Mixed Breed
A mixed breed gerbil is usually a Mongolian gerbil, Meriones unguiculatus, whose ancestry or color background is not confined to one named fancy variety. In pet listings this label may cover gerbils with blended or uncertain coat genetics, including pied, spotted, black, golden, grey, Burmese, blue, sepia, and Himalayan-type markings. It does not usually indicate a separate species; most domestic gerbils sold as pets descend from the same small desert rodent native to Mongolia and northern China. Body shape, digging behavior, and social habits matter more than the color name.
Mixed gerbils make the same practical demands as named varieties: a secure tank-style enclosure, deep bedding for tunnels, chewable enrichment, a solid exercise wheel, and a dust-free environment. They are social, so compatible same-sex pairs or stable small groups are preferred, while introductions are safer with a split-cage method. Buyers and rescues should confirm sex, age, and health rather than rely on a vague breed label. If breeding is planned, unknown ancestry makes color outcomes and inherited issues harder to predict, so many keepers avoid breeding untracked pets.
Colors: Black Pied, Black Spotted, Burmese Point, Burmese Spotted, Dark Blue, Dark Golden Base with Black Ticking, Dark Orange Base with Silver Ticking, Dark Sepia, Golden Spotted, Grey Pied, Grey Spotted, Himalayan, Light Blue, Light Golden Base with Black Ticking, Light Orange Base with Silver Ticking, Light Sepia, Lilac Pied, Lilac Spotted, Medium Blue, Medium Golden Base with Black Ticking, Medium Orange Base with Silver Ticking, Medium Sepia, Siamese, Solid Black, Solid Grey, Solid Lilac, White with Dark Points, White with Light Points, White with Medium Points