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Publications [#367802] of Herman Pontzer

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Journal Articles

  1. Rimbach, R; Butler, G; Gupte, PR; Jäger, J; Parker, C; Pontzer, H, Gray squirrels consume anthropogenic food waste most often during winter., Mammalian biology = Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde, vol. 103 no. 1 (January, 2023), pp. 69-81 [doi]
    (last updated on 2024/04/24)

    Abstract:
    Urban habitats provide wildlife with predictable, easily accessible and abundant food sources in the form of human food waste. Urban eastern gray squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) are commonly observed feeding in trash bins, but we lack data regarding the type, quantity and seasonal changes in food waste usage. We observed five trash bins on an urban university campus during four different observation periods. We recorded the time squirrels spent on and inside trash bins and type of retrieved food items. We also recorded ambient temperature, human presence and trash bin filling. Moreover, we determined changes in squirrel population density in a natural and three anthropogenic habitats during the same periods. Trash bins were fuller when human presence was higher. The higher human presence, the more squirrels went on and inside the bin, but there was no effect on number of retrieved food items. Trash bin usage by squirrels decreased when ambient temperature and bin filling increased. Most food items were retrieved during the coldest observation period, a period of high human presence, and the majority of retrieved food items were starchy foods (e.g., bread, French fries). The relationship between the number of squirrels observed along transects and a measure of urbanization, the normalized difference built-up index, was negative in periods with high ambient temperatures and positive in periods with low ambient temperatures, indicating winter may be less challenging in urban areas, likely facilitated by the availability of anthropogenic food sources, allowing a higher level of activity throughout winter.

    Supplementary information

    The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s42991-022-00326-3.

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