Vangunu giant rat

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Uromys vika, also known as the Vangunu giant rat and locally known as the vika, is a giant species of rodent that lives in trees. It is in the family Muridae.[2][3] The rat was discovered in the island of Vangunu in the Solomon Islands in 2015,[4] after years of searching based on local stories, and described in 2017.[5] It was identified as a new species on the basis of its skull, skeleton and a detailed DNA analysis.[2]

Vangunu giant rat
Conservation status
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Order: Rodentia
Family: Muridae
Genus: Uromys
Species:
U. vika
Binomial name
Uromys vika
Lavery & Judge, 2017

Discovery and publication

In November 2015 a wildlife ranger (Hikuna Judge) from the Zaira Conservation Area,[6] saw something (outside the conservation area): "a large rat, [falling] from a 10m tree felled by loggers. The fall killed the rat - but the ranger shipped it to the Queensland Museum, in Australia, where ... Lavery was a fellow". Tyrone Lavery and Hikuna Judge published a species description, in 2017.[5]

Habitat

The rat fell of a tree, outside Zaira, a village on Vangunu Island.[7]

The species is likely to be called critically endangered (as of 2017), because of the small amount of forest habitat (about 80 km2) remaining on the island and ongoing logging.[2][3]

References