It is hard to guess what a Crawford’s gray shrew weights. But we have the answer:
An adult Crawford’s gray shrew (Notiosorex crawfordi) on average weights 4 grams (0.01 lbs).
The Crawford’s gray shrew is from the family Soricidae (genus: Notiosorex). They can live for up to 1.25 years. When reaching adult age, they grow up to 6.1 cm (0′ 3″). Usually, Crawford’s gray shrews have 3 babies per litter.
As a reference: An average human weights in at 62 kg (137 lbs) and reaches an average size of 1.65m (5′ 5″). Humans spend 280 days (40 weeks) in the womb of their mother and reach around 75 years of age.
Crawford’s gray shrew (Notiosorex crawfordi) also known as the desert shrew, is a small shrew found in the southwestern United States and northern Mexico. It is a member of the order Soricomorpha and the family Soricidae. It was the only known member of the genus Notiosorex until two species, N. villai distributed in Tamaulipas, Mexico, and N. evotis distributed along the northwest coast of Mexico, were named. A fourth distinct species, N. cockrumi, was discovered in Arizona and named in 2004.Crawford’s gray shrew is one of the smallest desert mammals and one of the world’s smallest homeotherms. When fully grown, it will only grow to a size of about 1.5 to 2 in (3.8 to 5.1 cm) long, half of which is the tail, and it will only grow to a weight of about 3 to 5 g (0.11 to 0.18 oz). It is gray-brown with light gray under parts. The long tail is gray with it being lighter underneath. It has small, but relatively prominent, ears.A Crawford’s gray shrew is born during the summer months to a litter size of three to six. When born, it is naked, pink and is about the same size as a honeybee. It grows rapidly and reaches its adult size in about four to five weeks. As a baby, its diet consists of milk the mother produces without the aid of water. After two to three weeks, its diet changes to food brought back to the nest and then regurgitated into the juvenile’s mouth. By fall, Crawford’s gray shrew is out of the nest and on its own. As an adult, its diet changes from the regurgitated food to intact food it kills itself. Crawford’s gray shrew will eat lizards, small mice, and scorpions, but its main food source is a wide variety of arthropods. Since this shrew has a very high rate of metabolism, it will eat up to 75% of its body weight every day, and occasionally its full body weight; this can be dangerous since it can overheat the animal. The heat produced by metabolism and gained from its surrounding environment results in a high risk of overheating.Crawford’s gray shrew, unlike most shrews, does not have access to an abundant water supply. To conserve the little water that shrews do absorb, they find shelter to protect them from the harsh external temperatures. Crawford’s gray shrew does not construct its own burrows or use the ones made by other animals. Instead, it builds small nests in pack rat houses or under dead agaves.This species also conserves water by being nocturnal, unlike other shrews, which hunt day and night to avoid starvation. Crawford’s gray shrew has poor vision, so it uses its highly sensitive ears and long nose to hunt down its prey. It will also use an echolocation, similar to bats, with high-pitched squeaks to locate prey. It will also store food during the night so it will not have to go out during the day. To keep from losing any water from its victims, it will bite off the legs and then crush the prey’s head so as not to kill it but to keep it fresh and unable to move.Since water loss is a huge problem for this shrew, it has adapted by reducing two major causes of water loss. While breathing, Crawford’s gray shrew inhales air warmed to body temperature and absorbs water vapor from the nasal walls. Exhaled air is cooled as the air is exiting, and the water vapor from the air condenses on the nasal passage. This keeps in more water than if the air were exhaled at body temperature. Water loss is reduced even more through respiration because it takes fewer breaths than other shrews and it has the lowest resting metabolic rate of all shrew species.Because of its diet, the Crawford’s gray shrew must expel a large amount of nitrogenous waste from its body, which has a potential for a large loss of water when urinating. However, it is able to reduce water loss from urine, as well, by concentrating urea in the urine. The urine is four times more concentrated than that of a human, thus saving a huge amount of water.Even with all of these adaptations to help it survive in the harsh environment of the desert, it still only lives for a relatively short time. Since it hunts at night, Crawford’s Gray Shrew is susceptible to nocturnal hunters, such as snakes and owls. Although it can emit a musky odor that makes it seem less appetizing to mammalian predators, it still lives for only about a year or so in the wild.
Animals of the same family as a Crawford’s gray shrew
We found other animals of the Soricidae family:
- Mexican shrew with a weight of 11 grams
- Swamp musk shrew with a weight of 10 grams
- Baird’s shrew with a weight of 8 grams
- Eurasian least shrew with a weight of 2 grams
- Kongana shrew with a weight of 5 grams
- American pygmy shrew with a weight of 3 grams
- Nigerian shrew with a weight of 23 grams
- Salenski’s shrew with a weight of 5 grams
- Elegant water shrew with a weight of 38 grams
- American water shrew with a weight of 13 grams
Animals with the same weight as a Crawford’s gray shrew
As a comparison, here are some other animals that weight as much as the Notiosorex crawfordi:
- Elegant myotis bringing 4 grams to the scale
- Yellow-lipped bat bringing 4 grams to the scale
- Groove-toothed bat bringing 4 grams to the scale
- Brown tube-nosed bat bringing 4 grams to the scale
- Peters’s sheath-tailed bat bringing 4 grams to the scale
- Saussure’s shrew bringing 4 grams to the scale
- Peters’s trumpet-eared bat bringing 4 grams to the scale
- Clear-winged woolly bat bringing 4 grams to the scale
- Hardwicke’s woolly bat bringing 4 grams to the scale
- Borneo roundleaf bat bringing 4 grams to the scale
Animals with the same size as a Crawford’s gray shrew
Not that size really matters, but it makes things comparable. So here are a couple of animals that are as big as Crawford’s gray shrew:
- Merriam’s shrew with a size of 6 cm (0′ 3″)
- Azumi shrew with a size of 6 cm (0′ 3″)
- Seychelles sheath-tailed bat with a size of 6 cm (0′ 3″)
- Taiwanese brown-toothed shrew with a size of 6.7 cm (0′ 3″)
- Arizona shrew with a size of 5.8 cm (0′ 3″)
- Common blossom bat with a size of 6.7 cm (0′ 3″)
- Mount Isarog shrew-mouse with a size of 7 cm (0′ 3″)
- Large-eared gray shrew with a size of 6.6 cm (0′ 3″)
- Townsend’s big-eared bat with a size of 5.7 cm (0′ 3″)
- Egyptian tomb bat with a size of 7.2 cm (0′ 3″)
Animals with the same litter size as a Crawford’s gray shrew
Here is a list of animals that have the same number of babies per litter (3) as a Crawford’s gray shrew:
- Cape golden mole
- Short-tailed mongoose
- Molina’s grass mouse
- Juniper vole
- Fisher (animal)
- Little native mouse
- Jackson’s shrew
- Tibetan sand fox
- Prairie vole
- Bushy-tailed woodrat
Animals with the same life expectancy as a Crawford’s gray shrew
Completely different animals, but becoming as old as a Crawford’s gray shrew:
- Long-tailed planigale with an average maximal age of 1.25 years
- Olive grass mouse with an average maximal age of 1 years
- Northern red-sided opossum with an average maximal age of 1 years
- Alpine shrew with an average maximal age of 1.25 years
- Texas mouse with an average maximal age of 1.5 years
- Olive grass mouse with an average maximal age of 1 years
- Long-clawed shrew with an average maximal age of 1.5 years
- American water shrew with an average maximal age of 1.5 years
- Eastern rock elephant shrew with an average maximal age of 1.08 years
- Myosorex varius with an average maximal age of 1 years