They are all rodents, and share some common characteristics, mainly their constantly growing incisor teeth.
Mice, lemmings, hamsters, Gerbils, muskrat..
No there are only hamsters, mice, and rats. On some of the petriplets hamsters it says gerbils but that was a mistake it supposed to be hamsters.
Mouse Hamster Vole Guinea Pig Rat Capybara Squirrel Jirds Shrew Degu Mole Jerboa Beaver Groundhog Muskrat Chipmunk Prairie Dog Porcupine Gerbil Chinchilla Here only a few of them are listed. The Order Rodentia comprises of more than 2,000 species which are subdivided into three distinct types and thirty families. Capromyidae, Castoridae, Crictidae, Erethizontidae, Muridae, Sciuridae and Zapodidae are some of the most common families. Muridae is the largest, containing nearly two-thirds of all rodent species. Eg: sand rats, gerbils, crested rats, old world rats and mice. Cricetidae is the second largest, and has approximately 600 species. Eg: mouse-like hamsters such as gerbils, crested rats, white-tailed rats and door mice. Sciruridae family has fewer than 100 species. But the species belonging to this family are some of the most commonly recognized rodents. Eg: Squirrels, flying squirrels, chipmunks, marmots and woodchucks.
Mice and rats are in the order Rodentia along with porcupines, squirrels, beavers, gerbils, guinea pigs, and hamsters
No. Cohabiting different types of rodents can result in the death of one or all of your pets. Rats kill mice, a behaviour known as muricide and gerbils and syrian hamsters are both extremely territorial and would kill any intruder.
No. Gerbils, hamsters, rabbits, mice, rats are faster than guinea pigs.
No. They are mammals in the rodent family along with rats, mice, hamsters, and gerbils.
yes there are , there are degus , jerbowas , chinchillas , hamsters , mice , rats , basically all the rodents that live on this planet.
The same as any other rat in the world, pellets. They usually say hamsters, gerbils, mice, rats, ferrets, and guinea pigs.
There are so many adorable rodents guinea pigs, hamsters, degus, gerbils, chinchillas, rats and mice
Hamsters originate form Syria.
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.