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| Eastern Gray Squirrel   Sciurus carolinensis Gmelin -- Rodentia:  Sciuridae     | 
 
 
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|          In the middle 1800's Eastern Gray
  Squirrels, Sciurus
  carolinensis Gmelin, were imported from Europe to urban
  areas of America to provide "peace and calm" according to Etienne
  Benson of the University of Pennsylvania. 
  They quickly became a nuisance and by the latter 20th Century many
  public areas discouraged feeding them. 
  These squirrels have begun to appear in large numbers in urban areas
  of southern California after the year 2000. 
  They sequester in garages with open doors and in the motor area of
  automobiles that they can access where they store food, such as tree nuts.        A prolific and adaptable
  species, the Eastern Gray Squirrel has also been introduced to, and thrives
  in, other parts of the western United States and in 1966, this squirrel was
  introduced into Vancouver Island in Western Canada in the area of Metchosin,
  and has spread widely from there. 
  They are considered highly invasive and a threat to both the local
  ecosystem and the native American red squirrel.          Commercial repellants are used to
  discourage squirrels from dwellings. 
  However, keeping foodstuffs such as peanuts and tree nuts from
  accumulating outdoors is a good preventative.  The squirrels have been observed to feed on some outdoor
  vegetable plantings such as green leaf lettuce, although they shun green
  peas.  Some birds such as crows and
  jays have been observed to seek out the hiding places and remove the nuts.   REFERENCES:   Alexander,
  R. McNeill.  2003.  Principles of animal locomotion.  Princeton University Press. p. 162.    Anonomous.  1921. 
  The success of grey squirrels. 
  The Times. Times Newspapers Limited, 20 December.   Basic
  information about squirrels. 
  2015.   I.C.S.R.S.  Interactive Centre for Scientific Research
  about Squirrels, 17 November.    Bertolino,
  Sandro  &  Piero Genovesi.  2003. 
  Spread and attempted eradication of the grey squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) in
  Italy, and consequences for the red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) in
  Eurasia.   Biological Conservation.
  109 (3):  351358.   Blakeslee,
  Sandra.  1997.  Kentucky Doctors Warn Against a Regional
  Dish:  Squirrels' Brains.  The New York Times, 27 August.   Butler, F.  & 
  C. Kelleher (eds).  2012.  All-Ireland Mammal Symposium 2009.   Irish Naturalists' Journal,
  Belfast, 
  
   ISBN 978.    Carey,
  M.,  G. Hamilton,  A. Poole 
  &  C.  Lawton, C.  2007.  The Irish
  Squirrel Survey 2007.  COFORD, Dublin, Ireland.   Curtis,
  Paul D. & Kristi L. Sullivan.  2001.  Tree
  Squirrels, Wildlife Damage Management Fact Sheet Series.  Cornell Cooperative Extension, Ithaca, New
  York.    De
  Abreu-Jr, Fiedler; Silvia E. Edson, Mirian Pavan, T. N. Tsuchiya, Don E.
  Wilson, Alexandre R. Percequillo & Jesϊs E. Maldonado.  2020.  Museomics of tree squirrels: A dense taxon
  sampling of mitogenomes reveals hidden diversity, phenotypic convergence, and
  the need of a taxonomic overhaul.  
  B.M.C. Evolutionary Biology. 20 (1): 
  77.   Goheen,
  Jacob R. & Robert K. Swihart. 
  2003.  Food-hoarding behavior
  of gray squirrels and North American red squirrels in the central hardwoods
  region: Implications for forest regeneration.   Canadian Journal of Zoology. 81 (9):  16361639.    Grant,
  Steve.  2004.  The Squirrel's Bag Of Tricks: They Can't
  Get Out Of The Way Of Cars, But Other Behaviors Demonstrate Advanced Thinking
  (For a Rodent),   The Hartford Courant, 21 October   Hanmer,
  Hugh J.,  Rebecca L. Thomas  & 
  Mark D. E. Fellowes.  2017.  Provision of supplementary food for wild
  birds may increase the risk of local nest predation.   Ibis. 159 (1):  158167.   Hanmer,
  Hugh J.,  Rebecca L. Thomas & Mark
  D. E. Fellowes.  2018.  Introduced Grey Squirrels subvert
  supplementary feeding of suburban wild birds.  Landscape and Urban Planning. 177:  1018.    Huynh,
  H., G. Williams, D. McAlpine &  R.
  Thorington.  2010.  Establishment of the Eastern Gray Squirrel
  (Sciurus carolinensis) in Nova
  Scotia, Canada.   Northeastern
  Naturalist. 17 (4):  673677.    Kelly,
  John.   2012.  Learn to speak squirrel in four easy
  lessons.  Washington Post, 9 April.   Koprowski,
  John L.  1994.  Sciurus carolinensis.  Mammalian Species. 480 (480):  19.    Lawniczak,
  M.   2002.   Sciurus carolinensis.  Animal Diversity Web 2002.    Long,
  J. L.  2003.  Introduced Mammals of the World: Their History, Distribution
  and Influence.  Csiro Publishing,
  Collingwood, Australia. 
  
