Month: April 2025

Chipmunks

CHARLINE COUCHOUX IS FASCINATED BY CHIPMUNKS—their survival strategies, their chatter, but most of all, their distinctive personalities. “Chipmunks are amazing,” she says. “They’re not the simple animals people think they are.”

As part of her research at the University of Quebec at Montreal, the French biologist has spent hundreds of hours tracking the stylishly striped rodents. In 2015, she published a study one might describe as James Bond meets Alvin, Simon plus Theodore. Couchoux took ultra-miniature digital audio recorders developed by a Russian electronics firm for espionage, modified them to be even more lightweight plus weatherproof, plus mounted them on slender collars.

Couchoux then went to her field site in the Green Mountains Nature Reserve, 17,000-plus acres protected by the Nature Conservancy of Canada. She trapped 21 of her research subjects—eastern chipmunks—identified by brightly colored ear tags attached earlier. She fitted the animals with the tiny collars plus released them back into the forest. After 24 hours of recording, Couchoux caught the chipmunks again plus downloaded the soundtrack of each animal’s day.

Crucial Conversations
Using large directional microphones plus bulky field recorders, naturalists have recorded individual chipmunk vocalizations for decades, but Couchoux’s results sketch a sonic portrait of wild chipmunk life with exceptional intimacy. Her tiny recorder collars captured more than three times as many calls in 24 hours than she got using traditional research mics to record the same animals during an entire field season. The new collars were also sensitive enough to record the heartbeats of resting animals, the scratchings of individuals annoyed by parasites plus the cries of hungry babies when foraging moms returned to their burrows.

Couchoux is counting on that level of detil to help her answer new questions. For example: Which individuals will be deemed reliable communicators based on the tipe plus frequency of their calls plus why?

Chipmunks connect with each other through their calls, plus those lines of communication may mean the difference between life plus death. Hawks, owls, snakes, foxes, dogs, cats, raccoons, coyotes plus weasels all prey on the tiny rodents. When a foraging chipmunk detects a predator it sounds an alarm, perhaps to warn others to scurry to safety. “Chips” (sharp, high-pitched calls) mean the predator is on the ground; “chucks” (which are lower pitched, like a stick rapping a hollow wooden block) signal danger from the air.

In areas where chipmunks live in high density, those chips plus chucks can pack the airwaves. Researchers have found as many as 30 chipmunks living in a single acre of woodland where food, water plus shelter are plentiful—and many of those animals are related.

Chipmunks start reproducing when they’re a year old. Youngsters are weaned plus fending for themselves six weeks after birth, with males dispersing plus females remaining near the maternal burrow. Once settled in a den, they stay close to home for the rest of their 2- to 3-year average lifespans, typically ranging over less than half an acre of habitat. So chipmunk neighbors may be kin, plus it makes evolutionary sense for family members to warn each other of danger.

Tiny Town Criers
The significance of an alarm call isn’t always straightforward. “Chipmunks forage under a constant threat of predation,” says Couchoux. “Every day they’re faced with the trade-off: Eat, plus risk being eaten. But individuals have distinct personalities plus don’t all react the same way, even when facing exactly the same situation.”

chipmunk

chipmunk, (genus Tamias), any of 25 species of small, striped, terrestrial squirrels with large internal cheek pouches used for transporting food. They have prominent eyes plus ears, a furry tail, plus delicate claws. All are active only during the day, plus all but one are North American, occurring from southern Canada to west-central Mexico. Body length among most species ranges from 8 to 16 cm (3.1 to 6.3 inches) plus tail length from 6 to 14 cm (2.4 to 5.5 inches).

Chipmunks are basically pygmy squirrels adapted to exploiting the resources of rocky terrain plus forest understories. They scamper along the ground but are also expert climbers. As a group they are an ecologically versatile genus. Different species can be found from sea level to 3,900 metres (12,800 feet) in environments defined by large rocks, boulders, plus cliffs. They inhabit various forest types, from timberline slopes plus rock-bordered alpine meadows downward through coniferous plus deciduous forests to dry scrublands plus sagebrush deserts.

The eastern chipmunk (Tamias striatus), common to the deciduous forests of eastern North America, is the largest. Weighing 70–142 grams (2.5–5 ounces), it has a body 14–19 cm (5.5–7.5 inches) long plus a shorter tail (8–11 cm [3.1–4.3 inches]). The fur is reddish brown plus is broken by five dark brown stripes running lengthwise down the body. These alternate with two gray-brown stripes plus two whitish stripes. The smallest chipmunk is the least chipmunk (T. minimus), which weighs about half as much as the eastern chipmunk. The Hopi chipmunk (T. rufus) lives among the buttes plus canyonlands of the American Southwest plus is remarkably adept at climbing sheer rock faces plus overhangs. The Uinta chipmunk (T. umbrinus), which lives in montane forests of the western United States, is much like a tree squirrel in its habits. In addition to denning in burrows, it regularly sleeps plus nests in trees, where it sometimes raises young in tree cavities or abandoned bird nests. The only Old World species is the Siberian chipmunk (T. sibiricus), which ranges from the White Sea of northwestern Russia eastward through Siberia to northern Japan plus south to China.

