Most people are familiar with squirrels, but
may not be aware that members of the
squirrel family (Sciuridae) can be divided into two
basic groups: tree squirrels and ground squirrels.
Tree squirrels are arboreal. Not only do they nest
in trees, but they also often mate and forage in
trees. Ground squirrels are primarily terrestrial.
Though some may climb several feet up the trunk
of a tree, ground squirrels nest in burrows beneath
the soil surface and forage and mate on the
ground or in their burrows. Another big difference
between ground-dwelling and tree-dwelling
squirrels is that ground squirrels hibernate during
the winter and tree squirrels do not. Typical
ground squirrels include marmots, woodchucks,
and chipmunks. Typical tree squirrels include fox
and gray squirrels in North America and red
squirrels in Europe.
Gray Squirrels
One of the most familiar tree squirrels in North
America is the gray squirrel, Sciurus carolinensis.
Gray squirrels live in deciduous forests and are
also abundant in parks and yards in eastern North
America. Their common name is somewhat misleading,
in that some gray squirrels have a black
pelage. There are even a few populations of albino
gray squirrels in North America. Nevertheless,
most gray squirrels have gray backs with lightcolored
ventral fur and light to white fur on the
backs of the ears. Like other tree squirrels, gray
squirrels have large, bushy tails almost equal in
length to the squirrel's body. Though males are
generally larger than females, there is no pronounced
sexual dimorphism. Gray squirrels range
in size from 330 to 750 grams.
Gray squirrels are not particularly social. That
is, they do not form cooperative groups. Rather,
gray squirrels are solitary. They do not defend territories,
and home ranges of individual gray
squirrels overlap widely. However, they may defend
core areas in the autumn to ensure access to
food.
Gray squirrels undergo one or two breeding
seasons each year, depending on latitude. Squirrels
in northern latitudes may only breed once a
year, though squirrels in more moderate climates
breed up to two times per year. Timing of the
breeding season thus also varies with latitude. In
the northern United States, gray squirrels begin to
breed in early to mid February. Gray squirrels are
polygynous; one male may mate with several females
during a single breeding season. Males
compete with each other for access to females;
several males may chase a female until one has an
opportunity to mate with her. Some males, rather
than participate in mating chases, wait behind
trees and find opportunities to mate with females
during times other than the mating chase. Mating
takes place on the ground or in the trees, and thus
can be dangerous to both participants, as there is a
real risk of falling during mating.
Gestation in gray squirrels lasts approximately
forty-four days. Litter sizes range from one to six,
with an average of two to three. Gray squirrels are
born in a relatively helpless state; they are born
hairless and their eyes do not open until about
twenty-five days after birth. Gray squirrels nurse
for eight to nine weeks, after which time they are
weaned. Some litters are at this point abandoned
by their mother. Young gray squirrels can fend for
themselves at about eighty days of age and begin
to build their own leaf nests at about eighteen
weeks of age. Sexual maturity is
reached at ten months of age. Gray
squirrels have an average life span of
only eleven to twelve months. However,
many individuals live longer
than this, even up to ten years in the
wild (longer in captivity).
Gray Squirrel Lifestyle
Gray squirrels might best be considered
opportunistic omnivores. Commonly
known to consume nuts and
seeds as well as buds and fruits from
hardwood trees, gray squirrels have
also been known to consume baby
birds, insects, and fungi. Nevertheless,
during the autumn and winter,
gray squirrels depend almost exclusively
on the mast crop from hardwoodtrees
as their food source. Beginning
in late summer to early autumn,
gray squirrels begin to scatterhoard
nuts. Scatterhoarding entails burying
single nuts in different places around the squirrel's
home range and differs from larderhoarding
in that gray squirrels do not cache large piles of
nuts together in a single location. Memory and an
excellent sense of smell allow the squirrels to find
buried nuts later in the winter, even when buried
under several inches of snow. Gray squirrels can
be very selective about which foods to include in
their diet. They are known to avoid nuts produced
from the red subgenus of oaks, which tend to be
high in tannin. When eating acorns from red oaks,
squirrels generally consume those parts of the
seed that are low in tannin.
Unlike ground squirrels, gray squirrels do not
hibernate during the winter. Thus, even in the
worst weather, they must leave the safety of their
nests to obtain food. During the winter months,
gray squirrels will den together in tree cavities,
presumably to conserve heat. Females usually
den with other females (often in mother-daughter
groups) and males usually den with other males.
Dens are lined with leaves as insulation. Squirrels
also use a variety of anthropogenically produced
materials in den construction. Foil-coated fastfood
wrappers and laundry lint are not uncommon
discoveries in squirrel nests. During warmer
months, gray squirrels build leaf nests, called
dreys, in the upper branches of hardwood trees.
Classification:
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Mammalia
Subclass: Theria
Infraclass: Eutheria
Order: Rodentia
Suborder: Sciurognathi
Family: Sciuridae (squirrels), with forty-nine genera
and 267 species
Geographical location: Worldwide, except Australia,
Polynesia, and southern South America
Habitat: All habitats except deserts
Gestational period: Forty days
Life span: Ten years in the wild, sixteen years in
captivity
Special anatomy: Large bushy tail used for balance
and temperature regulation
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