     Long,
  Kim.  1995.   Squirrels:  A Wildlife
  Handbook.  Johnson Books,  pp. 144146.  and 
  Big Earth Publishing. p. 95.   McGoldrick,
  M.  &  J. Rochford.  2009.  Recent range expansion by the Grey
  Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis Gmelin
  1788.   Irish Naturalists' Journal.
  30:  2428.    McRobie,
  H., A. Thomas & J. Kelly. 
  2009.  The Genetic Basis of
  Melanism in the Gray Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis).   Journal of Heredity. 100 (6):  709714.    Murie, Olaus
  Johan  &  Mark Elbroch.  2005.  Peterson
  Field Guide to Animal Tracks.  
  Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, p. 79.   Partan,
  Sarah R.  2010.  Multimodal alarm behavior in urban and
  rural gray squirrels studied by means of observation and a mechanical
  robot.  Current Zoology. 56 (3):  313326.    Red
  and Gray Squirrels in Massachusetts. 
  2013.  Mass Wildlife.
  Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife, 17 May.   Red
  squirrel conservation, squirrel ecology and grey squirrel management.  2007. 
  The Friends of the Anglesey Red Squirrels.    Sheehy,
  Emma  &  Colin Lawton. 
  2014.  Population crash in an
  invasive species following the recovery of a native predator: the case of the
  American grey squirrel and the European pine marten in Ireland.  Biodiversity and Conservation. 23 (3):  753774.    Steele,
  M. A.,  L. Z. Hadj-Chikh  & 
  J. Hazeltine.  1996.  Caching and Feeding Decisions by Sciurus carolinensis:
  Responses to Weevil-Infested Acorns.  
  Journal of Mammalogy. 77 (2): 
  305314.    The
  Grey Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis).  2006. 
  Grey squirrel Advisory.  7
  February.   Thorington,
  R. W. Jr.  &  R. S. Hoffman.  2005. 
  Family Sciuridae.  In
  Wilson, D. E. & D. M. Reeder (eds.). 
  Mammal Species of the World:  A
  Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.).   Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 760.    Tree
  Squirrel | Rodent | Southern Africa. 
  2010.  Krugerpark.co.za.  10
  June.   Wauters,
  L. A.,  J. Gurnell, A. Martinoli  & 
  G. Tosi.  2002.  Interspecific competition between native
  Eurasian red squirrels and alien grey squirrels: does resource partitioning
  occur?.   Behavioral Ecology and
  Sociobiology. 52 (4):  332341.   Webley,
  G. E.,  G. S.  Pope  & 
  E.  Johnson.  1985. 
  Seasonal changes in the testes and accessory reproductive organs and
  seasonal and circadian changes in plasma testosterone concentrations in the
  male grey squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis).  General and Comparative Endocrinology. 59
  (1):  1523.   |