Mom's aardvark |
The scientific name for aardvarks is Orycteropus afer, which is Greek for "digging-footed from Africa." The name aardvark is an early Afrikaans word, and it means "earth pig" or "ground pig." The animals were called this because they live in burrows in the ground, and also they look a little like pigs, even though they are not even remotely related to pigs.
Other names for aardvarks are "antbear" or "anteater," but aardvarks aren't related to the South American anteater either. In fact, aardvarks don't have any close relatives at all, so that may be why they don't have family reunions. Their closest relatives are elephant shrews, sirenians, hyraxes, tenrecs, and elephants.
Aardvarks have tough skin with some coarse hair on it. Their toes have wide, flat nails that are really good for digging. Their long snouts have a flat sort of disc at the end where the nostrils are. The aardvark's mouth is shaped like a tube, and its tongue is like a long, sticky worm that can be 12 inches long.
The whole reason aardvarks are made like this is so they can dig termites out of their mounds and eat them. Termites and ants are almost the only things that aardvarks eat, which frankly, does not sound like a very yummy or well-balanced diet to me. But aardvarks seem to do fine on it. Adults weigh between 110 and 180 pounds, and they live as long as 23 years in captivity.
Termite mounds can be really tall! |
This mound got dug into, probably by an aardvark. |
Real aardvark burrows have much smaller openings. This one is probably in a zoo. |
Aardvarks live by themselves unless it is mating season. After mating, a female aardvark waits 7 months and then one cub is born that weighs about 4 pounds. After 2 weeks, the cub can leave the burrow and follow the mother. By 14 weeks, it is eating termites, and it is weaned by 16 weeks. At 6 months, a cub can dig its own burrow, but often a cub will stay with its mom until the next mating season.
The main predators of aardvarks are lions, leopards, hunting dogs, and pythons. Also there are some African tribes that hunt aardvarks for their meat. If an aardvark is trying to get away from a predator, it can dig a burrow really fast, or else it can run in a zig-zag way. Sometimes it will use its claws, tail, and shoulders to defend itself, and its thick skin also helps protect it.
In African folklore, the aardvark is admired because of how hard it works to find food, and also because it is not afraid of soldier ants. Some African magicians make a charm out of parts of the aardvark, mixed with the root of a certain tree. A person who has this charm is supposed to be able to go through walls or roofs at night. Burglars like to use this charm, and so do young men who want to visit girls without the permission of the girls' parents.
I think aardvarks are funny-looking, and it might be interesting to have one at our house, but Mom says we do not have enough termites to feed an aardvark, or at least she hopes we don't!
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