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Yellow Pine Chipmunk (Neotamias amoenus)

Yellow Pine Chipmunk (Neotamias amoenus)

Yellow Pine Chipmunk (Tamias amoenus)


Class: Mammalia
Family: Sciuridae
Common Name: Yellow Pine Chipmunk
Genus: Neotamias
Species Name: amoenus

About The Yellow Pine Chipmunk

Yellow-pine chipmunks are common in meadows, rocky outcrops, and the borders of yellow pine and juniper forests. They feed in open, sunny areas, favoring seeds, and use their cheek pouches to carry food to the nest to store for winter. One food cache weighed 190 g—as much as four chipmunks. The chipmunks spend 4-5 months in their winter nests, which are located underground or in rock crevices, waking to feed from time to time. They breed soon after they emerge in the spring, usually in April, and have litters about a month later. When the young first emerge from the nest, they are easy prey for hawks, weasels, bobcats, and coyotes. Those that survive—sometimes as few as 30 percent—continue nursing until August.

Links:
Mammal Species of the World
Click here for The American Society of Mammalogists species account

Rights Holder: Smithsonian Institution

Trips Where Observed

Moving the Car

Member Lifelists

North America
United States
World

Sites Where Observed

Location
Date
Notes
7/12/2012
Yellow Pine Chipmunk (Tamias amoenus)
ID based on black outer stripe on back, but I am no expert on chipmunks.

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