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7 animals that build underground hidden homes !

ETimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 14, 2025, 15:42 IST
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7 animals that build underground hidden homes !

Many animals around the world build hidden homes underground known as burrows. These shelters protect them from predators and extreme weather, and provide safe places to sleep, raise young, or hibernate. From tiny rodents to robust mammals, underground living shows nature’s remarkable adaptability. These burrow systems can be simple tunnels or elaborate networks with multiple chambers and entrances. Here are seven such animals who build their homes underground. Scroll down to know about them -

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Mole

Moles are small mammals highly specialised for life underground. With powerful, shovel-like front limbs and sharp claws, they churn through soil to build extensive tunnel systems. These burrows allow them to hunt insects and earthworms safely below the surface while keeping them hidden from predators. Moles rarely surface, spending most of their life beneath the ground searching for food and shelter.

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Groundhog

The groundhog, also called a woodchuck, is an expert burrower. These rodents dig complex tunnels with multiple entrances used for sleeping, hibernating, and raising young. Their burrows often have 2-5 exits that help them escape quickly from danger. Groundhogs play a significant role in soil aeration and affect local ecosystems through their digging activities.

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Armadillo

Armadillos are armored mammals known for their strong digging abilities. Using sharp claws, they excavate burrows often near water sources like streams and creeks. These dens serve as safe retreats from heat and predators and sometimes stretch for many feet underground. Armadillo burrows not only shelter the animals but can also be reused by other wildlife.

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Fennec fox

The fennec fox, a desert dweller with large ears, digs deep underground burrows in sandy soils. These tunnels help them escape scorching daytime heat and protect their young. The complex burrow networks often include several entrances and chambers and are essential for survival in harsh desert climates where open shelter is scarce.

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Black-tailed prairie dog

Black-tailed prairie dogs live in highly social underground colonies known as towns. Their burrows have multiple entrances, chambers for breeding and food storage, and intricate layouts that support large family groups. These tunnel systems not only provide safety from predators but also help regulate temperature and allow social communication within the colony.

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Common wombat

The common wombat is a burrow-building marsupial found in Australia. They dig long underground tunnel systems with several entrances. Wombat burrows are used for shelter, protection, and weather refuge. Their digging also helps improve soil health, benefiting other plants and animals in their environment. Often other creatures use abandoned wombat burrows as homes too

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Short-beaked echidna

Short-beaked echidnas use powerful front claws to dig, enabling predator evasion by rapidly burrowing into soil or creating quick cover, and aiding body temperature control in varying climates. Their digging turns over soil, improving aeration and ecosystem health through mixing, though fertilisation is indirect through organic matter exposure rather than direct.



From small rodents to strong mammals, numerous creatures depend on underground dwellings to survive. These holes are used as defense, nursery, food storage and to escape bad weather. The analysis of these concealed habitats gives us an idea of the extraordinary ingenuity of the wildlife and the importance of burrowing behaviour in nature.



All Images Credit: Canva

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