Life habit of pudding hamster:
Like other pet mice, Buthus martensii has the advantages of no space occupation, convenient feeding and cleaning, gentle personality and low cost, so it is very popular with office workers who have limited space and time, and soon becomes a popular pet. A species of Gakaria hamster, which was bred by the Japanese in the laboratory in the early 1990s, is the result of genetic variation, so it would be wrong for someone to say that Buthidine is a wild breed.
Buthidine's coat color is generally golden and shiny, just like delicious egg-milk pudding, which is also the source of its name. Of course, the coat color of pudding hamster varies from milky yellow to golden yellow, as well as white pudding and color-changing pudding, with a slightly darker topline on the back.
Buthidine is also very docile, but it is the most timid of the third-line hamster species. When it is attacked and afraid, it will only scream wildly and will not fight back. Buthidine is the most bullied one in the hamster family, and he is a little neurotic. Compared with other third-line hamsters, it must take extra effort to get close to Buthidine. There are also friends who say that Buthidine is fierce and bites badly. In fact, this is a sign of his timidity. Buthidine usually does not attack other hamsters actively.
Buthidine is also the most inactive species among all the third-line hamsters. It eats a lot and loves to sleep. Hamster toys such as rollers can't mobilize his motor cells. At most, he will find a place to lie down if he takes a walk in a relatively large space. If his instinct of grabbing food can be replaced by his enthusiasm for exercise, Buthidine should be a "healthy" hamster. Therefore, Buthidine is mostly obese. Rat friends who consider raising Buthidine must force him to exercise more every day.