Bushy-tailed woodrats are active throughout the year. While primarily
nocturnal, they can occasionally be seen during the day. They are usually solitary and very territorial. These woodrats collect debris in natural crevices, and abandoned man-made structures when available, into large, quasistructures for which the archaeologists' term '
midden' has been borrowed. Middens consist of plant material,
feces, and other materials which are solidified with crystallized
urine. Woodrat urine contains large amounts of dissolved
calcium carbonate and
calcium oxalates due to the high oxalate content of many of the succulent plants upon which these animals feed. An important distinction to make is between middens and nests. Nests are the areas where the animal is often found and where the females raise their young. Nests are usually within the midden, but regional variations to this rule occur. When not contained within the midden, the nest is usually concealed in a rocky crevice behind a barricade of sticks. Bushy-tailed woodrats do not
hibernate. They build several food caches, which they use during the winter months. The bushy-tailed woodrat engages in hind foot-drumming when alarmed. It will also drum when undisturbed, producing a slow, tapping sound. ==Predators==