Common Agouti
Dasyprocta punctata
Dasyprocta punctata is widely listed as common agouti but is known as the Central American agouti in many field guides. It is a medium-sized, long-legged rodent found from southern Mexico through Central America and into parts of northwestern South America, usually in forests, plantations, and edge habitat. The coat is coarse and grizzled brown to orange, the ears are small, and the tail is barely visible. Agoutis are noted by tropical ecologists for scatter-hoarding large seeds, including palm and other hard-shelled fruits, which can make them important dispersers where larger seed-eating mammals have disappeared.
In human care, agoutis appear in zoos, wildlife parks, rescue centers, and occasionally in rural meat-production or bushmeat contexts where laws allow. They need a quiet enclosure with dry shelters, deep leaf litter or soil, and protected planting or logs for cover, since nervous animals may bolt hard into barriers. Diets usually combine browse, vegetables, fruit in moderation, nuts or seeds, and a formulated rodent or herbivore component to support teeth and mineral balance. Pairs may breed readily, but introductions can be rough; managers watch for chasing, bite wounds, and stress in subordinate animals.
Colors: Brown with Orange Ticking