Pack rats are nest builders. They use plant material such as twigs,
sticks, and other available debris. They are particularly fond of shiny
objects. A peculiar characteristic is that if they find something they
want, they will drop what they are currently carrying—for example, a
piece of cactus—and "trade" it for the new item. They can also be quite
vocal and boisterous. Getting into everything from attics to car
engines, stealing their ‘treasures’, damaging electrical wiring, and
creating general noisy havoc can easily cause them to become a nuisance
A pack rat midden
is a debris pile constructed by a woodrat. A midden may preserve the
materials incorporated into it for up to 50,000 years, thus may be
analyzed to reconstruct their original environment, and comparisons
between middens allow a record of vegetative and climate change to be built. Examinations and comparisons of pack rat middens have largely supplanted pollen records as a method of study in the regions where they are available.
The pack rats will also use plant fragments, animal dung, and small
rocks in building the den. The vast majority of the materials will be
from a radius of several dozen yards of the nest. Woodrats often urinate
on the debris piles; sugar and other substances in the urine crystallize as it dries out, creating a material known as amberat, which under some conditions can cement the midden together, and can encase plant fragments, pellets and other debris in an amber-like matrix.
The resilience of the middens is aided by three factors. The
crystallized urine dramatically slows the decay of the materials in the
midden; the dry climate of the American Southwest further slows the
decay; and middens protected from the elements under rock overhangs or
in caves survive
https://plantsandrocks.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-record-keeper.html
Sunday, 23 February 2020
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