Quick answer
Key facts about hamster — size, diet, habitat, and conservation in one place.
Cheek pouches and hoarding
Hamsters have expandable cheek pouches that stretch to their shoulders, allowing them to carry food back to hidden stores. In the wild this behaviour supports survival in arid steppe where food may be scattered. Pet hamsters still hoard even with a full food bowl.
Nocturnal burrowers
Hamsters are active mainly at night and need deep bedding — 20 cm or more — to dig burrows and feel secure. A too-small cage or wheel causes stress, obesity, and spinal injury. Syrian hamsters are strictly solitary; keeping adults together usually leads to fighting.
Wild origins and domestication
Syrian hamsters were first collected from near Aleppo in the 1930s and bred for laboratory use before becoming pets. Wild populations are fragmented and considered vulnerable in their native range, though the domestic pet trade relies on captive breeding.
Responsible pet care
Choose a enclosure meeting modern minimum size guidelines, provide a solid-surface wheel large enough to prevent back arching, and offer enrichment such as tunnels and chew toys. Hamsters are prey animals that may nip when startled awake; gentle handling builds trust over time.