July 5, 2010
Nut? What Nut? The Squirrel Outwits to
Survive
By NATALIE ANGIER
I was walking through the neighborhood
one afternoon when, on turning a corner, I nearly tripped over a gray squirrel
that was sitting in the middle of the sidewalk, eating a nut. Startled by my
sudden appearance, the squirrel dashed out to the road — right in front of an
oncoming car.
Before I had time to scream, the squirrel had gotten
caught in the car’s front hubcap, had spun around once like a cartoon character
in a clothes dryer, and was spat back off. When the car drove away, the squirrel
picked itself up, wobbled for a moment or two, and then resolutely hopped across
the street.
You don’t get to be one of the most widely disseminated mammals
in the world — equally at home in the woods, a suburban backyard or any city
“green space” bigger than a mousepad — if you’re crushed by every Acme anvil
that happens to drop your way.
“When people call me squirrely,” said
John L. Koprowski, a squirrel expert and professor of wildlife conservation and
management at the University of Arizona, “I am flattered by the term.”
The Eastern gray tree squirrel, or Sciurus carolinensis, has been so
spectacularly successful that it is often considered a pest. The International
Union for Conservation of Nature includes the squirrel on its list of the top
100 invasive species. The British and Italians hate gray squirrels for
outcompeting their beloved native red squirrels. Manhattanites hate gray
squirrels for reminding them of pigeons, and that goes for the black, brown and
latte squirrel morphs, too.
Yet researchers who study gray squirrels
argue that their subject is far more compelling than most people realize, and
that behind the squirrel’s success lies a phenomenal elasticity of body, brain
and behavior. Squirrels can leap a span 10 times the length of their body,
roughly double what the best human long jumper can manage. They can rotate their
ankles 180 degrees, and so keep a grip while climbing no matter which way
they’re facing. Squirrels can learn by watching others — cross-phyletically, if
need be. In their book “Squirrels: The Animal Answer Guide,” Richard W.
Thorington Jr. and Katie Ferrell of the Smithsonian Institution described the
safe-pedestrian approach of a gray squirrel eager to traverse a busy avenue near
the White House. The squirrel waited on the grass near a crosswalk until people
began to cross the street, said the authors, “and then it crossed the street
behind them.”
In the acuity of their visual system, the sensitivity and
deftness with which they can manipulate objects, their sociability, chattiness
and willingness to deceive, squirrels turn out to be surprisingly similar to
primates. They nest communally as multigenerational, matrilineal clans, and at
the end of a hard day’s forage, they greet each other with a mutual nuzzling of
cheek and lip glands that looks decidedly like a kiss. Dr. Koprowski said that
when he was growing up in Cleveland, squirrels were the only wild mammals to
which he was exposed. “When I got to college, I thought I’d study polar bears or
mountain lions,” he said. “Luckily I ended up doing my master’s and Ph.D. on
squirrels instead.”
The Eastern gray is one of about 278 squirrelly species
alive today, a lineage that split off from other rodents about 40 million years
ago and that includes chipmunks, marmots, woodchucks — a k a groundhogs — and
prairie dogs. Squirrels are found on all continents save Antarctica and
Australia, and in some of the harshest settings: the Himalayan marmot, found at
up to 18,000 feet above sea level, is among the highest-living mammals of the
world.
A good part of a squirrel’s strength can be traced to its
elaborately veined tail, which, among other things, serves as a thermoregulatory
device, in winter helping to shunt warm blood toward the squirrel’s core and in
summer to wick excess heat off into the air. Rodents like rats and mice are
nocturnal and have poor vision, relying on whiskers to navigate their world. The
gray squirrel is diurnal and has the keen eyesight to match. “Its primary visual
cortex is huge,” said Jon H. Kaas, a comparative neuroscientist at Vanderbilt
University, A squirrel’s peripheral vision is as sharp as its focal eyesight
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/121401889/abstract , which
means it can see what’s above and beside it without moving its head. While
its color vision may only be so-so, akin to a person with red-green
colorblindness who can tell green and red from other colors but not from
each other, a squirrel has the benefit of natural sunglasses, pale yellow
lenses that cut down on glare.
Gray squirrels use their sharp,
shaded vision to keep an eye on each other. Michael A. Steele of Wilkes
University in Pennsylvania and his colleagues have studied the squirrels’
hoarding behavior, which turns out to be remarkably calculated and rococo.
Squirrels may be opportunistic feeders, able to make a meal of a discarded
cheeseburger, crickets or a baby sparrow if need be, but in the main they
are granivores and seed hoarders. They’ll gather acorns and other nuts,
assess which are in danger of germinating and using up stored nutrients,
remove the offending tree embryos with a few quick slices of their incisors,
and then cache the sterilized treasure for later consumption, one seed per
inch-deep hole.
But the squirrels don’t just bury an acorn and come
back in winter. They bury the seed, dig it up shortly afterward, rebury it
elsewhere, dig it up again. “We’ve seen seeds that were recached as many as
five times,” said Dr. Steele. The squirrels recache to deter theft, lest
another squirrel spied the burial the first X times.
Reporting in the journal Animal Behaviour
Abstract, the Steele team showed that when squirrels are certain that
they are being watched, they will actively seek to deceive the would-be
thieves. They’ll dig a hole, pretend to push an acorn in, and then cover it
over, all the while keeping the prized seed hidden in their mouth.
“Deceptive caching involves some pretty serious decision making,” Dr. Steele
said. “It meets the criteria of tactical deception, which previously was
thought to only occur in primates.”
Squirrels are also master
kvetchers, modulating their utterances to convey the nature and severity of
their complaint: a moaning “kuk” for mild discomfort, a buzzing sound for
more pressing distress, and a short scream for extreme dismay. During the
one or two days a year that a female is fertile, she will be chased by every
male in the vicinity, all of them hounding her round and round a tree with
sneezelike calls, and her on top, refusing to say gesundheit. A squirrel
threatened by a serious predator like a cat, dog, hawk or wayward toddler
will issue a multimodal alarm, barking out a series of loud chuk-chuk-chuks
with a nasally, penetrating “whaa” at the end, while simultaneously
performing a tail flag — lifting its fluffy baton high over its head and
flicking it back and forth rhythmically.
Sarah R. Partan of
Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass., and her students have used a
custom-built squirrel robot
Download
the study to track how real squirrels respond to the components of an
alarm signal. The robot looks and sounds like a squirrel, its tail moves
sort of like a squirrel’s, but because its plastic body is covered in rabbit
fur it doesn’t smell like a squirrel. Yet squirrels tested in Florida and
New England have responded to the knockoff appropriately, with alarm barks
of their own or by running up a tree. Human passers-by have likewise been
enchanted. “People are always coming over, asking what we’re doing,” said
Dr. Partan. “We’ve had to abandon many trials halfway through.” An iSquirrel?
Now that’s something even a New Yorker might love.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/06/science/06angi.html?scp=1&sq=squirrels&st=cse