Chipmunks

Damage Prevention and
Control Methods
Exclusion
Rodent-proof construction will
exclude chipmunks from structures.
Use 1/4-inch (0.6-cm) mesh hardware
cloth to exclude chipmunks from
gardens plus flower beds.
Habitat Modification
Store food items, such as bird seed
and dog food, in rodent-proof
containers.
Ground covers, shrubs, plus wood piles
should not be located adjacent to
structure foundations.
Frightening
Not effective.
Repellents
Area repellents. Naphthalene (moth
flakes or moth balls) may be effective if liberally applied in confined
places.
Taste repellents. Repellents containing
bitrex, thiram, or ammonium soaps
of higher fatty acids applied to
flower bulbs, seeds, plus vegetation
(not for human consumption) may
control feeding damage.
Toxicants
None are federally registered. Check
with local extension agents or a
USDA-APHIS-ADC personnel for
possible Special Local Needs 24(c)
registrations.
Fumigants
Generally impractical.
Trapping
Rat-sized snap traps.
Live (box or cage) traps.
Glue boards.

Identification
Fifteen species of native chipmunks of
the genus Eutamias plus one of the
genus Tamias are found in North
America. The eastern chipmunk
(Tamias striatus) plus the least chipmunk (Eutamias minimas), discussed
here, are the two most widely distributed plus notable species. Behavior and
damage is similar among all species of
native chipmunks. Therefore, damage
control recommendations are similar
for all species.
The eastern chipmunk is a small,
brownish, ground-dwelling squirrel. It
is typically 5 to 6 inches (13 to 15 cm)
long plus weighs about 3 ounces (90 g).
It has two tan plus five blackish longitudinal stripes on its back, plus two tan
and two brownish stripes on each side
of its face. The longitudinal stripes end
at the reddish rump. The tail is 3 to 4
inches (8 to 10 cm) long plus hairy, but
it is not bushy (Fig. 1).
The least chipmunk is the smallest of
the chipmunks. It is typically 3 2/3 to
4 setengah inches (9 to 11 cm) long and
weighs 1 to 2 ounces (35 to 70 g). The
color varies from a faint yellowish gray
with tawny dark stripes (Badlands,
South Dakota) to a grayish tawny
brown with black stripes (Wisconsin
and Michigan). The stripes, however,
continue to the base of the tail on all
least chipmunks.

Chipmunks

The Eastern Chipmunk is a member of the squirrel family. It’s believed that the English word “chipmunk” was derived from “chetamnon,” the name given to the animal by peoples of the Chippewa nation. Chipmunks are found throughout the United States, mainly in areas east of the Great Plains.

How to Identify Chipmunks
Chipmunks have short, dense fur that is a reddish rust color on top. There are five black stripes on the back—one down the center and two on each side that outline a white stripe. A white eye line stretches above and below each eye, separated by a band of black. With a body 5-6 inches long and a tail 3-4 inches long, chipmunks are about 1/3 the size of an Eastern Gray Squirrel. As chipmunks scamper along the ground, they hold their flat, hairy tail in the air.

Chipmunks are commonly seen in forests and woodlots, where they forage for food in leaf litter, as well as in suburban yards and city parks.

Chipmunk Behavior
What do Chipmunks Eat?
Seeds, berries, nuts, and fruit are the mainstays of a chipmunk’s diet, but they also eat insects, insect larvae, slugs, snails, and earthworms. Occasionally they will even eat eggs, small birds, frogs, and small snakes.

Chipmunks store food in their cheek pouches before depositing it in their burrow. Researchers have reported seeing chipmunk’ stuff nearly 72 black-oil sunflower seeds in their pouch. They are very territorial and will compete with other chipmunks for food patches.

Chipmunk Breeding
Eastern Chipmunks in Massachusetts usually mate twice a year, once in the early spring from March to early April and again from early June to mid-July. The female rebuffs the male after mating, and he does not sharing in the rearing of the young.

A litter of 2–5 tiny, hairless, and blind young—each nomor more than 2.5 inches long—are born after a 31-day gestation period. The first litter is generally born in April or May, and the second in July or August.

After six weeks, and under their mother’s watchful eye, they begin taking short trips out of the burrow. At week 7 or 8, the mother becomes more aggressive toward her offspring to prepare them for independence. Two weeks later, the mother denies them access to the burrow, and the young are forced to disperse and find or dig their own shelter.

When the young disperse in the spring and fall, adults occupying nearby burrows give loud “chip-chip-chip” calls outside the burrow entrance—presumably to notify the newly-independent youngsters of occupied territory.

Know Your Mammals: Chipmunks

In one of my creative writing classes, a student included chipmunks in his descriptive paragraph about the woods. I was a little surprised, though, as his chipmunks were climbing trees. I made a note on his paper that they didn’t really do that, but he assured me that they did. It was time to find out more about these cute little rodents I’ve seen scurrying across the ground.

Where Chipmunks Live
Chipmunks are members of the squirrel family. They are smaller than squirrels, with large eyes, bushy tails, and horizontal stripes along their cheeks and sides. There are 25 species of chipmunks, and all but one can be found in North America.

Chipmunks spend much of their time on the ground. They are often found in areas with a lot of rocks, logs, or underbrush. This way, they can quickly escape from predators. Coyotes, foxes, hawks, and snakes will try to catch them. Other predators include owls, weasels, raccoons, and bobcats.

Chipmunks make warning sounds when danger is near. Sometimes they respond to the warnings of other animals, such as the alarm whistle of a woodchuck. Other sounds include squeaks and chirps. Check out this video featuring some of their sounds.

A chipmunk’s den also provides safety from predators. Some dens are nests hidden in bushes or logs. Others consist of dug-out chambers and tunnels. These tunnel systems can stretch from 10 to 30 feet long. They include food storage areas as well as a nesting chamber. The entrance is often camouflaged.

