Ingestion rates and annual energy expenditure for the Great Basin pocket mouse, Perognathus parvus, were studied ,in south-central Washington (Hanford Reservation) during 1970-71 as part of the US/IBP Desert Biome program. Food intake models were derived in relation to time, microenvironmental temperatures, metabolic rate, and coefficient of digestibility. Estimated annual ingestion rates were 2550 and 2462 kcal/yr for individual males and females, respectively. Summer torpor reduces these costs about 3%. Winter energy expenditure was 40-43% lower than summer because of more extensive periods of torpor. Estimated daily maintenance energy requirements ranged from a low of 2.36 and 2.63 kcal in the winter to a high of 6.96 and 6.55 kcal in the spring for individual adult males and females, respectively. These estimates indicate P. parvus consumes between 4-10% of its body weight in food per day during the year. Assuming a diet consisting entirely of cheatgrass seeds (Bromus tectorum), individuals require 873-999 seeds per day in the spring and summer, decreasing to about 775 seeds per day in the fall. In the winter, facultative torpor reduces this to less than 400 seeds per day, necessitating the caching of approximately 50-65 g of seeds. The average annual seed crop would support a maximum density of about 80 animals/ha, indicating this granivore may be periodically food stressed. The overall impact of P. parvus on plant succession at the Hanford site is probably ¡minor.[Dept. Biol. Sci., Univ. Idaho, Moscow, Idaho 83843, USA].