Golden-rumped elephant shrew running with blurred background

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Science

Species Spotlight

Golden-rumped Elephant Shrew

Quick Facts

Name: Golden-rumped Elephant Shrew 

Diet: Carnivores that eat invertebrates such as earthworms, millipedes, insects, and spiders 

Behaviour: Diurnal (active during the day) 

Lifespan: 4-5 years 

Size: 27-29cm long with a 23-26cm tail. 525-550g in weight 

Habitat/Range: Dense coastal scrub and forests in East Africa 

Threats: Habitat loss, habitat fragmentation, and traps 

Conservation Status: Endangered 

Close-up of golden-rumped elephant shrew

Names & Nicknames: Golden-rumped shrew or Golden-rumped Sengi

Size: HUGE… well, for an Elephant shrew at least. The golden-rumped is one of the largest Elephant shrew species at a whopping 550 grams, measuring up to the length of a standard ruler, and that's without the tail!

Smell: Sweet, sweet musk, baby! These shrews have a pungent, particular smell to help ward off the many things that want to eat them.

Communication: Elephant shrews have a pretty neat way to communicate. Ever the considerate friend, if startled by a predator (or human), they'll slap their tails against the ground to alert other elephant shrews.

Favourite hangout: Curled up asleep in their little nests. Elephant shrews excavate a hole in the soil that they line with leaves to be their bed for the night. This construction can take up to two hours, and it's hard to say which is their favourite, as golden-rumped can have up to 6 on the go at a time that they alternate between to throw off predators!

Golden-rumped elephant shrew walking away

Fav Food: Not too fussy as long as they don’t have a backbone. These little critters spend their days running around the undergrowth (with impressive speed), using their long snouts to hoover up any invertebrate they can sink their teeth into.

Love Language: These little love shrews mate for life. They'll jointly defend a territory together, though they seldom spend time with each other. The male knows to keep in line; female elephant shrews tend to be the dominant ones!

If you see them?: Good luck with that! Elephant shrews are well camouflaged and clock in at speeds of up to 16mph (24km/h), as fast as a rampaging herd of bulls. (Just a little less frightening.)

Red flags: Although they can sometimes get caught up in hunters' traps, they aren't explicitly hunted by humans, mainly because they're meant to taste... unfavourable. Habitat loss is a major threat, though.

A potential habitat for the golden-rumped elephant shrew - a dry scrubland in Kenya

Facts: Elephant shrews have a bit of an identity crisis, are they elephants, or are they shrews??? Well, it turns out that, despite their size, they are more closely related to elephants than shrews! Though they aren't that closely related to either elephants or shrews at all….

Facts: Elephant shrews get periods just like humans. They are in the exclusive club of mammals to have this, including primates such as humans and a small number of bat species.

Who are they: The small, overly caffeinated friend. The real world scares them, but that doesn't mean they aren’t prepared to fight when threatened.

How at risk it is: Endangered