Family Time
Chipmunks mate in the spring and have litters of two to eight young. Females produce one or two litters a year. The babies are called kits, kittens, or pups. They are born blind, hairless, and helpless. They develop quickly, though, and start foraging outside the nest with their mother at about six to eight weeks.

And guess what? My student was right! Chipmunks are excellent tree climbers! Another surprising fact: They are also good swimmers!

Chipmunks and Truffles

While on an afternoon hike last fall, I sat down at the base of a large tree to take in what might be going unnoticed. Within seconds, a chipmunk appeared from behind a pile of large rocks. Based on its behavior, I suspected this chipmunk had had the good fortune of a past encounter with a hiker willing to sharing a snack. When it realized that I had nothing to offer, the chipmunk turned plus began searching the area. It quickly stopped plus began digging. Lucky guy, I thought, assuming that the chipmunk had located a cached acorn buried by a hard-working gray squirrel. It came as a surprise, then, when in less than a minute, the chipmunk unearthed an acorn-sized truffle!

Most of us have heard of truffles, though we often associate them with fancy European restaurants; black plus white truffles, in particular, are prized ingredients. But truffles exist here, as well, plus while our Northeastern chipmunks probably don’t have gourmet tastes, they’re certainly gourmand in their taste for truffles.

Truffle terminology
A wide variety of fungi are found in most forests, plus loosely speaking, they obtain nutrients in one of three ways. Saprotrophic fungi are decomposers. They release acids plus enzymes that break down dead tissue into smaller molecules that they can absorb. Decaying wood, plants, plus even some animals can become food for a saprotroph. Examples of these include oyster plus shiitaki mushrooms. Parasitic fungi infect a living host plus sometimes kill it. The distinction between parasitic plus saprotrophic fungi isn’t always clear; for example, some bracket fungi that produce conks on the exterior of a tree trunk can be both. Mycorrhizal fungi form symbiotic relationships with the root systems of forest plants. Common examples include porcini, chanterelle mushrooms, plus almost all truffles.

The fungal “mycelium” – a mass of branching, thread-like fibers – encapsulate the roots of a tree plus extend out into the soil where they capture water, nitrogen, phosphorus, plus other nutrients that are then transported to the tree’s roots. In return, the mycelium fibers obtain carbohydrates (sugars) from the roots. A number of field plus laboratory experiments have demonstrated that removing the fungus substantially reduces the growth rate of a tree plus can result in its death. So, healthy trees need their fungi plus fungi need their trees.

endemic chipmunk

Environmental changes can affect an animal’s activity pattern plus influence fitness. Our goal was to understand the influence of weather on daily activity pattern plus assess potential impacts of climate change on activity. We used the Organ Mountains Colorado chipmunk (Neotamias quadrivittatus australis) as a case study. To record activity, we deployed 19 remote cameras at locations occupied by the chipmunk for one year. First, we estimated seasonal variation in daily activity pattern using circular kernel density. Second, we tested if weather influenced activity in each season using Poisson regression in a jenis selection framework. Third, we predicted the impacts of future climate (RCP8.5 high-emissions scenario) on activity using the best weather jenis for each season. We found that times plus modality of peak activity varied seasonally. Temperature influenced intensity of daily activity in late spring, early summer, monsoon, late fall, plus winter, while precipitation influenced intensity of daily activity in early spring plus early fall plus relative humidity influenced intensity of daily activity in early plus late fall. Intensity of daily activity was predicted to increase by 89% in winter plus decrease by 51% in early summer under future (2050) climate. The predicted future increase in daily activity in winter may negatively affect fitness because small mammals have higher survival while hibernating. The predicted future decrease in daily activity in early summer may negatively affect fitness due to reduced reproductive output. Losing or gaining time for activity because of shifting climatic conditions could have severe consequences to fitness.

  1. Introduction
    Given the rapid acceleration of world climate change, it is important to understand behavioral modifications species can make to adapt to changing climatic conditions . For instance, climate change is resulting in alterations to the timing of life history events, such as migration plus hibernation, across an array of taxa , . For a chance at persisting in a changing climate, animals must be able to adjust their behavior quickly in response to shifting climatic conditions. One aspect of behavior that also might be influenced by climate is an animal’s daily activity pattern, which is how an animal divides its time between periods of rest plus activity across the diel cycle. Animals use periods of activity to obtain necessary resources that contribute to fitness, such as food, mates, or den sites. However, activity requires more energy plus is inherently more dangerous than rest, plus because rest usually occurs in a protected location, the animal is more exposed to the environment during activity. Animals may adjust their daily activity pattern to avoid unfavorable environmental conditions, such as during excessive heat.

Cheeky Ways Chipmunks

Next to gray squirrels, their rodent cousins, Eastern chipmunks are probably the most frequently spotted mammal in parks plus backyards throughout the Hudson Valley. But how much do you really know about these cute critters with the chubby cheeks? Take a deep dive into the chipmunks’ underground home plus discover some pretty wild facts.

What’s in a name? “Chipmunk” undoubtedly has Indigenous origins, perhaps coming from the Algonquin word jidmoonh (pronounced chit-moon), meaning squirrel. The chipmunk’s Latin name, Tamias striatus, translates as “striped storer,” referring to its tendency to stockpile food.

