Living Earth Rodentry

Living Earth Rodentry Living Earth Rodentry

AGS registered breeder & exhibitor of Mongolian gerbils; dwarf hamsters & exotic rodents. On hiatus. Lisa McCune-Noll, Mercer, PA

Living Earth Rodentry

Breeder of Mongolian Gerbils, Campbell's Russian dwarf hamsters, Chinese hamsters, wild type & satin Cairo (Egyptian) spiny mice, African soft furred rats. Lisa McCune-Noll, Pittsburgh, PA

Founder of the US Exotic Rodent Association,
Founding Member of the Greater Pittsburgh
Fancy & Exotic Rodent Association,
Member of the American Gerbil Society

As time &

space allows, I will take in, rescue, or rehome the following small rodents: gerbils, hamsters, and exotic rodents (spiny mice, ASFs).

02/08/2026

I don't often post about another passion of mine, plants. Today I thought I'd post something that combines two. This is Ziziphus nummularia, commonly known as wild jujube, various speices occur in desert areas of the Middle East, Arabia and east into India. Often growing in places where few other plants wouldn't survive, managing to find water in the most unlikely places. The fruits which are the size of an olive and have the texture and flavour of an apple. They are eaten by a wide range of rodent species, including Gerbils, Jirds and Spiny Mice.

11/10/2025
09/25/2025

A scientist is saving Ukraine's hamsters—in the middle of war
Mikhail Rusin is perhaps the world's greatest hamster champion.
The European hamster is bigger and feistier than the varieties more commonly found in pet stores. They are also critically endangered.
In February 2023, as cruise missiles hit cities from Kherson to Kyiv, Mikhail Rusin lost heat and electricity in his home in Ukraine’s capital for almost a week. Overnight lows were around 14 degrees Fahrenheit. It was yet another hardship of the war, and while he worried about himself and his family, he was also concerned about his hamsters at the Kyiv Zoo. The hamsters were in sparse cages in a dark room, hibernating. Despite being generally tolerant of the cold, if their body temperatures dropped too low, they might not recover.
Rusin, a 41-year-old biologist who heads up the zoo’s European hamster breeding program, just might be the biggest champion for these critically endangered rodents, which are native to 23 countries from France to Kazakhstan.
European hamsters are not to be confused with pet hamsters, which are native to Syria and Turkey. For one, they are much larger, weighing three times as much, and feistier. Imagine a pet hamster “but it’s the size of a guinea pig, with a really bad temper,” says Julie Fleitz, a hamster expert with the French National Centre for Scientific Research. When provoked, they’ll stand on their hind legs to fight. Not much scares them. “They can jump on dogs and other larger predators,” says Rusin.
But for all their tenaciousness, these hamsters struggle. The IUCN, which accesses the extinction risk status of animals around the globe, lists the European hamster as critically endangered. And in Ukraine, the species is in the Red Book, the country’s list of vulnerable and rare animals.
Because of their dwindling numbers, Rusin breeds the hamsters as part of the zoo’s conservation program and then releases them on the Tarutino Steppe, a large, open grassland in southwestern Ukraine near Odesa.
Remarkably, since 2020, Rusin has released hamsters every year—throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and then the war, which started in 2022. During the same time, Rusin has seen friends go off to fight and come back injured. He’s witnessed the debris of intercepted Russian drones hit the zoo. And he lost his income for half a year in 2022 when the zoo—still reeling from the effects of 2020’s dismal ticket sales—lost visitors again, along with the revenue they bring, due to the war.
And yet, through it all, he has continued his work with the hamsters. “Some people think that we are wasting resources now [on hamsters],” he says, rather than spending the conservation money on military drones. But he doesn’t see it as an either-or situation. Nor do the many hamster-saving volunteers he’s inspired. Amid the war, he says, “this is where I find my inner peace.”
Hunting and habitat loss led Ukraine's hamsters to the brink. Now, they face a new threat: war.
Even without the wartime challenges, orchestrating a wild European hamster resurgence would be no easy feat. The Red Book notes that there are only a few thousand of the hamsters left in Ukraine.
They’ve populated the region since the last ice age, but by middle of the 20th Century, half a million were harvested each year for their fur. Then, monoculture, or the farming of single crops, robbed the hamsters of their food diversity, particularly in Eastern Ukraine. When the hamsters woke from yearly hibernation, they found ploughed fields, nothing to eat, and few places to hide from predators. Nowadays, much of the habitat they had left there has been destroyed by war.
Their range, which once extended from France well into eastern Russia, has also decreased dramatically—by 94 percent in France, and by 74 percent in Germany, Poland, and Ukraine, says Fleitz. When the hamsters perish, the environment suffers. Hawks, foxes, polecats, and other predators rely on them for food.

In 2019, Rusin was asked to head up the breeding program at the Kyiv Zoo, after the zoo’s director heard about a similar program in Germany and wanted to replicate it. When the zoo reached out, Rusin was the only PhD in Ukraine focused on the hamster. Within a year, COVID-19 hit. That spring, “we had a lockdown, and it was forbidden to move through the city,” Rusin says. He had to obtain a government permit to go to work and feed the hamsters.

Then, two years later, Russia invaded Ukraine, expecting a quick victory. Instead, the war has raged for three years, with nearly one million Russian troops and half a million Ukrainian troops dead or wounded, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. More than 1,600 civilians have been killed across Ukraine. Russian missiles and drone strikes continue to target Kyiv, decimating infrastructure and killing civilians.

