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Asian Garden Dormouse
(Eliomys melanurus)

Article by Heather Carol
Reprinted from EXOTICKEEPERSFORUM.co.uk

TAXONOMY

The Asian Garden Dormouse is related to the European Garden Dormouse (Eliomys quercinus quercinus). Depending on whether you prefer to lump species together or split them the Asian Garden Dormouse is either the sub-species Eliomys quercinus melanurus or a separate species Eliomys melanurus.

GEOGRAPHICAL RANGE

Asian Garden Dormice are found in Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Syria, Libya, Tunisia, Lebanon, Israel, Jordan, Egypt, Iraq, and Algeria.

HABITAT

They are found in rocky areas, dry shrub-land and forests. Some in the Arabian desert regions have adapted to a non-arboreal habitat.

PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION

Asian Garden Dormice are about five inches in body length and their tail is roughly four to five inches in length. They are grey (sometimes tinged with brown) on their upper body and head and white on their stomach, legs and chin. They have a black stripe on either side of their head from their nose, around their eyes to the start of their ears. The ears are large in proportion to the body, and the eyes are large and dark. Their tail is light grey for the first couple of inches and is then entirely black. The colour of their tail is one way of distinguishing the Asian Garden Dormouse from the European Garden Dormouse as the European Garden Dormouse has a brown, black and white tail, whereas the Asian Garden Dormouse’s tail is mostly black with light grey towards the base of the tail. Other than this the European Garden Dormouse and the Asian Garden Dormouse look very similar to each other.

REPRODUCTION

In the wild the breeding season runs from March to May and August to October. The females come into season every 10 days during the breeding season. The male inserts a vaginal plug after mating. A litter of two to eight pups is born after a gestation period of 22 -28 days. Asian Garden Dormice often have only one or two litters per year.

BEHAVIOUR IN THE WILD

Asian Garden Dormice make a range of vocalisations ranging from whistles to barks, and grunts. Asian Garden Dormice are nocturnal.

DIET IN THE WILD

In the wild Asian Garden Dormice eat a range of seeds, nuts, fruits and insects .


DIET IN CAPTIVITY

My Asian Garden Dormice are offered a wide range of seeds, nuts, fruits and insects to try and replicate the variety that they would have foraging in the wild. Their basic mix is a mixture of the following:

Softbill bird food.
An African seed mix with dates and Acacia seeds (they love this!!).
Parrot fruit and nut mix.
Canary condition seed
Millets
Hemp
Linseed
Budgie Tonic seed
Greefinch mix
Dried mealworms

They are also given canned crickets, and a wide variety of fruit including grapes, melon, apple and banana. They are also given a mineral block which they nibble on and a salt lick.

HOUSING IN CAPTIVITY

My Asian Garden Dormice are kept in a warm room that never drops below 20 degrees C.

I have used three types of enclosure to house my Asian Garden Dormice. These have been a 4ft high x 4ft long x 1ft wide mostly wood and mesh enclosure, 4ft high x 2ft wide x 2ft deep enclosures (part of a block of three enclosures – 2 are 4ft high x 2ft deep x 2ft wide and one is 18 inches wide x 2ft deep x 4ft high), and glass aquariums with wood and mesh lids.

I have found that my Asian Garden Dormice have preferred enclosed spaces. This is possibly because these enclosed spaces may replicate the feeling of security that they would find in a tree canopy or rocky outcrop.

One of my pairs of Asian Garden Dormice, Isis and Aten, were housed in one of the 4ft long x 4ft high x 1ft wide enclosures, but didn’t settle. This enclosure was fairly open, and I may in future box in the sides of this enclosure to see if any of the Asian Garden Dormice will settle in it.

Isis and Aten were then placed in one of the 4ft high x 2ft deep x 2ft wide enclosures. These enclosures have melamine sides, a mesh back (5mm mesh), and a mesh and Perspex door, but Isis and Aten decided that they weren’t happy in this enclosure either. Isis and Aten are currently living in a 4ft glass tank (enclosed on the back and sides with a tank background and with a wood and mesh lid) and have settled brilliantly in this.

I also have another pair of Asian Garden Dormice and a single male Asian Garden Dormouse who currently reside in glass tanks with wood and mesh lids. I also have another pair of Asian Garden Dormice who are living in one of the tall 4ft x2ft x 2ft enclosures.

I don’t think that it is possible to suggest an enclosure that will suit all Asian Garden Dormice. My own animals have shown that some individuals will be comfortable in one type of enclosure, and others in another. However, it is important that Asian Garden Dormice are offered as much space as possible.

Asian Garden Dormice do like lots of tank and enclosure furnishings to keep them occupied, and mine seem to particularly love anything that resembles a cave or tunnel. Asian Garden Dormice are also excellent climbers. Furnishings for Asian Garden Dormouse enclosures can include branches, logs, rocks, ceramic and wooden houses and log rolls. My Asian Garden Dormice particularly love large cardboard tunnels, and adore ceramic pots that they can use as tunnels to sit in and watch the world go by.