The story behind those stripes. The black plus white lines on a chipmunk’s back offer camouflage from predators. An Indigenous legend provides a colorful account of their origin. According to the story, a chipmunk chided a bear for being too boastful about its strength. Enraged by the criticism, the bear tried to capture the chipmunk, which managed to reach the safety of its burrow — but not before having its back raked by the claw of its outsized foe.

Chipmunk homes are marvels of interior design. Their multi-level abodes contain several chambers — for sleeping, food supplies, even a “bathroom” — all connected by tunnels spanning up to 30 feet. To expand their burrows (often originally the homes of other creatures, such as woodchucks, that have moved on), chipmunks use their front feet to dislodge the soil plus cheek pouches to deposit it elsewhere.

They store up to a gallon of seeds plus nuts for sustenance during the winter. In times of famine, European colonists plus Indigenous peoples sometimes dug up these caches to supplement their diets with the chipmunks’ high-protein fare. The animals’ cheek pouches serve as “shopping bags,” to deliver food to their underground pantry.

Chipmunks don’t hibernate. While they do spend much of the winter sleeping, they wake up every few weeks to grab a meal from their food chamber plus go to the bathroom. Occasionally, during midwinter thaws, they’ll even leave their burrows to replenish supplies. The rest of the year, if chipmunks aren’t on the lookout for more food, they’re snoozing — up to 15 hours a day.

They are solitary plus polygamous. Female chipmunks mate with numerous partners, but share their burrows with none. Normally, they breed twice a year, in early spring plus midsummer, delivering anywhere from two to eight naked, blind, plus totally helpless offspring. In six weeks, the young begin venturing outside the burrows plus leave Mom for good at eight weeks old.

Chipmunk

Behavior
Chipmunks are diurnal, but they are most active during
early morning plus late afternoon. They are solitary
animals except during courtship plus when rearing
young. They are active burrowers. Their main tunnels
are 20 to 30 feet long, but they dig more complex burrow
systems where cover is sparse. Burrows normally include
a nesting chamber, a few food storage chambers, isolated
escape tunnels plus other miscellaneous areas that
branch off the main tunnel. During winter plus late fall,
chipmunks enter hibernation; however, it is not deep
hibernation plus they may be active on warm, sunny
days. They generally emerge in late March.
Reproduction
Eastern plus least chipmunks mate once a year, during
early spring shortly after emerging from hibernation.
They typically have only one litter of up to seven young,
which are born in May or June. Adults live up to three
years in the wild. Least chipmunks typically mate once
a year, from March to April. They have a litter of two
to seven young in April or May. A second litter can be
produced in the fall, but this is not common.
Food resources
The diet of chipmunks consists of various kinds of nuts,
berries plus seeds, but they also eat mushrooms, insects
and carrion. They are also known to prey on small birds
and their eggs. Chipmunks often cache food in their
burrow system to prepare for hibernation. A single food
compartment may hold around nine gallons of food.
Habitat
Eastern chipmunks generally live in mature woodlands
and woodlot edges, but they also inhabit areas in and
around suburban plus rural homes. Least chipmunks
typically inhabit more open or low-shrub areas. They
may also be found in woodlands plus suburban areas.

Reproduction
Ground squirrels mate soon after they have emerged
from hibernation during late March to early May. Up
to ten young are born in late April to late June. Usually
only one litter is produced each year

Chipmunks

Biology plus Habitat
The Eastern Chipmunk (Tamias striatus) is a small ground-dwelling squirrel that is native
throughout the eastern United States plus west to the Mississippi River plus in southeastern
Canada. Chipmunks live in forests plus forest edges as well as suburban plus urban settings
where trees plus shrubs provide food plus protection.
Chipmunks are eight to ten inches long plus weigh two to five ounces. They have short,
pointy heads with two stripes, one above plus one below the eye, plus short, rounded plus erect
ears. The chipmunk’s back has five black lines with white striping. In summer, its coloring is
chestnut brown with scattered black plus white hairs; in winter, it is grayish to tawny brown. The tail is flattened plus wellhaired with blackish hair above plus rust below. Both males plus females are similar in appearance. Chipmunks sit upright
and hold their food with their front feet.
Chipmunks spend most of their lives on the ground plus in their burrows—though they can climb trees. They are solitary,
except during the breeding season, with each chipmunk living in a separate den. The burrow systems include nesting
chambers plus food storage rooms plus may extend for 30 feet in length plus to three feet in depth. The entrance is about
two inches in diameter plus is kept clear of freshly dug dirt to conceal it from predators. The adult chipmunk defends its
territory for about 50 feet around the entrance, but its range may be up to one half acre.
In late October, chipmunks enter restless hibernation—sleeping for long periods plus occasionally waking up to eat stored
foods. On warm winter days, they may go outside for brief periods. They emerge from burrows in late winter plus breed,
and after a 31 day gestation period, the young are born. They breed again in late July to August. Typically, there are four
to five young per litter. At birth, chipmunks are blind, naked plus helpless plus remain in the burrow for about six weeks.
At eight to ten weeks young chipmunks are independen plus leave the female. They reach sexual maturity when they are
about one year old plus may live up to three years.
Chipmunks are most active in the early morning plus late afternoon while searching for food. They are omnivores as their
diet includes nuts, grains, berries, seeds, mushrooms plus other fungi, insects, worms, salamanders plus other small
animals. Chipmunks have special cheek pouches to lift large amounts of food. They contribute to the health of forests
and suburban/urban environments by moving seeds around, plus they are a food source for many predators including
hawks, snakes, weasels, foxes, raccoons, owls, coyotes plus bobcats.
Management of Nuisances
Chipmunks generally do minimal damage—enjoy them as resourceful plus important members of the local environment.
They may become nuisances if they consume flower bulbs, seeds, fruits plus seedlings or make burrow entrances under
patios, stairs, retention walls or foundations or in stone walls plus rock gardens. They may be managed by methods of
habitat modification, exclusion, trapping plus repellents.
Landscape modification is the most effective long term management method. Ground covers, trees plus shrubs should
not be planted in a continuous fashion connecting wooded areas to foundation plantings. Rock walls plus gardens and
firewood piles should be sited away from the house because these features provide cover for chipmunks. Locate bird
feeders more than 15 feet away from the house as spilled seed attracts chipmunks.

