Octodontids
Scientific classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Order:Rodentia
Family:Octodontidae
Genera
 Octodon
 Octodontomys
 Octomys
 Spalacopus
 Aconaemys
 Tympanoctomys

The Octodontidae are a family of South American rodents. Eight to ten species of octodontid are recognised, arranged in five or six genera. The best known species is the Degu, Octodon degus.

Some authors have suggested that the octodontids should be reclassified in the order Lagomorpha. Older literature includes the tuco-tucos in the family, as the subfamily Ctenomyinae, but these animals are normally now treated as a separate family, the Ctenomyidae.

Members of the genus Aconaemys are referred to as rock rats, and members of genus Octodon are all called degus, though the name Degu on its own implies O. degu. The single member of Spalacopus, S. cyanus, is called the Coruro. Members of the other genera are called viscacha rats: note, however, that viscachas are not octodontids - they are members of the chinchilla family.

Most octodontids are nocturnal, social, burrowing animals, though the Degu is largely diurnal.

External links

http://www.chez.com/rodent/Octodontidae/Octodontidae.html