a mammal of the genus Sciurus of the family Sciuridae of the order Rodentia, distributed in the forests of Europe, Asia, and America. There are about 50 species. Squirrels are adapted to an arboreal mode of life. The length of their body reaches 28 cm. Their fur is usually thick and on certain squirrels, fluffy. Their color ranges from bright red to gray and black; many species are variegated. There are two species in the USSR—the pine squirrel and the Persian squirrel.
The pine squirrel (S. vulgaris) is found in the northern forest and forest-steppe zones that extend to the forest tundra. They are most numerous in the dark pine and larch taiga and in mixed forests. Feeding on the seeds of pine trees, acorns, nuts, berries, and occasionally insects and bird eggs, they store food for the winter. Pine squirrels are diurnal animals. They build nests in trees from lichens, moss, bast, and twigs or settle in tree hollows. There are usually two (sometimes three) litters a year yielding five to ten baby squirrels. The number depends on the yield of pine seeds; in lean years pine squirrels undertake massive migrations. They are one of the major objects of the fur industry in the USSR (in the taiga zone of the European part, the Urals, and Siberia).
The Persian squirrel (S. anomalus) is found in the forested regions of the Trans-Caucasus. Because of their small number and sparse coarse fur, these squirrels have no economic value.