Giant armadillos are solitary and
nocturnal, spending the day in burrows. Giant armadillos use their large front claws to dig for prey and rip open
termite mounds. The diet is mainly composed of termites, although
ants,
worms,
spiders, other
invertebrates, small
vertebrates and
carrion are also eaten. Little is currently known about this species' reproductive biology, and no juveniles have ever been discovered in the field. In a long-term study on the species, that started in 2003 in the Peruvian Amazon, dozens of other species of mammals, reptiles and birds were found using the giant armadillos' burrows on the same day, including the rare
short-eared dog (
Atelocynus microtis). Because of this, the species is considered a habitat engineer, and the
local extinction of
Priodontes may have cascading effects in the mammalian community by impoverishing
fossorial habitat. Additionally, the giant armadillo was once key to controlling
leaf cutter populations which could destroy crops, but they can also damage crops themselves when digging through soil. Female giant armadillos have two
teats and have a gestational period of about five months. Evidence points to only
giving birth once every three years. Little is known with certainty about their life history, although it is thought that the young are weaned by about seven to eight months of age, and that the mother periodically seals up the entrance to burrows containing younger offspring, presumably to protect them from predators. Although they have never bred in captivity, a wild-born giant armadillo at
San Antonio Zoo was estimated to have been around sixteen years old when it died. ==Threats==