Conservation Science and Practice (Jun 2024)

Habitat parameters influencing the distribution of a geographically isolated flying squirrel

  • Clark S. Winchell,
  • David A. Holway,
  • Corinne A. Diggins,
  • Paul F. Doherty Jr,
  • Stella C. Yuan,
  • Daniel Banyai‐Becker,
  • Scott B. Tremor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.13129
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 6
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract The San Bernardino flying squirrel (SBFS) is an isolated subspecies of Humboldt's flying squirrel, occurring in montane sky islands in the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mountains in Southern California, USA. Recent small mammal surveys in the San Jacinto Mountains suggest the squirrel is extirpated. Our objectives were (1) determine habitat features, including forest metrics and topographical factors, that influence SBFS presence, in the San Bernardino Mountains; (2) use information collected in the San Bernardino Mountains to confirm squirrel occurrence and habitat preference in the San Jacinto Mountains; and (3) assess habitat and climatic differences between the two mountain ranges that could explain species persistence in one mountain range but not the other. We surveyed for SBFS using camera traps at 54 sites in the San Bernardino Mountains and 34 sites in the San Jacinto Mountains using both camera traps and acoustics. In the San Bernardino Mountains, we detected squirrels in sites that were more mesic, had higher structural heterogeneity, and had greater amounts of downed woody material compared to non‐detection sites. Habitat parameters were similar between the two ranges; however, squirrels were not detected in the San Jacinto Mountains. Conditions in the San Jacinto Mountains were hotter and drier. Increased temperatures due to climate change could potentially explain the absence of flying squirrels in the San Jacinto Mountains.

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