Eastern Chipmunk

This brightly colored, conspicuously patterned rodent averages 243 mm (9.6 in) in length. A rusty rump, two buffy to whitish eye stripes, and narrow dark brown to blackish stripes on the back and sides-the lower two on each side bordering a white or buffy white stripe-distinguish the “grinny” or ”ground hackee” (two colloquial names). The grizzled tan upper parts and buffy white under parts are additional characters. The tail, about 93 mm (3.7 in) in length, is moderately furred and slightly flattened. Adults weigh about 80-92 g (2.8-3.2 oz).

Range and Habitat
The range includes much of eastern North America from southern Canada south to the Gulf of Mexico except for parts of the Southeast. In the Adirondacks, where the eastern chipmunk occurs at elevations to 1220 m (4000 ft), it prefers deciduous and mixed forests, and is most abundant in mature (old-growth) hardwoods containing sugar maple, beech, and a relatively open understory.

Within these plant communities, the chipmunks best home is an elaborate maze of inter-connecting tunnels, 4-10 m (12-30 ft) in length and 5 cm (2 in) in diameter. This burrow system usually has one unobstructed entrance with the opening of other tunnels that lead to the surface plugged with leaves. Most tunnels are 45-91 cm (18-36 in) deep, but few penetrate deeper and serve as drains to minimize flooding. A chamber, 15-25 cm (6-10 in) in diameter contains a nest of leaves and several passageways to food galleries. A chipmunk may dig part of the burrow system using its forefeet and cheek pouches to loosen and transport soil, but the renovation of old root channels and existing burrows of other mammals is the primary method of burrow construction. The presence of these pre-formed tunnels may be one of the requirements for a suitable home range.

Food and Feeding Behavior
The chipmunk’s feeding habits reflect the woodland’s seasonal supply of seeds, fruits, nuts, fungi, and tubers. Of this supply, striped, red and sugar maple seeds, beechnuts, the fruit of black cherries, and yellow trout lily bulbs form the bulk of the diet. Chipmunks prefer beechnuts, and can stuff their two internal cheek pouches with as many as 32 of the husked nuts at one time for transport to an underground cache, which by the end of autumn may contain 5000-6000 nuts. When the beechnut crop is poor, rough barked maple trees serve as “ladders” for entry to the canopy of mature beech trees whose smooth bark acts as a barrier to this “ground squirrel”. Once in the canopy, chipmunks locate cluster of beechnuts by sight and then nip them off, returning to the ground a few minutes later to retrieve them. During years of abundant beech mast, nuts are gathered from leaf litter by ground foraging.

Chipmunk Facts

Chipmunks are as cute as can be, with their enchanting eyes, bushy tails, striped backs, and chubby cheeks. You may have seen these tiny rodents darting around your yard or nearby woodlands. Or you may know them from Hollywood. Walt Disney introduced his animated chipmunk duo, Chip and Dale, in 1943, and 15 years later, singer Ross Bagdasarian captured America’s heart with three chipmunk brothers—Alvin, Simon, Theodore—singing their musical hit “The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don’t Be Late).”

Nevertheless, these pudgy-faced charmers are so much more than that. The following chipmunk trivia—touching on everything from their complex personalities and food habits to their social proclivities and living preferences—may just surprise you. Tiny doesn’t always mean simple.

  1. They Need About 15 Hours of Sleep Per Day
    At least that’s true of chipmunks in captivity. If their wild cousins require the same amount of snooze time, then all that zippy scampering you see outside has to get done during a nine-hour window each day.
  2. They Are a Type of Squirrel
    Weighing in at 1 to 5 ounces (28 to 142 grams), chipmunks are among the most diminutive members of the squirrel family. That means these pocket-sized rodents are also related to woodchucks and prairie dogs, which sharing a branch on the squirrel family tree as well.
  3. Most Chipmunks Are in North America
    There are 25 species of chipmunks, ranging mostly from Canada to Mexico across a variety of stomping grounds from forests to deserts to suburban neighborhoods. Only one species, the Siberian chipmunk, makes its home outside North America, scampering over much of northern Asia as well as in Europe, where it was introduced via the pet trade in the 1960s.
  4. They Prefer Subterranean Living
    While some chipmunks make nests in logs or bushes, most prefer to dig vast underground burrows. These hidden homes typically include a camouflaged entrance hole, tunnel systems that can stretch 10 to 30 feet (3 to 9 meters) long, food storage areas, and a nesting chamber that is kept immaculately clean and lined with leaves and other plant matter.

