Red Squirrel

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The red squirrel used to be a common sight throughout the UK. There used to be around 3.5 million of them around but this has dropped to a mere 120,000, which is why you rarely see them around now, even though they were quite a common sight before.

A major threat to the species is the grey squirrel, which was introduced as an ornamental species in the 1800s. Greys compete with our native reds for food and because they can eat unripe acorns that contain tannins, which is highly toxic to red squirrels, they quickly take away the red squirrel’s food supply. This leads to the reds having less food, which in turn means that female red squirrels are unable to reproduce as they never reach the optimum body weight to be able to support young.

Greys are also a lot more tolerant about living in much denser populations than reds; greys achieve up to 15 individuals per hectare (the size of a large football pitch) and reds achieving up to 2-3 per hectare. With grey squirrels achieving high densities, they have a much higher daily food requirement. This, coupled with their ability to digest tannins, makes up for a big issue for both the red squirrels and the ecosystem.

Another major issue is the squirrel pox virus that grey squirrels carry. Red squirrels are extremely susceptible to it and the virus spreads rapidly, decimating their populations. Infected squirrels often develop lesions round sensitive tissue, such as the mouth and eyes. Another factor is the adenovirus, a disease recently identified in squirrels. This virus has no obvious symptoms, but many animals infected are found dead. The Animal Health and Veterinary Laboratories Agency (AHVLA) is currently performing studies on the found cases of adenovirus, trying to shed some light on what it does.

To help conserve the native red squirrel population, many people take controlling the grey squirrel population very seriously. A common form of squirrel control is shooting the greys with airguns or shotguns, as well as traps to help preserve the numbers of red squirrels.

If you would like to learn more about grey squirrel control, BASC has all the information you need to get started.  Read all about drey poking, trapping and air rifle shooting; you might want to consider joining our Green Shoots projects too, which focus on grey squirrel, mink control and much more.

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Hello, my names Cody and I’m 14 and live in South Yorkshire. First I would like to thank my Dad for leading me on to shooting. I’m part of a shooting syndicate at Braithwell were I have met many amazing people in the past five years. I would like to say thank you to the gamekeeper Anthony Harrison for running the shoot and to everyone involved. I love every aspect of shooting, right down to cleaning the birds and cooking what we shoot. However, my favourite part is watching the dogs work as I love to see them find and pick up birds. I’ve been looking for a chance to get involved with BASC ever since becoming a member, amazingly I was on the Young Shots page in 2016 and now I wrote an article which got published on the website. I hope you enjoy the article!

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