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Rare 'bamboo rat' photographed at Machu Picchu
by Staff Writers
Lima (AFP) Aug 17, 2018

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A rare rodent species known as a "bamboo rat" that lives around the Inca ruins at Machu Picchu in Peru has resurfaced after a decade of absence and been photographed for the first time.

A specimen of the rodent Dactylomis peruanus was spotted by guards among bamboo trees at the citadel, which is surrounded by a protected area, said the National Service of Natural Protected Areas.

The last time the animal was recorded at Machu Picchu was in 2008.

The bamboo rat lives in subtropical or wet tropical areas, according to Peruvian authorities.

It has also been reported at medium-altitude heights on the slopes of the Andes in northern Bolivia.

In Peru, the animal is on a list of creatures about which little is known because it is seen so rarely.


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Crows have consistent habits of partial migration, study shows
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In many parts of North America, crows seem omnipresent. But while many crows stay in the same place all year, others migrate. New research has offered fresh insight into the phenomenon of "partial migration" among crows. Researchers at Cornell University and Hamilton College tagged dozens of crows from winter flocks in Utica, New York, and Davis, California. The satellite tracking devices allowed scientists to monitor the crows' movements of the course of several years. The data s ... read more

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