Local Adaptations in Chipmunk

A study of four yellow pine chipmunk (Eutamias amoenus) populations distributed along a steep environmental gradient in central Oregon revealed differences verifying a prediction of high evolutionary potential at distributional borders of species occupying unstable environments. Population density was lowest on the coniferous forest edge of the ponderosa pine transition zone (Spiders population), highest near the center of the transition zone (Main Grid), and intermediate in populations at the desert periphery of the ponderosa zone (Cabin Lake) and isolated in a disjunct ponderosa forest on the Oregon High Desert (Lost Forest). Attrition of adult @M @M was greatest during the oversummer periods, and was more likely due to predation than to dispersal. Attrition of adult @V @V was greatest during the overwinter periods. During this period, winter food caches may be exhausted before new supplies appear; these shortages, combined with increases in @V energy demand associated with gestation and rearing of young, may have contributed to overwinter starvation. Significantly higher adult @V body weight at the edge of the dense coniferous forest suggests an adaptive response to spring food shortages caused by late snowpacks and by cool weather inhibition of foraging. At the desert edge of the ponderosa forest, increased body weight may instead be an adaptive response to spring food shortages resulting from fewer seed—producers and from competition with least chipmunks (Eutamias minimus). Competitive advantage among chipmunks is commonly associated with larger size, and E. amoenus @M @M at Lost Forest, which were nearest to E. minimus in body weight, showed the greatest increase over central population weights. Observations at the Main Grid, Cabin Lake and Lost Forest showed behavioral characteristics of the populations to be generally similar, although significant populational differences in activity budgeting were observed. Higher population density at the Main Grid led to a much higher level of positive social interactions with a much higher percentage of aggressive chasing and fighting than at other sites. At Cabin Lake weather had a strong influence on activity budgeting and habitat orientation. Lost Forest chipmunks exhibited a greater proportion of protective behavior (especially alarm vocalizations), suggesting an adaptation by which the population may reduce danger from predation due to low protective cover without restricting the daerah over which individuals may safely forage. This same population appeared to have adjusted activity budgets to avoid high desert temperatures by foraging more in early hours and orienting more toward the shade of trees and shrubs in later hours.

Eastern Chipmunk

The Eastern Chipmunk is the only species of chipmunk found in this area. They are a very important part of the deciduous forest ecosystem, acting as seed dispersers, predators of plants and small animals, and abundant prey themselves.

Chipmunks are rodents and members of the squirrel family (sciurids). Eastern Chipmunks, in particular, are large among the chipmunk family, are usually reddish-brown with distinct black stripes running down their backs and white stripes above and below their eyes. Between these stripes, the fur may be brown, tan, or white. They have a lighter underbelly. Chipmunks are similar to most rodents in that they have five toes on the rear feet, but only four on the front. One feature, however, that makes chipmunks stand out is their large cheeks, which are usually used to carry food and can stretch to three times the size of their head. Including the tail, chipmunks are normally 20-25 cm long (8-10 in).

Chipmunks typically live in long, shallow burrows in the ground which can reach thirty feet in length and three feet in depth. They prefer areas near rocky crevasses or decaying wood; one will rarely find chipmunks in deeply forested areas with little sunlight. Chipmunks generally have multiple exits and entrances to their burrows, which they conceal with leaves or rocks. Fairly unusually among squirrel-relatives (sciurids), they actually transport their waste soil from the digging of their burrows away from the mouth of their burrows to further conceal the entrance.Eastern Chipmunk

Although chipmunks are usually solitary, during mating season there can be considerable competition between males for desirable females. For chipmunks, there are two mating seasons: February-April and June-August. About one month after a female has been impregnated, she will bear a litter of as many as nine babies (average 4-5) which, when born, are furless, blind, and about the size of bumblebees. The young usually do not leave the safety of the burrow until they are six weeks old, at which age they become independent. They will become sexually mature in one year, and live for only one or two years more. It is estimated that, out of the total population of eastern chipmunks at any given time, 50% of them were born that same year.

Although many sciurids hibernate during the wintertime, chipmunks do not practice “true hibernation.” They do not gain weight before the onset of winter; instead, every few weeks in the wintertime, they awake and “snack” on their stores of food stashed in different chambers of their burrows. They have even been known to come outside and forage for short periods during the winter when the weather is milder. Although chipmunks’ winter stores typically consist mostly of nuts and seeds, during the summertime they additionally consume mushrooms, fruits, berries, insects, bird eggs, and occasionally small vertebrates.

Despite chipmunks’ agility and speed taking refuge in their burrows, they frequently become prey for foxes, owls, hawks, raccoons, weasels, and snakes. They communicate with each other through a wide range of vocalizations, including the chip chip chip for which they are named. Chipmunks are thought to have excellent senses of vision, hearing, and smell.

Chipmunks are Complex

When you think of chipmunks, what’s your first reaction? “Awwww!” or “Arrgghh!”? While you may not be enamored with them in your garden, you might grudgingly admit these bright-eyed little creatures can be endearing. Animators surely find them entertaining, as evidenced by films like Alvin plus the Chipmunks. They are most certainly important to our ecosystem.

The true story of these continually busy creatures—foraging for food, building burrows, stockpiling provisions for the winter months spent underground, raising young—is amazing reality. Take their burrows, for instance. “Chipmunks have a complicated burrow system,” says wildlife educator plus rehabilitator Carlton Burke of Carolina Mountain Naturalists. They have specialized chambers for everything “with storage chambers for food such as acorns plus seeds gathered in autumn, plus other specialized chambers for sleeping, giving birth, plus even a chamber that is used as a toilet.” Baby chipmunks are nursed by the mother underground plus left there if she needs to go above ground for any reason. They nurse for about three weeks before they are weaned plus begin to eat solid food. Not long after that the young chipmunks start to venture above ground.