Rusin’s hamsters ended up surviving that brutal winter of 2023, even though their zoo building often lacked indoor heat. But the following summer, blackouts and stifling temperatures hit Kyiv, as more missiles rained down from Russian attacks. In early July, the Okhmatdyt children’s hospital was hit in a strike that decimated the ICU and the oncology and surgery units, injuring 10 children and killing two adults, including a doctor.

A kilometer away at the zoo, the scorching summer spelled disaster for the hamsters. “The facility that we had at the time was not prepared,” Rusin says. It was “without ventilation, without electricity, without air-conditioning working.” Temperatures soared to 90 degrees Fahrenheit on some days.

Many hamsters at the zoo became hyperthermic and died, so Rusin’s team transferred the survivors to a cool unfinished basement nearby until they were ready for release. But soon, Rusin’s team had to evacuate there, too, straining the hamsters’ little bodies further. “Hamsters are very prone to stress,” he says, “and several heart attacks occurred with the hamsters.” For Rusin, it was a heartbreaking blow—especially when he and his colleagues were taking such risks to conserve these species.

Every year, Rusin’s work grows more urgent. Many hamster populations have disappeared in eastern Ukraine, where most of the military action has occurred. “There were some cases of hamsters falling in the trenches,” Rusin says. “And then we had, for example, cases when the military hanged hamsters and other wild animals. People unfortunately are cruel very often, especially in the war.”

04/09/2024
An Egyptian spiny mouse perhaps, with its plump, round body?
09/21/2022

An Egyptian spiny mouse perhaps, with its plump, round body?

Wooden cosmetic spoon in shape of a mouse. Egyptian used spoons to mix their eye make up on. Date: Egyptian, New Kingdom, 18th dynasty, 1525 - 1295 BC. Now on display at the Metropolitan Museum, NYC.

Credit:

This needs to be fought! We all have to fight it!
03/18/2021

This needs to be fought! We all have to fight it!

ALERT: Lacey Act Amendment
Read below or at https://usark.org/2021-lacey/.

U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (R-Florida) has introduced Senate Bill 626 (S626). This is a bill that would reverse the USARK federal lawsuit victory by reinstating the ban on interstate transportation of species listed as injurious under the Lacey Act. The bill would also create a "white list" (see #2 below). This goes far beyond large constrictor snakes. This will trickle down to hundreds or thousands on common pet species. Also note this does not pertain only to non-native species. FWS has already listed U.S. native species of salamanders as injurious.

Briefly, S626 will:

1. Provide that the Lacey Act bans the interstate transport of species listed as injurious. Specifically, it replaces Lacey's current language ‘‘shipment between the continental United States’’ with ‘‘transport between the States";

2. Create a "white list" of species that can be imported. This means that any animal (reptile, amphibian, fish, bird, mammal, invertebrate) that is not on the white list is by default treated as an injurious species and is banned from importation.

3. Create a new authority allowing FWS to use an "emergency designation" that becomes effective immediately after being published in the Federal Register unless an extension of no more than 60 days is allowed. That means no due process, public input, hearings, advanced notice, etc. for injurious listings;

4. Permit FWS to not allow importation if a species has not been imported in "minimal quantities" (to be defined) in the year prior to the enactment of this Act.

The effective date would be one year after the enactment of this Act.

Senator Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) is a co-sponsor. S626 has been assigned to the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.

Read the S626 text at https://usark.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/2021-S626-Lacey-Act.pdf.

We will provide more details on actions to take.

In our landmark court decision, four federal judges agreed that USARK was correct and that the Lacey Act (Title 18 Section 42 of the U.S. Code) did not ban interstate transportation of injurious species based on the original language of the Lacey Act and the intent of Congress. As a result of this fight for our members and the herpetocultural community, this meant animals domestically bred under human care could be moved and sold across state lines (within the continental United States). For herpetoculturists’ concerns, this included some species of constrictor snakes and 201 species of salamanders.

Hamsters of the World!One thing of note with this poster. Most often in popular hamster caresheets, the familiar Chinese...
12/02/2020

Hamsters of the World!

One thing of note with this poster. Most often in popular hamster caresheets, the familiar Chinese hamster, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_hamster, is listed with the scientific name Cricetulus griseus, and more rarely, Cricetulus barabensis griseus.

A close relative, the Chinese striped hamster was first described in 1773 as Cricetulus barabensis by the German zoologist Peter Simon Pallas. There is quite some confusion over the Latin name of the Chinese striped hamster and the Chinese hamster. Some people consider the Chinese hamster (Cricetulus griseus) and the Chinese striped hamster (Cricetulus barabensis) different species,[2] whereas others classify them as identical, the Chinese striped hamster as a subspecies of the Chinese hamster (in which case the Latin name of the Chinese striped hamster would be Cricetulus griseus barabensis)[3] or the other way round (in which case the Latin name of the Chinese hamster would be Cricetulus barabensis griseus).
In addition, six subspecies of the Chinese striped hamster are recognised - more info about them can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_striped_hamster
Both (sub)species are members of a subgroup of hamsters called "ratlike hamsters" due to their relatively long tails and overall "mousey" look as compared to other hamsters.

10/13/2020

Smile 😁

10/12/2020
04/23/2020

As the pandemic continues, two self-quarantined Londoners decided their gerbils needed an art-filled space to unwind.

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Pittsburgh, PA

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