The Red Squirrels of Wyoming
Scientific Name
Tamiasciurus hudsonicus
Identification
11–15 inches long, 6.7–7 ounces.
Brownish-red on its upper half; dark stripe above white ventral side; light eye-ring; bushy tail.
Quick, energetic.
Loud, long chirp to advertise presence; much more pronounced in the fall.
Habitat
Spruce, fir, and pine forests; young squirrels found in marginal aspen habitat.
Eat conifer seeds, terminal buds of conifer trees, fungi, some insects; sometimes steal young birds from nests.
Preyed on by coyotes, grizzly bears, hawks.
Behavior
Breed February through May, typically March and April; one litter of 3–5 young.
One of the park’s most territorial animals; territorialism ensures winter food supply.
In fall, cuts cones from trees and caches them in middens, which are used for years and can be 15 by 30 feet; grizzlies search out these middens in whitebark pine and limber pine habitat to obtain the nuts.