are less prevalent in laboratory settings than Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus), which account for approximately 80% of all hamsters used in research due to their established breeding and handling protocols.[42] In the pet trade, Turkish hamsters are infrequently kept owing to their pronounced aggression toward conspecifics and the challenges of accommodating their hibernation needs. They appear sporadically as "wild-type" pets among enthusiasts in Europe and Turkey, where their solitary and territorial behavior—more intense than in many other cricetids—necessitates individual housing to avoid injury.[14] Proper care demands deep substrate layers (at least 15-20 cm) for burrowing and controlled environmental cooling during winter to facilitate natural torpor without risking hypothermia, alongside consistent monitoring to prevent prolonged low-temperature states that could harm the animal.[43] The Turkish hamster lacks a domestication history akin to that of the Syrian hamster, which was first described in 1839 and selectively bred from wild specimens captured in 1930, leading to its widespread use as a pet and lab animal.[44] Instead, Turkish hamsters have been sourced primarily through wild captures for research purposes since the early 20th century, with no evidence of systematic selective breeding programs.[42] While both species share the genus Mesocricetus and exhibit similar morphologies, the Turkish hamster retains its wild traits without the genetic modifications seen in domesticated Syrian lines. From an ethical standpoint, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) designates the Turkish hamster as Near Threatened due to habitat loss and low population densities, advising against wild collection for non-essential purposes to mitigate further declines.[1] Captive breeding efforts remain limited in scale, focused mainly on supporting research colonies rather than commercial or pet propagation.[2]References
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/[neuroscience](/page/Neuroscience)/cheek-pouch