I have used both wood shavings and Aspen bedding for my Asian Garden Dormice and both of these substrates have suited them well. My Asian Garden Dormice are given hay for nesting and make really beautiful woven hay nests.

BEHAVIOUR IN CAPTIVITY

My Asian Garden Dormice are animals to watch rather than to handle. I bought them as adults and they had not been tamed as youngsters. I am hoping that it will be possible to tame any pups that my Asian Garden Dormouse pairs have in the future by handling them from an early age.

Asian Garden Dormice can deliver a nasty bite, and some of mine, particularly the males, will bark and lunge at my hand when I net them to give them a health check or so that I can clean their enclosure. Asian Garden Dormice can move very quickly and an escaped Asian Garden Dormouse is very difficult to catch (I have used a net or a live trap designed for catching Chipmunks and Squirrels).

My Asian Garden Dormice are strictly nocturnal and are out and about late in the evening. They are messy eaters and dig through their bowls scattering the contents around so that they can pick out all of the best bits first.

They are also messy creatures in other ways too. While they do tend to use a particular corner as their main toilet, they do mark branches and shelves, and other surfaces in their tanks or enclosures with urine and droppings.

BREEDING IN CAPTIVITY

My Asian Garden Dormice have not bred as yet, but I am keeping my fingers crossed for the patter of tiny Dormouse paws in 2009.

LONGEVITY

The average age that an Asian Garden Dormouse is likely to reach in captivity is about five or six years, but some have been known to live longer than this.


Article By Ric McCarthy

Other names:
Arab Dormouse, Wüstenschläfer, Eliomys quercinus melanurus

About me and how I came to keep them as pets:
To start with, I'm not very experienced with this species. I only got three of them (a male and two females) September 2000. Since my animals are from a low quality breeder they may differ from "normal" desert dormice.

I am studying as a vet and I'm keeping a variety of pets for about 17 years now (cats, dogs, rabbits, dwarf bunnies, guinea pigs, dwarf hamsters, pygmy mice, spiny mice,...). Iīm 21, live in Europe and my mother tongue is not English, so there might be some mistakes in this text (spelling and grammar).

Last spring I thought of getting sugar gliders or African Pygmy Dormice, I had collected tons of information about both, but could not decide so I visited a breeder to see his sugar gliders and found that I could not provide a big enough cage for them (without free run of the house they need 1m3 as a minimum he told me). The breeder told me that he knew a guy that wanted to get rid of his dormice but they were not African Pygmy but a species related to the European Garden Dormouse. I decided to take them and tried to get information about them, but didn't find very much useful.

I went to the "breeder" 2 weeks later and found out that he didn't know anything about them. He took them out with gloves, they were behaving like crazy hissing and biting wildly - obviously they were not tame (if they wouldn't have looked that miserable I wouldn't have taken them - I really doubted my decision at that time). When I brought them home, I didn't see them at all for the next 2 weeks. Even if I sneaked into their room in the middle of the night they hid immediately. By the end of October I got them to trust me as much that they took treats through the bars.

Now (January 01) one already sits on my hand and eats mealworms out of it, the others also donīt hide when I put my hand into their cage and take food out of it, but they wont sit on it.

Positives of these dormice as pets:

  • they don't smell
  • they don't chew on things
  • they are not very noisy
  • they are very social
Negatives of them as pets:
  • they make a great mess
  • special needs (temperature, food, large cage)
  • this makes them somehow expensive
  • they have very sharp teeth
If I would write some anecdotes or stories here I would not know were to begin (I and I would come to no end). They are too cute and very intelligent too. They know exactly how cute they are and what treats they can get from whom. I always feed them mealworms from my hand and sometimes through the bars when I pass by their cage. My mother can't stand the worms so she feeds them pea flakes, hamster wafers or something else as a treat, and they take it, they would not take these things from me (or they take it sniff at it and throw it out through the bars again), because they know, that they will get their worms.

Scent glands and smell:
They don't smell if their cage is cleaned regularly. They may have scent glands to mark their territory but it's not noticeable to humans.

I read that their average life span is 5 years.

Do they tolerate interaction?:
That depends on what kind of interaction. They can't stand stress, loud noise.... You can not take them out to play (like a guinea pig for example), they should not be out of their cage at all - they wouldn't have fun running around in the house, it would be too much stress for them.

Their general personality, disposition and attitude:
I can't answer that in general, because I donīt own them long enough and I think that there may be a great difference between mine and animals from a good breeder that handled and loved them. Considering their past, Iīd say that they are good tempered otherwise they would hate people after their experience at the breeder, but they have really learned to trust me and my family.

Are they sweet and petable, or mischievous and playful?:
They are definitely playful, almost like little kittens, they play with each other or hunt my finger if I move it, sometimes they nip at it but they never bit me.

