Distribution and ecology
Corbet and Hill (1992) mention that ''Maxomys'' rats are often the most common rodent in the Southeast Asian tropical forest, from most of the Malay Archipelago to Sulawesi,Morphology
''M. rajah'' is medium in size where the upperparts are brown, darker in the midline, with numerous stiff gray-brown spines. The underparts are white with many short, white spines, and usually with a dark brown streak along the middle in adults, but never with an orange throat patch. The white color of the underparts extend down in a narrow line to the feet. Above the tail is brown, pale below and thinly haired. Usually, the range of the measurement of ''M. rajah'' are HB 138.1-218, T 142-210, T/HB = 102.9-109.3%, HF 33.8-43, E 21.9-22.3, Wt 71-218 g, D 1003/1003=16, M 2+2=8. Skull: gl 40.9-48.6, iob 6.6-7.4, mt 6.9-8.1. The immature Red Spiny Rats, ''M. surifer'' is similar ''M. rajah'' and quite difficult to distinguish. (Payne ''et al.'', 1985).References
* Corbet, G.B and Hill, J.E.(1992). ''The mammals on the Indomalayan region: a systematic review''. Natural History Museum Publications and Oxford University Press. * Payne, J., Francis, C.M. and Phillipps, K. (1985). ''Field guide to mammals of Borneo''. The Sabah Society with World Wildlife Fund Malaysia. * Yasuda, M., Miura, S. and Hussein, N.A. (2000). Evidence for food hoarding behavior in terrestrial rodents in Pasoh forest reserve, a Malaysian lowland rain forest. ''Journal of Tropical forest Science''. * Shadbolt, A. B and Ragai, R. (2010) Effects of habitat fragmentation on the movement patterns and dispersal ability of the brown spiny rat (Maxomys rajah) in the planted forest zone of Sarawak, Eastern Malaysia. Biodiversity and Conservation 19(2): pp 531 – 541.External links