Least chipmunk

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The least chipmunk (Neotamias minimus) is the smallest species of chipmunk<ref name="Burt1980">Template:Cite book</ref> and the most widespread in North America.

Description

It is the smallest species of chipmunk, measuring about Template:Convert in total length with a weight of Template:Convert.<ref>Least chipmunk (Tamias minimus) Template:Webarchive, Arkive</ref> The body is gray to reddish-brown on the sides, and grayish white on the underparts. The back is marked with five dark brown to black stripes separated by four white or cream-colored stripes, all of which run from the nape of the neck to the base of the tail. Two light and two dark stripes mark the face, running from the tip of the nose to the ears. The bushy tail is orange-brown in color, and measures Template:Convert long.<ref name=Verts2001>Template:Cite journal</ref> In some areas, where range overlap with the yellow-pine chipmunk occurs, it may be difficult or impossible to distinguish the two species in the field; laboratory examination of skeletal structures may be required.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

As in other chipmunks, there are four toes on each of the forefeet and five on the hindfeet. Females have eight teats. The brain to body mass ratio for least chipmunks is lower than that for other species of chipmunk living in the same area, suggesting that they prefer less complex environments.<ref name=Budeau1986>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Distribution and habitat

Least chipmunks are found through most of the western United States from northern New Mexico and western North and South Dakota to eastern California, Oregon and Washington, and throughout much of southern and western Canada from Yukon and southeastern British Columbia<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> to central Ontario, and into the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and neighboring parts of Wisconsin and Minnesota. Throughout this range, as many as 21 subspecies have been identified.<ref name=Verts2001/> Less arboreal than other chipmunks,<ref name=Verts2001/> least chipmunks are commonly found in sagebrush habitats and coniferous woodland, and along rivers, but they also occur in alpine meadows, and on the edges of the northern tundra.<ref name=iucn/>

Behavior

Least chipmunks are diurnal and eat seeds, berries, nuts, fruits and insects. They mark areas depleted of suitable food with urine, and do not return to such patches afterwards.<ref name=Devenport1999>Template:Cite journal</ref> Home ranges vary widely, and have been reported to vary from Template:Convert in northern Michigan<ref name=Verts2001/> to as much as Template:Convert in Colorado.<ref name=Bergstrom1988>Template:Cite journal</ref> Because of their small size, least chipmunks are generally subordinate to yellow-pine chipmunks, which are able to drive them away from food resources where food is plentiful. However, because they need to eat less food in order to survive, least chipmunks are more numerous where resources are scarce.<ref name=Sheppard1971>Template:Cite journal</ref> They are agile animals, and have been recorded running at speeds of up to Template:Convert in natural conditions.<ref name=Smith1995>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Predators include hawks, owls, and mustelids.Template:Citation needed

Least chipmunks spend the winter in burrows and also scatter-hoard food in numerous concealed pits beneath logs and similar cover. Burrows consist of a single chamber about Template:Convert across and tunnels Template:Convert in diameter, averaging Template:Convert in length. They have two to four entrances, often concealed by nearby rocks, and are typically about Template:Convert below the surface.<ref name=Verts2001/> During the summer they may construct temporary nests in trees from leaves and grass,<ref name=Broadbrooks1974>Template:Cite journal</ref> or appropriate hollows made by woodpeckers.<ref name=Verts2001/>

Least chipmunks do not hibernate, or put on excess fat in the fall. Instead, they survive the winter by entering torpor for long stretches of time, waking to eat food cached in the burrow. How much of each winter they spend below ground in this manner depends on the latitude, varying from late November to mid March in Michigan to mid October to late April in northern Manitoba.<ref name=Verts2001/>

Reproduction

Females enter estrus within a week of emerging from their burrow in the spring, and mating typically takes place between March and May. Gestation lasts 28 to 30 days, with a single litter of three to seven young being born each year; females who lose their first litter soon after birth may, however, sometimes be able to breed again in the same year. The young are born hairless and blind, measuring about Template:Convert in length, and weighing Template:Convert. They are able to stand and open their eyes at 27 days, and are weaned at 36 days. They are sexually mature at one year, but do not always breed until their second year. They can live for up to six years in captivity.<ref name=Verts2001/>

References

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