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General: The eastern chipmunk
almost seems obsessed with gathering food. It will spend much of its day
gathering and storing food in storage caches that will be used in winter. It
borrows into the ground usually no deeper than 3 feet. The tunnel will be
roughly 2" in diameter and can be 10 feet long with chambers for sleeping
and food. A chipmunk in the wild has a life span of 1 - 2 years, captive
raised chipmunks have lived substantially longer.
They are not true hibernators.
They will go into a deep sleep around mid-November through March. They wake
every so often to eat and can be seen out on nice winter days(1)
The
eastern chipmunk mates in spring. The gestation period is approximately 31
days, The typical litter is born in May of
3 - 5 babies. Young chipmunks
begin to emerge from the burrow at 40 days. The female weans and abandons her litter once they come above ground, by either moving them to a nearby
burrow, or by leaving her young in the natal burrow while she moves to a new
one.(2)
Eastern chipmunks have no value as food or for their fur and
as such should be enjoyed as wild animals. Only if they become nuisance
animals around the house or farm should there be any attempt to remove or
kill them.
Identification: Eastern chipmunks are
approximately 8" - 12" long (the tail being almost 4"). They have
reddish-brown fur on their upper parts. They have a white stripe on each
side bordered on both sides by dark stripes. They have one dark stripe
running down their back. The stripes stop at the tail. Their belly is white.
They have pale facial stripes above and below the eyes.
Habitat: Eastern chipmunks can
be found in open deciduous forest, open agricultural areas, mature suburban
neighborhoods with appropriate foods. Often times they will be found by
stone walls and houses with old foundations.
Territory: The eastern
chipmunk can be found in southeastern Canada and most of the northeastern
United States from Maine in the North - south to Mississippi and Virginia
and west to North Dakota and Oklahoma
Diet: Most of the eastern
chipmunk's diet is made up of nuts, acorns, seeds, mushrooms, fruits,
berries and corn. It also eats insects, bird eggs, snails and small mammals
like young mice.
(1) National Audubon Society Field Guide
to North American Mammals
(2) Adirondack Ecological Center
http://www.esf.edu/aec/adks/mammals/chipmunk.htm
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