Yes DEFANTLY a rats tail is way longer a gerbles is only as long as you thumb-nail (mostly)
Yes technically wolves have longer tails than dogs. But sometimes dogs can have the same length of tails.
No. Ferrets have a much longer, thinner body than a rat. They also have fur covering their tails whereas a rat does not.
Rats are nicer than mice and are bigger, live longer, and are smarter than mice.
Gerbils are small, furry rodents with long tails and tufted feet, while rats are larger rodents with longer bodies and smaller ears. Gerbils are generally more social and less likely to bite than rats. Gerbils have a more herbivorous diet, while rats are omnivorous.
Mice at maturity are 4-5 inches much smaller then a mature rat 8-10 inches. Mice also have large ears compared to their head were rats ears are smaller. Both Rats and Mice are rodents that can invade our homes and carry diseases.
Mice and rats are both rodents, but not the same creature. Rats and mice are perhaps the most notorious household pests. There are three common pest rodents: the Norway rat, the roof rat and the house mouse. Norway rats live closer to the ground and will inhabit basements and lower floors. They may also live outside in burrows. Norway rats' tails are shorter than their bodies, whereas roof rats' tails are longer. Both species average 16 inches in length, tail included. Roof rats, as the name implies, prefer to live higher off the ground, nesting in trees, inside attic walls or dead space inside ceilings. Mice are smaller than rats (averaging up to 5 inches in length, including tail) but they live longer and are more common. All of these rodents will eat food and chew on property if they find their way into a home. Severe rodent infestations can result in structural damage. Mice and rats have also been known to chew through electrical wires.
They have short tails that hide in their fur.
Yes they are different in many ways:.rats are bigger.rats have scaly tails but mices tails are furry.mice droppings are smaller than a rats droppings - about the size of 1/2 a grain of rice.rats can be aggressive, especially if cornered, they will attack but a mouse will just freeze.rats have bellybuttons (i swear ive seen one!)thier really not different they both are wild both like cheese/peanut butter and both break into peoples house
In general: Gerbils have furry tails and kind of hop or jerk around when the move. adult rats are bigger than adult mice. Young rats have a stubbier face than adult mice who have more triangular shaped faces Gerbils look like hamsters rats have weird tails and mice are little and white grey or something.
Almost all mammals have tails. Other than human beings, and a few other primates, all mammals have tails. This includes cats and dogs and cows and sheep and mice and rats and otters and whales and zebras and elephants and horses and echidnas etc.
Mice and rats are both rodents, but not the same creature. Rats and mice are perhaps the most notorious household pests. There are three common pest rodents: the Norway rat, the roof rat and the house mouse. Norway rats live closer to the ground and will inhabit basements and lower floors. They may also live outside in burrows. Norway rats' tails are shorter than their bodies, whereas roof rats' tails are longer. Both species average 16 inches in length, tail included. Roof rats, as the name implies, prefer to live higher off the ground, nesting in trees, inside attic walls or dead space inside ceilings. Mice are smaller than rats (averaging up to 5 inches in length, including tail) but they live longer and are more common. All of these rodents will eat food and chew on property if they find their way into a home. Severe rodent infestations can result in structural damage. Mice and rats have also been known to chew through electrical wires.
True. Some ion tails have been observed to extend 150 million km or more.