44 
MAMMALIA. 
[Chap. I. 
habit the forests, making their nests among the roots of 
the trees, and feeding, in the season, on the ripe seeds of 
the nilloo. Like the lemmings of Norway and Lapland, 
COFFEE EAT. 
they migrate in vast numbers on the occurrence of a 
scarcity of their ordinary food. The Malabar coolies 
are so fond of their flesh, that they evince a preference 
for those districts in which the coffee plantations are 
subject to their incursions, where they fry the rats in 
coco-nut oil, or convert them into curry. 
Bandicoot. — Another favourite article of food with 
the coolies is the pig-rat or Bandicoot \ which attains on 
those hills the weight of two or three pounds, and grows 
to nearly the length of two feet. As it feeds on grain 
and roots, its flesh is said to be delicate, and much re- 
sembling young pork. 
1 Mus bandicota, Beckst. The nrption of the Telinga name pan- 
Eaglieh term bandicoot is a eor- dikofai, literally pig-rat. 
