The grayish mouse opossum is solitary and semi-
arboreal, being more
terrestrial in its habits than other
didelphids. The species has an omnivorous diet, but feeds mainly on insects such as
bugs,
cockroaches,
moths and
beetles (and their larvae). It occasionally feeds on small lizards and bird eggs, and also feeds on fruits, such as figs, bananas, plantains, coconuts, or citrus. Predators include many
owls, such as the
barn owl, and some other
birds of prey,
domestic cats,
jaguarundi,
margay,
ocelots,
pumas and larger
snakes. A nocturnal animal, the grayish mouse opossum spends its days resting in its nest, generally within forks or hollows of trees, bushes or cacti, or wedged between rock crevices. The nests are globular-shaped, constructed of leaves, stems, and other vegetation, and lined with finer pieces of grass and plant fibres, such as the "cotton"-like material obtained from kapok (
Ceiba pentandra) trees. They may also reuse the abandoned hanging nests of
orioles or
wrens. Breeding occurs in late summer and early autumn. The animals mate while hanging upside down from their tails, with the male tightly holding onto the female's neck with its jaws. The litter size ranges from 8 to 14. The young attach themselves to teats shortly after birth, and are sheltered by a pouch-like layer of hair, in the absence of a true pouch. The young leave the nest once they reach about in weight. ==Parasites==