The Dunnart is one type of marsupial mouse that can easily consume the equivalent of its own body weight daily.
The weight that a mouse can lift will depend on its size. It is estimated that mice can lift things that twice their body weight.
The Carpentarian antechinus is a carnivorous marsupial, or "dasyurid". It is a small Australian marsupial which, along with several other species, comes under the heading of "marsupial mouse", and measures about 85mm (including its head and body) with its tail measuring about 69mm. The tail of this animal is large relative to the size of its body (about 80% of the total size of the body). The Carpentarian Antechinus typically weighs in at approximately 17g.
There are various species of the so-called marsupial mouse, and they are not measured in height, but length.The planigale has a head to body length of about 10cm, with a tail length of about 8 cm.The antechinus measures about 85mm (including its head and body) with its tail measuring about 69mm.The phascogale, also known as the wambenger, is about 10 cm long, with a tail length of 14 cm.
0.5% of its body weight.
Yes, if you go over your daily maintenance(the amount of calories your body burns of daily) you will gain weight. If you can keep it at the same level you will maintain weight and if you go under your daily maintenance you will loose weight.
The feet, as they bear our weight daily for hours.
It depends on the individual's age, size, and activity level. However as a general rule, if you measure your body weight in kgs multiply it by .8 and if you measure your body weight in lbs, multiply it by .37. This would be your daily minimum.
The Carpentarian Antechinus is similar in size to a mouse.The small Australian marsupial which, along with several other species, comes under the heading of "marsupial mouse", measures about 85mm (including its head and body) with its tail measuring about 69mm. The tail of this animal is large relative to the size of its body (about 80% of the total size of the body). The Carpentarian Antechinus typically weighs in at approximately 17g.
ask the mouse to stand up against a ruler then to stand on the scale.
About 30 ml (or 10ml/100g of body weight)
It depends on your body's weight but for most people it is 2 to 3 cups daily
Yes. Mice have a much higher metabolic rate than a cow does, which means a mouse has to eat more per body weight than a cow to keep it alive and able to move around. We have to look at how much a mouse and a cow drink on a per-body weight basis to see whether a mouse will or will not dehydrate faster than a cow will. We cannot compare how much a cow drinks or a mouse drinks per day in terms of gross volume, since these are unreliable numbers to work with. Thus, typically a mouse will drink 15% to 20% of its body weight in water per day. A cow, on the other hand, will drink 7 to 10% of her body weight in water per day. This is a huge difference, and shows that mice indeed will dehydrate faster than a cow will.