Navigate Namibia-03
Navigate Namibia-03
  • Namibia
    • Overview
    • Language
    • History
    • Books
    • T's & C's
    • Links
  • Travel
    • Travel Advice
    • Tours
    • Lodges
    • Car Rental
    • Self-Drive
    • Getting There
    • Travel Insurance
  • Nature
  • Parks
    • All
    • Northern Namibia
    • Southern Namibia
    • Western Namibia
    • Central Namibia
    • Eastern Namibia
    • Communal Conservancies in Namibia
  • News

Shortsnouted elephant shrew

Elephantulus brachyrynchus
It has a shorter snout than other elephant shrews.

Shortsnouted elephant shrew

Introduction: The short-snouted elephant shrew (Elephantulus brachyrynchus) is slightly shorter than other elephant shrews because of a shorter snout, hence the name. It is a fast runner, most active at dawn when they scurry from cover to cover. Foot-drumming is also a characteristic of this shrew. Another feature is scent glands behind the ears, which come into contact with the ground when they roll down the sand, dispersing a secretion on the ground and over themselves at the same time.

Distribution: Far north-eastern Namibia only, including the Caprivi Strip and Kavango River regions.

Diet: Ants and termites, grasshoppers and crickets.

Colouring: Varied brown body fur, with white, buffy or off-white rings around the eyes, upper lip and brownish-yellow patches behind the ears.

Breeding: Females have the capacity to produce five or six litters per year with one or two young. A survival feature of the newly-born short-snouted elephant shrew is that they are fully-furred and their eyes are open at birth, and can run almost immediately after birth.

Size: Total length of 210mm, tail roughly the same length

Weight: 44g

Gondwana Collection Namibia (Pty) Ltd t/a Gondwana Travel Centre

2nd floor, Ardeco Building, Nelson Mandela Avenue (entrance Bassingthwaighte St.)
Klein Windhoek
Contacts
info@namibian.org
Copyright © 2025.  Gondwana Collection Namibia (Pty) Ltd t/a Gondwana Travel Centre 1998-2025