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Southern Flying Squirrel - Glaucomys volans

 
series details
 Phylum: Chordata
 Class: Mammalia
 Order: Rodentia 
 Family: Sciuridae 
 Genus:   Glaucomys
  Description
Southern Flying SquirrelThe southern flying squirrel is smaller than the northern flying squirrel. It is about seven to ten inches in length. It has thick, silky grayish-brown fur above and white fur below. It has very large eyes and a long, flat tail. It has a loose fold of skin between its front and rear feet. When it stretches out its legs, this skin forms a kind of parachute that lets the squirrel glide from branch to branch. As the southern flying squirrel approaches its landing site, it pulls up, slowing its descent! When it is gliding, it uses its tail as a rudder to change direction!
  Range
The southern flying squirrel is found from Texas, Kansas and Minnesota east through most of the eastern United States, except for northern New England and the Southern tip of Florida. The southern flying squirrel is found in southern New Hampshire.
  Habitat
The southern flying squirrel lives in deciduous and mixed forests with lots of old trees with cavities for nesting. They especially like areas with seed-bearing hardwood trees like hickory, maple, beech, and poplar.
  Diet

Southern Flying SquirrelThe southern flying squirrel eats berries, seeds, fruits, lichen, tree bark, buds and nuts. It also eats insects, carrion, nesting birds, and eggs. It stores nuts and seeds in the ground and in crevices and holes in trees for use in winter.  

  Life Cycle
Southern Flying SquirrelThe southern flying squirrel mates in early spring and again in late summer. After a gestation period of 41 days, the female gives birth to two to seven young. The female feeds and raises the young. She will move them to another nest if she feels threatened. The young are weaned when they are about 65 days old and begin gliding when they are about five to six weeks old. They are independent when they are about four months old.
  Behavior

The southern tree squirrel is nocturnal. It usually builds its nest in a tree cavity or abandoned woodpecker hole, but it sometimes use leaves, bark, and twigs to make a nest in a tree crotch. It doesn't hibernate, but in the winter it may stay in its den huddled with a group of other squirrels to keep warm.


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