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

Asio flammeus (Short-eared Owl)
Galictis cuja (Lesser Grison)

Common Diet

Octodon degus (Degus)

Common Habitat

Alta Paraná Atlantic forests
Araucaria moist forests
Atlantic Forest
Bañados del Este
Bolivian montane dry forests
Bolivian Yungas
Bosques Petrificados Monumental Natural
Cerrado
Cerrado
Chilean matorral
Chilean Winter Rainfall-Valdivian Forests
Chiquitano dry forests
Defensores del Chaco National Park
Dry Chaco
El Palmar
Espinal
High Monte
Humid Chaco
Humid Pampas
Lanín National Park
Los Glaciares National Park
Low Monte
Nahuel Huapi National Park
Pantanal
Paraná flooded savanna
Parque Atlantico Mar Chiquita
Patagonian steppe
Perito Moreno National Park
Reserva de la Biosfera de Pozuelos
Reserva Ecologica de Ñacuñan
Reserva Natural Otamendi
Reserve de Biosphere Cerrado
San Rafael, Reserva de Recursos Manejados
Santuario de la Naturaleza Pumalín
Southern Andean steppe
Southern Andean Yungas
Southern Cone Mesopotamian savanna
Tinfunqué National Park
Tropical Andes
Uruguayan savanna
Valdivian temperate forests

Attributes / relations provided by
♦ 1Octodon degus, Charles A. Woods and David K. Boraker, MAMMALIAN SPECIES No. 67, pp. 1-5 (1975)
♦ 2Galictis cuja, Eric Yensen and Teresa Tarifa, MAMMALIAN SPECIES No. 728, pp. 1–8 (2003)
  Email © WorldSpecies.org 2020-2023