homehome Home chatchat Notifications


African Rat smears poison on its fur for protection against predators

I’ve always amazed how some non-primate species manage to sometimes use the environment to their advantage, in a tool-like use manner. The African Crested Rat, however, takes this to a whole new other level. It’s the only known mammal in the world, besides humans, that uses poison for defensive purposes.  He does this by chewing […]

Tibi Puiu
August 3, 2011 @ 3:33 pm

share Share

An image of Lophiomys imhausi, the African Crested Rat.

An image of Lophiomys imhausi, the African Crested Rat.

I’ve always amazed how some non-primate species manage to sometimes use the environment to their advantage, in a tool-like use manner. The African Crested Rat, however, takes this to a whole new other level.

It’s the only known mammal in the world, besides humans, that uses poison for defensive purposes.  He does this by chewing on the barks of Acokanthera trees, a while toxic plant, and then slathers poisonous spit onto special absorbent hairs on its flank. Apparently, the rat is immune to to poison, its natural enemies aren’t. The toxine is to this day actually used by human hunters, and its been known to have been used to put down elephants.

At first, reserachers thought that the rat itself was poisonous, hinted by its black-and-white skunk-like coloration. Reports of dogs and other pets being poisoned after coming into contact with the rat, sparked the researchers’ interest.  After a close observation, however, scientists found that the rat used the poison from nature, extracting a compund called ouabain found these tree barks.

“At between 40 and 50 centimeters long, the Crested Rat looks quite innocuous as it clambers about in rocky, wooded valleys in Kenya and the Horn of Africa,” says Jonathan Kingdon of Oxford University’s Department of Zoology.

“But once disturbed or attacked, the long fur on its flanks parts to expose a vivid black and white pattern around a leaf-shaped tract of peculiarly specialised hair, almost as if it is ‘daring’ a predator to take a bite of these poisoned hairs.”

To test their theory, scientists from the Wildlife Conservation Society, the University of Oxford and the National Museum of Kenya tested a wild-caught rat. Inside the rat’s cage, researchers introduced some branches and roots from the Acokanthera tree. Not long after, the rat proceeded to start gnawing the bark, before rubbing the saliva on itself.

“We observed the rat gnawing Poison-arrow tree bark directly from the plant, chewing it and then deliberately slathering the resulting mixture onto its specialised flank hairs,” says Kingdom.

Not many is know about the African Crested Rat, and scientists still aren’t sure how the rodent is able to chew on the highly toxic plant without getting sick itself. Further research might provide much welcomed advancements int he field of medicine.

share Share

How Hot is the Moon? A New NASA Mission is About to Find Out

Understanding how heat moves through the lunar regolith can help scientists understand how the Moon's interior formed.

New tools enable companies to improve the sustainability of their products

There’s no shortage of environmental crises. Whether it’s climate change, plastic pollution, or simply our mounting waste, we just produce too much stuff — and then throw it away. There’s no silver bullet or magic tool that can solve everything. We need societal changes, better regulation, and more responsible companies. In a new study, a […]

America’s Favorite Christmas Cookies in 2024: A State-by-State Map

Christmas cookie preferences are anything but predictable.

The 2,500-Year-Old Gut Remedy That Science Just Rediscovered

A forgotten ancient clay called Lemnian Earth, combined with a fungus, shows powerful antibacterial effects and promotes gut health in mice.

Should we treat Mars as a space archaeology museum? This researcher believes so

Mars isn’t just a cold, barren rock. Anthropologists argue that the tracks of rovers and broken probes are archaeological treasures.

Hidden for Centuries, the World’s Largest Coral Colony Was Mistaken for a Shipwreck

This massive coral oasis offers a rare glimmer of hope.

This Supermassive Black Hole Shot Out a Jet of Energy Unlike Anything We've Seen Before

A gamma-ray flare from a black hole 6.5 billion times the Sun’s mass leaves scientists stunned.

Scientists Say Antimatter Rockets Could Get Us to the Stars Within a Lifetime — Here’s the Catch

The most explosive fuel in the universe could power humanity’s first starship.

Superflares on Sun-Like Stars Are Much More Common Than We Thought

Sun-like stars release massive quantities of radiation into space more often than previously believed.

This Wild Quasiparticle Switches Between Having Mass and Being Massless. It All Depends on the Direction It Travels

Scientists have stumbled upon the semi-Dirac fermion, first predicted 16 years ago.