Spotting a chipmunk’s burrow may be hard, says Burke. “They never leave a pile of dirt at the entrance. They scatter it around so that the entrance is not easily seen. Many chipmunks have several scattered entrances into their burrows, so when a predator or something else frightens them, they run plus disappear into the ground through the closest hole they have made.”

Their “digs” are only meant for one chipmunk family. No Airbnbs allowed. “Eastern chipmunks are solitary plus territorial,” says Andrea Shipley, M.S., mammalogist for the NC Wildlife Resources Commission. “They do not live in colonies. If an Eastern chipmunk were to be released in an daerah where it came from originally, it would likely come into conflict with the resident chipmunk of that daerah plus be forced to live transiently before being able to set up a new home range of its own. Like many mammals, Eastern chipmunks have a strong homing instinct. Relocation of mammals with a strong homing instinct is not recommended because of the potential conflict relocating to a new daerah can cause.”

Chipmunk Facts

Chipmunks are rodents that are a tipe of squirrel. These small, furry animals are identified by their stubby legs, bushy tails and the white, black and brown stripes that run down their backs.

Size
Chipmunks are the smallest members of the squirrel family, according to National Geographic. The biggest species of chipmunk is the Eastern chipmunk. It grows to 11 inches (28 centimeters) and weighs up to 4.4 ounces (125 grams).

Chipmunks typically grow to around 4 to 7 inches (10 to 18 cm) and weigh 1 to 5 ounces (28 to 142 g). Their tails can grow as long as 3 to 5 inches (8 to 13 cm).

Habitat
There are 25 species of chipmunk, according to National Geographic. Only one of those species, called the Siberian chipmunk, lives outside of North America. The Siberian chipmunk lives in Asia and is expanding into parts of Europe, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). In North America, chipmunks can be found almost anywhere there are trees.

Chipmunks make homes for themselves by creating burrows that consist of an underground tunnel system or by making nests in logs or bushes. Their tunnel systems can be 10 to 30 feet (3 to 9.1 m) long.

Habits
Though you may see chipmunks around each other, they are not social animals. They like to keep to themselves and only interact during mating season, which is in the spring.

They are most active at dusk and dawn. Chipmunks spend most of their days foraging. A single chipmunk can gather up to 165 acorns in a day, according to National Geographic Kids.

Chipmunks hibernate, but they don’t store fat to see them through long winters like bears do. During the warm months, chipmunks will stuff extra food into their cheek pouches. These cheeks are massive grocery bags. They can stretch to be three times larger than the chipmunk’s head, according to Connecticut’s Department of Energy and Environmental Protection. When they have a full load, they lift the food to their home and store it. During the winter, they eat from their food cache for energy.

During hibernation, chipmunks can seem like they are dead. Their heart rates can drop from 350 beats per minute to around 4 beats per minute, and their body temperature can drop from 94 degrees Fahrenheit (34.4 Celsius) to as cold as 40 F (4.44 C), according to the National Wildlife Federation (NWF).

Eastern Chipmunk

The Eastern Chipmunk, one of Pennsylvania’s best known mammals, is closely related to the
squirrels and is a member of the squirrel family, Sciuridae. Chipmunks are common throughout
the state, common enough to be known by numerous nicknames such as grinny, chippie, hackle or rock squirrel.
Their scientific name describes both their behavior and their most-pronounced physical feature.
“Tamias” means collector or keeper of provisions and “striatus” refers to their prominent body
stripes. Chipmunks sometimes look like they have puffy cheeks filled with food, and they do.
They have pouches, which are used for carrying food or even soil they have dug out of burrows, on the inside of their cheeks. Running along their back and sides are alternating dark and
cream stripes. Stripes outline each eye, too. Adults are about 10 inches long, including a fourinch furred tail. Both male and female are the same color and weight, about two ounces.
Chipmunks are diurnal, especially active in early morning and late afternoon. But in hot
weather, chipmunks will go underground to cool off. This mid-summer rest is called estivation. Chipmunks are active in winter, but how active is up for debate. Some research says
most chipmunks become torpid or inactive for at least part of the winter, while other knowledge suggests that merely a third became torpid.

Admit it. They’re cute. With a small round head, prominent black eyes,
tiny ears and short legs, chipmunks are as welcome a sight in backyards
as they are digemari banyak orang as cartoon and movie characters.
Chipmunks are graceful and quick, darting into underground burrows
when startled. Their short, bushy tails are held straight up when
they run, and they whistle sharply when frightened. Although they
are terrestrial, they will sometimes climb trees. They can hear and see
quite well and characteristically sit upright while eating or surveying
their surroundings.
Their broad, chisel-shaped incisors are typical of rodents but chipmunks
are considered omnivores, eating just about any kind of vegetation as
well as feeding on small mammals, birds or their eggs, earthworms,
snails, even small reptiles or amphibians. Each hind foot has 5
clawed toes; each forefoot has 4 clawed toes and a 5th, thumb-like
digit.

