Red Squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus)

This noisy little squirrel is Minnesota's smallest tree squirrel. It is found in every county of the state, but is most common in evergreen (conifer) forests.

Red squirrel

Identification

General description: The red squirrel is reddish-colored mammal that lives mostly in trees.

Length: Body is 11 to 13 inches, tail is four to five inches.

Weight: 7 to 9 ounces.

Color: White belly and a top coat that is dull reddish gray in the summer and orange-red when colder weather arrives.

Sounds: Red squirrels are very vocal. They often chatter and whistle when humans are nearby.

Reproduction

Red squirrels mate in late winter. They nest in hollow trees or build a 12- to 19-inch ball-shaped nest in a tree top using leaves, twigs and bark. In early spring, females have two to five babies which are born hairless and weigh less than an ounce. The young squirrels are independent within 12 weeks.

Food

Squirrels eat the seeds of various conifers, acorns, mushrooms, hickory nuts, walnuts and maple seeds. After eating, its not uncommon for red squirrels to leave piles of shredded cones, husks and hulls more than a foot high.

Predators

Cats, hawks, coyotes, foxes, weasels, marten and bobcats all eat red squirrels.

Habitat and range

Red squirrel range map

Red squirrels live in pine and hardwood forests, wooded parks and residential areas.

Population and management

Minnesota has plenty of red squirrels because there's plenty of squirrel habitat. Each year, hunters harvest thousands of red squirrels, which don't provide as much meat as the larger gray and fox squirrels.

Fun facts

During fall when they are gathering food, red squirrels may become covered in the gum that oozes from pine trees.

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