Distribution, Abundance, and Foraging Patterns of Ground Squirrels near Atkasook, Alaska
- 1 November 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Arctic and Alpine Research
- Vol. 12 (4) , 501-510
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1550497
Abstract
Arctic ground squirrel (S. parryii) populations near Atkasook appeared to have very similar population dynamics to those reported for this species in other regions. In a favorable habitat (sand dunes) adult females bred every year and July densities reached about 1.5 ha-1 after the young emerged. Young animals, particularly males, dispersed in late Aug., and less than half the female young and 1/10 the male young were represented by yearlings the following spring. Density was regulated at a relatively constant level by aggressive behavior and dispersal. Animals used larger home ranges, densities were lower (about 0.5 ha-1 in July) and breeding effort was lower in less favorable habitat on a river bluff. This population appeared to vary more from year to year than that in the sand dunes; there were half as many adults and 3 times as many juveniles in 1977 compared to 1976. Stomach contents indicated that the squirrels took a wide variety of plant materials; herbaceous dicotyledons formed the most important group (25-75% of the diet) and included over 40 spp. These plants had the highest water content and were probably the most digestible and nutritious. Evergreen shrubs, lichens and animal matter formed very little of the diet. In spring, when food abundance was lowest, the diet was most varied; mosses, deciduous shrubs, monocotyledons, roots and animal matter contributed over half of the total. Distaste for evergreen shrubs, even though they were common in squirrel habitat, suggested that secondary compounds known to affect microtine rodents also influence the foraging patterns of ground squirrels.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Some Effects of Mammalian Herbivores and Fertilization on Tundra Soils and VegetationArctic and Alpine Research, 1980
- Nutritional Ecology of Microtine Rodents: Resource Utilization near Atkasook, AlaskaArctic and Alpine Research, 1980