Are they hyper, or more sedate when being handled?:
Mine were not handled by the breeder and I don't know how old they are. I would not risk taking them out for any reason they can be frightened by nearly everything, a scent, a noise ... They escaped once when I cleaned their cage (normally I leave them in the cage so that they are not stressed to much - but that time I had to change the whole bedding) and I didn't catch them with my hands, with would have frightened them very much, but I let them crawl into one of their baskets - that worked well.

How destructive are they in their cage?: They don't chew or destroy things on purpose, but they are so messy that I have to change everything in their cage every 3 or 4 weeks (all the branches, baskets, tunnels, hammocks, shelves....).

Their claws are no problem, they are not very long or sharp (they donīt need to be trimmed), but they have very sharp teeth and will bite if they are frightened.

Their droppings are very messy, they can not be litter box trained and donīt seem to have a toilet spot, they even pee into their food. The cage they were in at the breeder was very dirty so it can be that they are used to the dirt. When I got them they also peed into their nest that it was really wet and dirty, they don't do that any more. I clean the area around their cage every morning because they also throw out a lot (I also clean their shelves and food bowls every day).

Can they be trained?
They can learn to trust you.

Cage:
They need a large cage, mine is a 48x78x78 cm wire cage (I'm building them a bigger one at the moment) with a bar spacing of 1 cm (can also be 1,5 for adults - although the breeder told me that 1 cm is to wide - they never escaped). The cage should not be smaller for only two animals, because they need a lot of room to play.

I donīt provide wheels for any of my animals, because I think it is not necessary if they are kept right (I think it's a "cheep" solution for owners who donīt want to spend money on a larger cage - it's not natural for any animal to run in a wheel!). If somebody want's to use a wheel it should be a save one, so that their tail and feet can not be caught in them.

They need branches to climb, in a wire cage the also will enjoy climbing on the bars of the cage. Beside a real nest or sleeping box they need other places to hide, I use exotic bird baskets and large paper tubes. I provided ropes for climbing too, but they did not use them. They love hammocks I made from old blankets. They are not interested in the sand bath (with chinchilla sand) I put into their cage.

Diet:
I found different information about what they eat in nature, some said they only eat seeds and fruits (with I could not believe), others said that they are mainly predators.

I provide them:

  • 1 bowl with fruit (cut into small pieces, because they like to hold it in their "hands"): apple, grapes, banana, orange, mango, papaya, fig, pears, lettuce,...
  • 1 bowl seed mix containing: gerbil mix "Sluis" (cereals, bean flakes, pea flakes, carob cubes, dried grass, grass seeds, peanuts, groats, various types of sunflower seed, apple, leek, banana, carrot, maize flakes, vitamins and minerals) bird seeds (different sorts of millet and a few linseeds) dog cereals (with rolled oats, corn flakes, rice crispies..) dry cat food (they don't seem to like that)
  • Live food for the animal protein, they prefer mealworms to cat food
  • Dog biscuits (a brand that contains meat)
  • Rodent and bird crackers from "Vitakraft", for wearing their teeth down
  • Vit Fit and Calci Fit (both are "Vitakraft" products - I'm sure there are other good products, but these are available for me) as vitamin and calcium supplement, a salt and mineral lick stone.
I know that sounds like a lot of supplements, but they eat only a part of it.

They are really crazy about their diet. Sometimes they will eat the whole bowl of seed mix and not touch the fruits, another time they only seem to eat the fruits and sometimes they wont eat anything else but live food.

They don't need vaccinations or special vet care.

When I got mine, the breeder didn't know their age, but I guess that they are adults, they donīt grew anymore after I got them, but it would be best to get them young they will bond easier when they are young.

What kind of person should own these animals?
To own these animals you have to be patient, calm, nocturnal... I stay up until 3 o'clock in the morning just to sit in the dark and watch them - sometimes they are still awake when I get up at 8 in the morning (so no going out or dancing the whole night in a disco). They are no pets for children and should be kept away from dogs or cats (and all other predators) that might cause them stress.

Breeding:
I read that the estrous cycle is 10 days and the gestation period is about 22-28 days, the litter size is two to eight babies. They open their eyes after about 21 days and are weaned at 4 weeks.

During the last days of pregnancy the male has to leave the nest and is chased away if he wants to come near.

My two females had one litter the end of November 00, Kimy had one baby and Banshee two. They hid there babies very good I didn't even know that they were pregnant. I could not even hear the babies, although during they cared for their babies the parents made strange noises (very high, they didn't sound like animals noises at all). Both mothers cared for there babies 2 weeks and neglected them than suddenly. I think they were stressed, because we had road workers in front of our house and it was noisy the whole day (I could do nothing to make the situation better, there was no room in the house that was quiet enough). Because they were so secretive about their young I did not realize that they didn't care for them any more and they died. I hope they will do better next time, Iīll keep you updated.

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