Demographic characteristics of an unexploited population of fox squirrels (Sciurus niger)
Demographic changes in an unexploited population of fox squirrels (Sciurus niger) were studied between 1971 and 1978 on 45.2 ha of upland forest in east-central Illinois. Known numbers of squirrels varied between 69 and 142. Adult squirrels (>15 months old) comprised >50% of the known population during the study, with annual survival exceeding 60%. Young-of-the-year made up <20% of the livetrapped population. Increasing populations were characterized by increases (P < 0.05) in numbers of yearling–adult males and young-of-the-year of both sexes. Recruitment depended on both immigration and on production of young by resident females. Recruitment success (proportion of new squirrels resident at least 6 months after initial capture) of immigrants was best for adults and yearlings and poorest for subadults. Adult female breeding success was highest in the winter and correlated negatively with the number of females conceiving the previous breeding period. The size and composition of the seed crop of trees in autumn had no effect (P > 0.05) on recruitment, conception, survival rates, or changes in overall density when at least some winter-storable tree seed was available. In most years, adult females were dispersed evenly, but adult males and young of both sexes showed an aggregated or random dispersion. Breeding rates for yearling females, recruitment success of immigrants and of juveniles born on the study area, and overall changes in squirrel densities between trapping periods correlated negatively (P < 0.05) with the number of adult females but not with the number of males or younger females. Interpretation of dispersion of adult females and the relationship of numbers of adult females to population change suggest that fox squirrels stabilize their numbers in the absence of obvious environmental stresses through aggressive interactions between adult females and resident young and immigrants of all ages.