What Do Squirrels Do in Winter? | Lincoln Park Zoo (2024)

Brrr, it’s getting cold outside! Have you ever wondered how animals like squirrels survive Chicago’s freezing temperatures without so much as a coat? While people typically respond to the cold by staying inside and putting on layers, it turns out squirrels have a similar strategy for dealing with the challenges of winter. They tend to spend more time in the den, and they put on “layers” by fattening up.

What Do Squirrels Do in Winter? | Lincoln Park Zoo (1)

The type of squirrel you’re most likely to encounter around Nature Boardwalk at Lincoln Park Zoo is an eastern gray squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis). These are predominantly gray in color—as you would guess from the name—with white bellies.

Gray squirrels do well in urban areas such as Lincoln Park. These critters are homeotherms, which means that unlike some mammals, their body temperatures remain fairly constant throughout the year; they don’t hibernate. In the winter, squirrels spend less time foraging outside their dens, and it’s more common for several squirrels to share a den. This behavior allows more animals to take shelter and also to keep each other warm.

If you’ve been watching the squirrels lately, you may have noticed they’ve been very busy caching food. Caching, also called hoarding, is a behavior characterized by storing stashes of food for later. Squirrels usually do this by putting their food in a shallow hole and covering it up. They don’t remember all these “storage units,” and some of the forgotten seeds they leave behind will germinate and become shrubs, trees, etc. The stashes that are remembered will serve as food when resources are scarce in winter.

Squirrels also prepare for winter by bulking up. Throughout fall, they maximize food consumption and body mass. In winter, when food is hard to come by, these reserves will help the animals survive.

One other tactic gray squirrels use to keep warm in winter is shivering. Shivering isn’t just a sign that you’re cold; it also serves as a way to keep warm. While it certainly doesn’t sound fun, gray squirrels are remarkably good at generating heat by shivering.

The gray squirrels at Nature Boardwalk are busily eating everything in sight and storing food for later. Come down to Nature Boardwalk today to see them in action as they gear up for the approaching cold and snow!

Vicky Hunt

What Do Squirrels Do in Winter? | Lincoln Park Zoo (2024)

FAQs

What Do Squirrels Do in Winter? | Lincoln Park Zoo? ›

In the winter, squirrels spend less time foraging outside their dens, and it's more common for several squirrels to share a den. This behavior allows more animals to take shelter and also to keep each other warm.

What do squirrels do in the winter? ›

Instead of hibernating, they rely on sheltered nests or dens in trees, fat reserves, and stored food to survive the long, cold winter. You may have noticed these huge impressive nests when you look high up into trees this time of year.

What do squirrels do? ›

Squirrels catch, or store, seeds and nuts in the soil and trees. When forgotten, these seeds and nuts sprout into new plants and trees. Squirrels also spread mushrooms through their scat. After eating a mushroom, the spores travel through their guts unchanged, and are then dispersed throughout the forest.

What do squirrels do in their free time? ›

These cute critters also like to “cache” or hide supplies, burying nuts and seeds to help them survive harsh winters. Squirrels traditionally spend most of their time in trees foraging for food, bearing their young, taking shelter from the weather, finding food, and escaping from predators.

What do zoo animals do in the winter? ›

If temperatures drop too low, some animals at the zoo remain in their indoor spaces for their own health and safety. Some species also have other limitations such as the impacts of wind or ice in their habitat which may impact access.

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