How a Desert Rat Feasts on Poisonous Plants

A packrat, also known as a woodrat, from the Great Basin of Utah is surrounded by mildly toxic juniper leaves that make up much of its diet. When climate warming eliminated juniper trees from what is now the Mojave Desert between 18,700 and 10,000 years ago, packrats there had to eat much more toxic creosote bushes, which replaced juniper. A University of Utah study has scanned the genetic blueprint of packrats from the Great Basin and the Mojave, and has narrowed to 24 candidate genes the search for genes that produce enzymes allowing Mojave packrats to eat poisonous creosote resin.
(Image credit: Denise Dearing)

For thousands of years, desert woodrats (Neotoma lepida) of the southwestern United States lived on a diet rich in juniper, despite the plant’s toxic compounds. Then, 18,700 years ago, the region’s climate changed.

In what is now the Mojave Desert, juniper gave way to creosote shrubs, while farther north in the Great Basin it remained plentiful. Creosote shrubs have a completely distinct arsenal of toxins, yet woodrats thrive in both areas today.

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