BushMoot: Come along to the amazing Summer Moot 31st July - 5th August (extended Moot : 27th July - 8th August), a festival of bushcrafting and camping in a beautiful woodland PLEASE CLICK HERE for more information.
My boyfriend has them in his garden at hertfordshire. they seemed more cat-like in the face than the greys. At first I thought they were black red squirrels.
The campsite in Starigrad, Croatia, is overrun with the little black beggars!
They are better looking than the Greys - but how do they taste?
If they are in Britain - is this the end of the greys?
Are they more of a threat to the Reds?
I think the scientific article keeps this moderately in perspective. The only difference between these and the grey is that they have more melanin (black pigment) in their fur. There is no excess testosterone - that is reporting hype. There may be some sexual selection that the females prefer the black male. But that is it. Not more aggressive, randy or any such thing. Not out competing. Anyway, thats my take on it.
The worldwide reports are interesting. The Canadian ones would be a black mutation of the USA grey. The Eastern European ones would most likely be black versions of the red or European squirrel.
As the article suggests, these seem to be just a natural variation of the ordinary grey squirrel. Nothing new there, other than the numbers that seem to now be in evidence, perhaps due to the females prefering the black males as partners resulting in higher numbers of black squirrel births.
On a large Estate I worked on in Bedfordshire, where I did pest control in my free time, we had black 'greys' nearly 20 years ago. I suspect the population of them there may have gone the same way as we are seeing now, had it not been for the fact that all squirrels (no reds present) were regarded as pests and the black ones did tend to 'stand out from the crowd' so to speak, and found themselves on the wrong end of a rifle barrel as easily but perhaps more often than their plain grey cousins. BTW, they taste excatly he same as a normal grey
I live in Hertfordshire and have a black squirrel resident in my garden. It freaked me out when I first saw it on the path but it does the same things as the grey one who used to hang out there previously!
The article deriected around grey squirells being wiped out, doesn't mention the native Red much, surely these blacks are more of a threat to the Reds aswell. Cain
Longstrider and nitram55 are spot on they are a melanistic form of the grey, just like the peppered moth you should of learn't about in school. longstrider was the estate southill by any chance as the population here has increased in blacks, as you said they have been about for years.
These things have been around in Hetfordshire for a long long time, Nothing new in them at all.
I grew up in Letchworth Garden City and these were common as anything over 30 years ago. They were also incredibly tame on the common and you could get pretty close up to them without much effort.
I remember a project on them at school and they are definitely just a grey variant with different colour pigment. If i remember right the first sighting goes back to the mid 40's so i'd say they are pretty established now.
Melanistic forms are not rare throughout the whole natural world....it's a genetic mutation that is caused usually by environmental stresses, saying that not always. Melanistic forms are usually expressed through the female of the species, but again not always. Melanism is an increase in melatonin and results in the black colouration, as opposed to "Albinism" which is a total lack of melanin. The melanistic squirrels are found in most populations, but it's usually suppressed, they are'nt "Super squirrels", unfortunately just regular greys with a fashion sense. Black is the new Grey baby mwoaahh
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.