Plentiful but rarely seen
By Frank Carini and Colleen Cronin / ecoRI News
staff
This squirrel can fly, kind of. No, not
the aviator-hat-wearing rodent from Frostbite Falls, Minn., who shared
adventures with a moose named Bullwinkle.
Unlike its cartoon
brethren, however, the southern flying squirrel is real. The little mammal
glides from tree to tree using a special membrane between its front and back
legs. Flying squirrels are nocturnal, but you may be lucky enough to see one
glide overhead if you take a walk in the Simmons Mill Pond Management Area
around dusk.
“If you’re not out at
night, you wouldn’t be seeing them,” Roger Greene told ecoRI News last year.
He should know. Roger and
his wife, Gail, have lived in the stone farmhouse next door to the management
area off Coldbrook Road for decades. Their stewardship of the land, which has
been owned by the state since 1995, is legendary and generous. (To read a story
about the couple’s tireless work, click here.)
Roger and Gail place nest boxes around the management area for wildlife to make their homes, and for flying squirrels it is suggested to hang them between 10 and 25 feet off the ground. Since the squirrels glide rather than fly, they need some height to get from tree to tree.
The couple’s research on the hard-to-observe forest creature found flying squirrels often nest in dead beech trees and red oaks, which are abundant in the Simmons Mill Pond Management Area. They also make their homes in woodpecker holes, abandoned nests of birds and other squirrels, and attics.
“It’s an interesting
critter and nobody sees it,” Roger said.
The Greenes, however, have
been lucky enough to see a few, especially one they “totally by accident and
during the day” came across. They were walking in the woods one winter not too
long ago and they happened to knock against a hollow tree, and a flying
squirrel popped its head out at them.
“Every time we walked by
that tree that winter, we’d tap it and its head popped out,” Roger said.
For the rest of us, these
squirrels are out there, according to retired Rhode Island Department of
Environmental Management wildlife biologist Charlie Brown.
“Southern flying squirrel is a species that is native to Rhode Island and it’s pretty much native throughout much of the eastern United States. I would consider them fairly common,” Brown told ecoRI News last year.
“But, you know, they’re cryptic, so
people are often unaware that they’re here because you don’t see them. You
don’t encounter them like you would your typical gray squirrel … your daytime
active squirrels. But they’re probably as common if not more common than gray
squirrels in some areas.”
One of those places is
likely the Simmons Mill Pond Management
Area. This coastal maritime oak-holly forest under the Greenes’ care
is well-suited for these somewhat unusual, if common, mammals.
The southern flying
squirrel — also known, unfortunately, as the assapan — is one of two species of
flying squirrel found in North America. The other is the northern flying
squirrel. They are both gray-brown, but southern flying squirrel belly fur is
all white while its northern counterpart has belly fur that is gray at the
base.
The white-bellied version
is found in deciduous and mixed woods in the eastern half of North America,
from southeastern Canada to Florida.
Flying squirrels are the
smallest species of squirrel in Rhode Island. They measure up to 8-10 inches,
and can glide up to 150 feet while using their tails as a rudder. Northern
flying squirrels are slightly bigger, 10-12 inches long.
Flying squirrels are
omnivores, as they eat a variety of foods, including seeds, nuts, fruit, fungi,
and insects. Southern flying squirrels are considered one of the most
carnivorous squirrels because they supplement their diet with eggs, birds, and
carrion.
Southern flying squirrels
mate twice a year. When their young are born, they rely on their mothers to
care for them for two months. Flying squirrels can live up to five years.
Both species are preyed
upon by raccoons, owls, and hawks.
Besides the southern
flying squirrel, Rhode Island, according to DEM, is home to four
other related species — eastern gray squirrel, red squirrel, eastern chipmunk,
and woodchucks.
Brown has encountered
flying squirrels — the northern version with the white-gray belly fur can also
be found in the Northeast — in Warwick and on Providence’s East Side. He also
came across them conducting small mammal surveys, finding them in pitfall and
cage traps.
If there are big trees
with lots of cavities, then flying squirrels are likely around, Brown said.
Note: For those of you
unfamiliar with Secret Squirrel and Rocky J. Squirrel, links have been
provided.