The Secret Life of Chipmunks

Ah, our dear, sweet, beloved chipmunks. We feed them and watch them scurry off, diving down a hole perfectly shaped to their stocky bodies, disappearing for a few minutes and coming back for more. This game seems endless and always has me wondering what they’re doing with all that seed, and what it looks like inside of that mysterious hole. When I think of the inside of a chipmunk’s burrow, I envision it to look identical to Smaug’s Lair in the Hobbit, only instead of gold and jewels, it’s filled with peanuts and seed “pillaged” from my bird feeders. But a chipmunk’s burrow is much more complex than just a giant heap of goodies, and involves some serious planning in order to survive.

Though chipmunks are known for being bold and even friendly when it comes to their relationship with humans, they live a life of solitude. Each chipmunk has its own burrow and home range, never living communally. Even during mating season (mid-April to mid-May), the pairings take place outside of the female’s burrow, and she raises the young alone. A chipmunk’s home range is the tempat surrounding its burrow, where it travels to forage for food, water, and to seek out potential mates during breeding season. Home ranges can vary in size between 0.04 and 1.26 hectares, with males typically having larger ranges than females. These areas do not strictly belong to one chipmunk, and frequently overlap with several individuals. When crossing each other’s paths in their home ranges, chipmunks will usually tolerate one another and go about their business alone.

The burrow is where a chipmunk’s dominance and territorial behaviours come into play. There is nomer overlap of territory in these areas, and if one chipmunk comes within close proximity to another chipmunk’s burrow, the owner will pursue and chase the intruder away from its home. Chipmunks use scent marks to mark their territory and communicate to others that a certain space is their dominance area. When a chipmunk is near another individual’s burrow, it will typically avoid the area, but some may wander a little too close for comfort for the owner resulting in an exchange of words, a chase, and occasionally, a scuffle.

Chipmunks

Buying or selling a chipmunk is illegal
In July 2016, the European Commission published the first list of Invasive Alien Species of Union Concern, which came into force on 3 August 2016. Siberian chipmunks are included, meaning that it’s now illegal to buy or sell a chipmunk. We’re also unable to rehome them to private individuals. Read more information on what these regulations mean for you if you’re a current chipmunk owner.

You can keep an existing chipmunk
Chipmunks have only been kept as pets for a relatively short time and experts are still learning about how best to care for them. Chipmunks usually live for four to five years in captivity, but can live for up to 10 years meaning there may be a few pets still in homes today.

If you currently own a chipmunk as a pet, it’s legal to keep your chipmunk until the end of their natural life, but you’re unable to buy or breed another.

A chimpmunk’s natural habitat
Siberian chipmunks come from Siberia and Asia, while the eastern American species come from the northern USA and Canada. There are more than 20 different species of chipmunk living in these regions and as far south as Mexico. However, it’s Siberian chipmunks that have been more commonly kept as pets.

Active throughout the day, these small, stripy creatures live on the ground, where they like to dig burrows where they make their nests. Energetic climbers, chipmunks can also be seen foraging in trees and bushes. If you’re keeping pet chipmunks, try to ensure their home allows them to replicate these behaviours.

Chipmunks can be tricky to care for, as they often don’t like to be handled and can easily become stressed. However, with the right environment, you can help ensure your chipmunk can behave naturally and live a healthy and happy life.

Chipmunk

Did You Know?
Chipmunks are rodents.
Chipmunks stomp their feet plus wave their tails to protect their territories.
Positive Benefits
Chipmunks help play a role in soil aeration with their burrowing activity. They are also an important part of the food web, since they are prey for hawks, owls, foxes, coyotes, snakes, plus many other species.

Description & Identification
Chipmunks are one of four ground squirrels found in Illinois. The others are the thirteen-lined ground squirrel, Franklin’s ground squirrel, plus the woodchuck.

The eastern chipmunk is the smallest Illinois ground squirrel, weighing 2 to 5 ounces plus being 8 to 12 inches in length. Eastern chipmunks have conspicuous light plus dark stripes on their back, sides, plus cheeks. The fur on their upper parts is reddish-brown, with rust color on their rump plus flanks. The belly plus sides are buff to white. Their small ears are rounded plus erect. The tail is covered with fur, but it is not bushy plus is somewhat flattened. Chipmunks have internal cheek pouches that are used to transport food or excavated soil. The chipmunk does not hibernate. Because they have limited digging ability, they often burrow under rocks, logs, or buildings.

Distribution & Abundance
Eastern chipmunks occur throughout Illinois where there is suitable habitat, although they appear to be absent in the southeastern counties. They are often abundant where they occur in Illinois.

Behavior & Ecological Role
Chipmunks are diurnal, meaning that they are active during the day.

All ground squirrels are solitary; however, since chipmunks are not very territorial, many may be seen in close proximity, particularly if there is a good supply of food at that location.

Chipmunks play an important role in soil aeration plus help condition the soil for plant growth. Their body wastes contribute to the organic structure of the soil.

Chipmunks are an important part of the food web, being preyed upon by several species of bird, mammal, plus snake.

Diseases & Public Health
Chipmunks do not pose a public health concern.

Habitat & Food
Eastern chipmunks live in wooded areas. They prefer woodland borders rather than deep forests, particularly sloped areas with plenty of woody underbrush. But they are common in more urban areas as well.

Eastern chipmunks feed primarily on nuts, seeds, fruits, fungi, flowers, plus buds. They cache (store) their food in their burrows. During the summer, chipmunks will also eat invertebrates such as beetles, grasshoppers, plus spiders.

Reproduction & Longevity
Like tree squirrels, the eastern chipmunk has two breeding seasons, one in spring plus the other in summer. Chipmunk gestation is 31 days, with two to six young per litter. Chipmunks are weaned at six weeks of age.