The head and body length ranges from long, with the tail long; the typical weight is . The coat consists of long, silver and black-tipped guard hairs over a dense, woolly, grey and white undercoat, with the face and limbs having short, black fur. A mane of longer, coarser black-and-white banded hairs extends from the top of the animal's head to just beyond the base of the
tail. This mane is bordered by a broad, white-bordered strip of hairs covering an area of glandular skin. The forelimbs and hind limbs have short black fur. The forefeet are large and digit 1 of the forefeet does not have a claw, while digits 2-5 have a well developed claw. When the animal is threatened or excited, the mane erects and this strip parts, exposing the glandular area. The hairs in this area are, at the tips, like ordinary hair, but are otherwise spongy, fibrous, and absorbent with a honeycomb structure. The rat is known to deliberately smear these hairs with poison from the bark of the
Acokanthera schimperi, the poison arrow tree, on which it chews, thus creating a defense mechanism that can sicken or even kill
predators which attempt to bite it. It is the only rodent known to use and store toxins from a different species in nature to protect itself, with no known adverse effects to themselves.
L. imhausi differs from typical
Muridae in having the
temporal fossa roofed over a thin plate of bone, rudimentary
clavicles, and an opposable
hallux. The dorsal surface of the skull is covered with small bony projections which gives it a pebbled look. These projections are 0.3 mm across and are separated every 0.3 mm. On these grounds, it has been made the type of its own subfamily
Lophiomyinae in the family
Cricetidae; The dental formula is 1/1, 0/0, 0/0, 3/3, giving it a total of 16 teeth. The cusps of the molars are arranged biserially and connected medially by longitudinal enamel crests. ==Diet==