Mole Rats are workers and do things such as care for the Queens Pups, Dig Tunnels and Scout For and Look for Food.
The queen of the colony is larger and longer than all the other mole-rats.
Her job is to breed and have pups and to keep her position as the dominant mole-rat in the colony.
A mole rat is actually a pretty small rat creature in size.
Naked mole-rats are usually 3 inches (7.5 centimeters) long and weigh 1-1.5 ounces (28-42 grams).
However, soldiers can weigh up to 2 ounces (57 grams), and the queen, who is the largest member of the colony, can weigh up to 2.5 ounces (71 grams).
Mole rats can be aggressive when they feel threatened.
However mole rats are actually pretty gentle creatures around humans and rarely do they try to harm a human.
Naked mole-rats are very gentle by nature, rarely acting aggressive towards humans.
Mole rats are considered immortal as they are very hard to kill or poison and they can easily live when deprived of oxygen and are resistant to some forms of cancer.
Although eventually the mole rat will die of old age and the mole rat can live up to 30 years in some cases by most mole rats live up to 10 to 15 years and sometimes less.
Mice in captivity live at most 4 years; based on their size, naked mole rats would not be expected to live past 6 years.
Instead, some live beyond 30 years, and even at that age breeding females stay fertile.
The noise or noises that mole rats make are chirping, squeaking and twittering sounds as well as grunting sounds but they make these noises pretty quietly.
Naked mole rats are very communicative creatures, they quietly chirp, squeak, twitter or even grunt to one another.
There is such a thing as a mole rat.
Although even though the name says they are a mole and a rat they actually are neither a mold nor a rat.
Mole Rats are more closely related to porcupines and guinea pigs than they are to moles or rats.
Mole Rats are also known as the Naked Mole Rat.
Naked mole rats, as their name suggests, are pink, nearly hairless subterranean rodents.
These surprisingly long-lived animals are one of the only true eusocial mammals and live in underground burrows in eastern Africa.
Native to the desert regions of East Africa, which can be pretty warm during the day, naked mole-rats live underground.
If it does get cold at night, the little mammals just huddle together in a mole-rat pile and use each other's body heat to keep warm.
Naked mole rats are very communicative creatures, they quietly chirp, squeak, twitter or even grunt to one another.
Scientists wanted to find out whether these vocalizations have a social function for the animals – and found that each colony has its own dialect that promotes social cohesion.