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viscacha
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viscacha

Argentine Pampas and scrubland-dwelling rodent Lagostomus maximus of the chinchilla family. It is up to 70 cm/2.2 ft long with a 20 cm/8 in tail, and weighs 7 kg/15 lb. It is grey and black and has a large head and small ears. Viscachas live in warrens of up to 30 individuals. They are usually nocturnal and feed on grasses, roots, and seeds.

Four species of Mountain viscachas genus Lagidium, also called Peruvian hares, are smaller and have long ears and tails and are found in rocky places feeding by day on sparse vegetation.



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In the Andes, many of the mammal species have been domesticated, although pumas and vizcachas (an animal resembling a cross between a rabbit and a squirrel) still run wild.
Of the wildlife species, the most common are the vicuna, the vizcacha (a high-jumping rabbit) and the Andean fox, which actually looks like a coyote.
The menagerie can include partridges (a favorite), ducks, cats, dogs, hens, deer, vizcachas (a rodent related to the chinchilla), horses with banners, figures on horseback, or mating horses.
 
 
 
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