Yes. Agoutis, like all rodents, are mammals.
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Agoutis live in the South American rainforest, such as Brazil. They spend their time darting through the foliage on the forest floor and love eating the Brazil Nut.
Agoutis are important in the Rainforest Eco-system because they are the only animal with teeth strong enough to open their grapefuit-sized seed pod.
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Mammals that live in rainforests include jaguars, spider monkeys, howler monkeys, colobus monkeys, chimpanzees, agoutis, civets, vampire bats, water chevrotains, and the Pygmy Hippopotamus. Birds that live in rainforests include macaws, quetzals, manucodes, astrapias, parotias, toucans, cassowaries, hornbills, lorikeets, and the Harpy Eagle.
Agoutis - like all rodents - are vertebrates
No, it is a plural noun. The agouti is a small Central American rodent.
Agoutis eat fruit, leaves, and roots. An agouti may bury extra fruit to eat later, but often neglects to dig it up again. If the agouti buries a nut and never returns to eat it, the nut just might grow into a tree, making agoutis good rain forest gardeners.
Mammals with chisel shaped incisors (front teeth) are rodents and lagomorphs. Lagomorphs (rabbits, hares, and pikas) are all primarily herbivorous. Entirely or mostly herbivorous rodents include most squirrels, beavers, maras, chinchillas, some jerboas, vizcachas, hutias, coypus, pacas, capybaras, porcupines, agoutis, voles, springhares, naked mole rats, pocket gophers, some mice, hamsters, and guinea pigs.
There are multiple keystone species that live in the tropical rainforests. A couple of these species are cassowaries and agoutis.
Agoutis eat fruit, leaves, and roots. An agouti may bury extra fruit to eat later, but often neglects to dig it up again. If the agouti buries a nut and never returns to eat it, the nut just might grow into a tree, making agoutis good rain forest gardeners.
Here's a list... pangolins, squirrels, beavers, pocket gophers, kangaroo rats, pocket mice, kangaroo mice, jumping mice, birch mice, jerboas, mice, rats, scaly-tailed squirrels, springhare, gundis, dormice, dassie rat, cane rats, african mole-rats, old world porcupines, new world porcupines, viscachas, chinchillas, pacarana, cavies, maras, capybara, agoutis, pacas, tuco-tucos, octodonts, chinchilla rats, spiny rats, hutias, coypu, rabbits, pikas, hares, sengis