“…Lymphoid tissue was found in the cecal apex of all species studied here; however, the additional narrowing of the cecal apex seen in the Rhabdomys species indicated the presence of a cecal appendix similar to that described in a wide range of mammalian species (Smith et al, ; Smith, Parker, Kotzé, & Laurin, ). A cecal appendix was previously reported in other muroid rodents, namely, voles and lemmings (Smith et al, ) as well as in certain hystricomorphic rodents, such as in Bathyergus suillus (Cape dune mole‐rat; Kotzé, Van Der Merwe, & O' Riain, ) Georychus capensis (Cape mole‐rat; Kotzé et al, ), and Heliophobius emini (Emin's mole‐rat; Sahd, Pereira, Bennett, & Kotzé, ). The lymphoid tissue seen in the present study further supports the underlying immune function of the appendix, and the narrowing may be linked to its putative role in acting as a “safe house” or reservoir for commensal bacteria in cases of loss of the normal microbiome (Bollinger, Barbas, Bush, Lin, & Parker, ).…”