¹êÀàÍ·ÌõÎÄÕÂÏêÇé

Ë®ëࣨCapybara£©

2019-02-01 rlylµÄ×ÔÈ»ÊÀ½ç



½ç£º ¶¯Îï½ç Animalia


ÃÅ£º ¼¹Ë÷¶¯ÎïÃÅ Chordata


¸Ù£º ²¸Èé¸Ù Mammalia


Ä¿£º Äö³ÝÄ¿ Rodentia


¿Æ£º ëàÊó¿Æ Caviidae


Êô£º Ë®ëàÊô Hydrochoerus


ÖÖ£º Ë®ëà H. hydrochaeris

        ( Linnaeus, 1766 )


·Ö²¼£ºÄÏÃÀÖÞ




ÎïÖÖ¸ÅÊö Summary


ÖÐÎÄÃû£ºË®ëࣨƴÒô£ºshu¨« t¨²n£©£»


Ó¢ÎÄÃû£ºCapybara£»


ѧÃû£ºHydrochoerus hydrochaeris¡£


Ë®ë࣬ÊÇÒ»ÖÖ°ëË®ÆÜµÄʳ²Ý¶¯ÎҲÊÇÊÀ½çÉÏÌåÐÍ×î´óµÄÄö³ÝÀදÎͷÌ峤106-134ÀåÃס£Ë®ëà·Ö²¼ÔÚÄÏÃÀÖÞ°²µÚ˹ɽÒÔ¶«µÄÈÈ´øºÍδøµØÇø£¬ºóÀ´ÓÖ±»ÒýÈë·ðÂÞÀï´ïÒÔ¼°ÃÀ¹úÆäËûµÄÑÇÈÈ´øµØÇø¡£Ò°ÉúË®ëàÊÙÃü10Ëê×óÓÒ¡£


ÊÀ½ç×ÔÈ»±£»¤ÁªÃ˺ìÉ«Ãû¼ÁÐΪ£ºÎÞΣ£¨LC£©



Ì峤£ºÍ·Ì峤106-134ÀåÃ×


Éí¸ß£º¼ç¸ß50-62ÀåÃ×


ÌåÖØ£º35-66ǧ¿Ë


ÉúÃü£º10Ëê×óÓÒ


ʳÐÔ£ºË®²ÝºÍÊ÷Ƥ


·±Ö³£ºÃ¿Ì¥²ú1-8×Ð


ϰÐÔ£ºÈº¾Ó£¬°ëË®ÆÜ£¬ÐÔÇéÎÂѱ


·Ö²¼£ºÄÏÃÀÖÞ




ÍâÐÎÌØÕ÷ Description


Ë®ëàÍ·Ì峤106-134ÀåÃ×£¬¼ç¸ß50-62ÀåÃ×£¬ÖØÁ¿35-66ǧ¿Ë¡£´ÆÐÔÂÔ´ó¡£ ËüÃÇÔÚÍâ±íÉϺÜÏñ³¬´óÐ͵ÄëàÊó¡£Ë®ëàÊÇÓÎÓ¾ºÃÊÖ£¬ÖºÏÐÓÐСõ롣ǰ×ãËÄÖº£¬ºó×ãÈýÖº¡£ÄêÓ×µÄË®ëàÌåɫҪ±È³ÉÄêË®ë൭ÉÏÐí¶à¡£




Éú̬ϰÐÔ Ecological Habit


Ë®ëà·Ö²¼ÔÚÄÏÃÀÖÞ°²µÚ˹ɽÒÔ¶«µÄÈÈ´øºÍδøµØÇø£¬ÊÇÒ»ÖÖ°ëË®ÆÜµÄʳ²Ý¶¯Î´ó²¿·Öʱ¼ä¶¼´ôÔÚË®ÖлòË®±ß£¬ÓÈÆäÊǽ»ÅäʱÆÚ¡£ËüÃÇÔÚË®ÖпÉÒÔ¶ã±ÜÆäËû¶¯ÎïµÄÏ®»÷£¬ÉõÖÁÄܹ»ÔÚË®ÏÂ˯¾õ£¬¶ø°Ñ±Ç¿×±©Â¶ÔÚ¿ÕÆøÖС£Ë®ëàÊÇȺ¾Ó¶¯Îµ«Ò²Ê±³£ÒÔһͷ»òÒ»¶ÔµÄÐÎʽ³öÏÖ¡£Ê³ÎïÒÔË®²ÝºÍÊ÷ƤΪÖ÷¡£ÆäÐÔÇéÎÂѱ£¬Òò´Ë¾­³£±»ÑøÔÚ¹«Ô°À﹩ÈËÃǹÛÉÍ¡£




Éú³¤·±Ö³ Growth and Breed


Ë®ëàÔÚË®Öн»Å䣬ÔÐÆÚÔ¼150Ì죬ͨ³£Ã¿Ì¥²ú1-8×У¬Ã¿Äê²úһ̥¡£Ë®ëàÔÚ´óÔ¼12ÖÁ18¸öÔ´ﵽÐÔ³ÉÊ죬ҰÉúË®ëàÊÙÃü10Ëê×óÓÒ£¬È˹¤Î¹ÑøÊÙÃüÔÚ12Ëê¡£




µØÀí·Ö²¼ Distribution


Ë®ëà·Ö²¼ÔÚÄÏÃÀÖ޵İÍÎ÷Äϲ¿¡¢²£ÀûάÑÇ¡¢°¢¸ùÍ¢±±²¿¡¢¸çÂ×±ÈÑǶ«Äϲ¿¡¢Î¯ÄÚÈðÀ­ºÍ°ÍÀ­¹ç¡£ºóÀ´ÓÖ±»ÒýÈë·ðÂÞÀï´ïÒÔ¼°ÃÀ¹úÆäËûµÄÑÇÈÈ´øµØÇø¡£


Ë®ëà·Ö²¼Í¼£º




Ë®ëàµÄÓ¢ÎĽéÉÜ Introduction


The capybara (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris) is a large rodent of the genus Hydrochoerus of which the only other member is the lesser capybara (Hydrochoerus isthmius). The capybara is the largest rodent in the world. Close relatives are guinea pigs and rock cavies, and it is more distantly related to the agouti, chinchillas, and the coypu. Native to South America, the capybara inhabits savannas and dense forests and lives near bodies of water. It is a highly social species and can be found in groups as large as 100 individuals, but usually lives in groups of 10€€20 individuals. The capybara is not a threatened species and is hunted for its meat, hide and also for a grease from its thick fatty skin which is used in the pharmaceutical trade.



·ÖÏíµ½:

Ïà¹ØÎÄÕÂ

·¢²¼Ö÷Ìâ ¿Í·þÖÐÐÄ ÁªÏµÎÒÃÇ ËÑË÷ ¹Ù·½QQȺ ¹êÓÑÌìÏÂÉ̳Ç
·µ»Ø¶¥²¿