Advanced Search
World Species
Help
  • Home
  • Geography
  • ↓
    • AZE Sites
    • Biodiversity Hotspots
    • Climate Data
    • Ecoregions
    • Habitat Vegetation Classification
    • Important Bird Areas
    • Irreplacable Areas
    • Land Use
    • Protected Areas
  • Ecosystems
  • ↓
    • African Grasslands
    • Alaska Forest
    • Alaska Tundra
    • Antarctica
    • Australian Grasslands
    • Commanster
    • Coral Reef
    • Lake Michigan
    • Namib Desert
    • Northern Virginia
    • Rain Forest
    • More ...
  • Lists
  • ↓
    • Animal Cams
    • Animal Sounds
    • Cannibals
    • Common Species
    • EDGE Analysis
    • Emblems
    • Endangered Species
    • Invasive Species
    • Raptor Priority
    • Top 100 Endangered Species
  • Glossary
  • About

Diet Overlap

Dipodomys ordii (Ord's kangaroo rat)
Neotoma cinerea (bushy-tailed woodrat)

Common Diet

Atriplex confertifolia (shadscale)

Common Habitat

Arches National Park
Arizona Mountains forests
Badlands National Park
Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area
Blue Mountains forests
California Floristic Province
Canyonlands National Park
Central Plains Biosphere Reserve
Colorado National Monument
Colorado Plateau shrublands
Colorado Rockies forests
Dinosaur National Monument
Eastern Cascades forests
El Morro National Monument
Grand Canyon National Park
Great Basin montane forests
Great Basin National Park
Great Basin shrub steppe
Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area
Mojave desert
Montana Valley and Foothill grasslands
North America
Northern short grasslands
Palouse grasslands
Pecos National Historical Park
Petrified Forest National Park
Scotts Bluff National Monument
Shortgrass Steppe LTER Site
Sierra Nevada forests
Snake-Columbia shrub steppe
South Central Rockies forests
Wasatch and Uinta montane forests
Western short grasslands
Wyoming Basin shrub steppe
Zion National Park

Attributes / relations provided by
♦ 1Dipodomys ordii, Tom E. Garrison and Troy L. Best, MAMMALIAN SPECIES No. 353, pp. 1-10 (1990)
♦ 2Neotoma cinerea, Felisa A. Smith, MAMMALIAN SPECIES No. 564, pp. 1-8 (1997)
  Email © WorldSpecies.org 2020-2023