Document Type
Article
DOI
10.25778/P2AD-J877
Abstract
The southern fox squirrel (Sciurus niger niger) is a subspecies of fox squirrel that ranges from southeastern Virginia to northern Florida. Throughout its Southeastern range, southern fox squirrel habitat of natural mixed pine-hardwood forests has been fragmented by agriculture and short-rotation pine plantations. In Virginia, remaining habitat has been transformed by fire suppression on the landscape and has in turn resulted in small, disjunct populations of southern fox squirrels. We sought to identify the home range and resource utilization of southern fox squirrels in the southern Coastal Plain of Virginia. From established nest boxes, we captured, radio collared and tracked four individuals at Big Woods Wildlife Management area and Piney Grove Complex in Sussex County in 2022. We observed an average male 95% and 50% adaptive kernel home range 173.49 ha (SE = 25.73, N = 2) and 40.62 ha (SE = 5.87, N = 2), respectively, and an average female 95% and 50% adaptive kernel home range of 28.51 ha (SE = 0.49, N = 2) and 4.71 ha (SE = 0.34, N = 2), respectively. At both the second and third orders of habitat selection, squirrels selected for pine savanna cover types and short fire-return intervals.
Recommended Citation
Guill, Marissa H.; De La Cruz, Jesse L.; Puckett, K. Marc; and Ford, W. Mark
(2024)
"Resource Selection of the Southern Fox Squirrel (Sciurus niger niger) in the Coastal Plain of Virginia,"
Virginia Journal of Science: Vol. 75:
No.
3, Article 1.
DOI: 10.25778/P2AD-J877
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/vjs/vol75/iss3/1