Like other mole-rats, Cape mole-rats rarely travel above ground, and spend most of their lives within excavated burrow systems. Their burrows typically range from in length, with tunnels about wide. Like other
mole rat species, but unlike most other species of animals popularly called moles, they dig with their
incisors; this enables them to dig through earth much harder than most moles can deal with. Their lips are adapted to close
laterally behind the incisors when they gape; this prevents earth from entering the mouth when they dig. The only part the feet play in digging, is in moving the loosened earth to the rear. They are herbivorous, feeding on the
bulbs,
corms and
tubers of plants such as
Star-of-Bethlehem,
Cape tulips, and
wood-sorrels, among others. They obtain this food by digging foraging tunnels to reach plant roots; these tunnels are narrower than their main tunnels and may be as little as below the surface. Food may also be taken to deeper storage chambers to store up for hard times, or when a female is raising young. They have no need to drink, being able to obtain all the water they need from their diet. The mole rats occasionally travel above ground to forage for surface vegetation, and to disperse to found new burrow systems. Unlike some other species of mole-rat, they are solitary animals, and, except when a female is raising young, only one individual inhabits each burrow system. They are highly aggressive towards other members of their own species outside the breeding season. When encountering a rival, they adopt a rigid posture with the head thrown back and jaws open, chattering their teeth and occasionally making short leaps in the direction of their opponent. Because burrow systems can approach within of each other, burrowing animals warn away rivals using sex-specific
seismic signals. Cape mole-rats become alarmed if they sense a breach in their tunnel system, moving cautiously towards the break, and making characteristic 'pumping' motions with their hindquarters, of unknown significance. Predators that may enter the tunnel system to feed on Cape mole-rats include
mole snakes and
Cape cobras. They are particularly vulnerable while travelling above ground, where they may also fall victim to
jackals,
mongooses,
owls and
grey herons. ==Reproduction==