Red and white giant flying squirrel (Petaurista alborufus)
Photo by Jono Dashper
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Red and white giant flying squirrel (Petaurista alborufus)
Photo by Jono Dashper

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Why the future of West Virginia's rare flying squirrel looks bright | MNN
The squirrel — called the Virginia northern flying squirrel or more commonly the West Virginia northern flying squirrel (WVNFS) — was listed as an endangered species in 1985. But restoration efforts have helped the species rebound, and in 2013 the West Virginia northern flying squirrel joined an exclusive group of success stories — species that have been taken off the endangered list.
Since then, restoration work has ramped up. Now a new report assessing the status of the squirrel in its first five years since coming off of the endangered species list indicates there are many reasons to be optimistic.
Survival of the squirrel depends on survival of its habitat — red spruce-northern hardwood forest, which consists of red spruce, fir, beech, yellow birch, sugar or red maple, hemlock and black cherry. It used to be that the iconic, high-elevation red spruce forest blanketed hundreds of thousands of acres of the Central Appalachians. But much of that was destroyed in the late 1800s and early 1900s due to logging and wildfire.
"This habitat is really special," said Barb Douglas, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service senior endangered species biologist. "There's some old-growth left, but a lot of it was cut over at the turn of the 20th century."
"If you go into a really old-growth spruce forest, it's mossy and green and smells good," added Laura Hill, a retired fish and wildlife biologist for the service. "It's surreal. It's quiet, the ground is spongy and soft. It's calming and soothing."
In the decades preceding and following the listing of the West Virginia northern flying squirrel, protection and restoration efforts were successful in bringing the red spruce-northern hardwood forest habitat back to more than 173,000 acres in West Virginia.
And the work didn't stop when the squirrel was taken off the endangered species list in 2013. In the following five years, more than 7,455 acres of West Virginia northern flying squirrel habitat has been created, protected or restored. Additionally, even without formal protections, federal biologists have coordinated with project proponents to keep habitat loss at a negligible level of 285 acres — amounting to 26 times more habitat saved than lost.
As a result, the five-year report finds that the squirrel remains well distributed across all seven core areas and continues to be found at new, expanded and historical sites, with long-term potential for a slowly growing population.
Red-cheeked flying squirrel (Hylopetes spadiceus) Also known as: H. amoenus, H. aurantiacus, H. belone, H. harrisoni, H. caroli
The red-cheeked flying squirrel is a gliding mammal that is found in Singapore and most of Southeast Asia, most commonly in tall, lowland primary rainforest. First discovered and named in an expedition to Burma (present-day Myanmar) by Edward Blyth in 1847, the red-cheeked flying squirrel has remained fairly unstudied. By day the entrance to the nesting hole is plugged with dry grass or other vegetation. This is removed at dusk when the squirrels emerge and quietly ascend to the canopy before feeding. The squirrels appear to excavate their own nesting holes or inhabit holes made by other species, rather than inhabit natural tree holes. Reportedly, they have also been found nesting inside coconuts.
Brunei Darussalam; Indonesia (Kalimantan, Sumatera); Lao People's Democratic Republic; Malaysia (Peninsular Malaysia, Sabah, Sarawak); Myanmar; Singapore; Thailand; Viet Nam
Subspecies H. s. spadiceus H. s. everetti H. s. sumatrae
Classification Animalia - Chordata - Mammalia - Eutheria - Boreoeutheria - Euarchontoglires - Glires - Rodentia - Sciuromorpha - Sciuridae - Sciurinae - Pteromyini - Hylopetes
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उड़न गिलहरी #FlyingSquirrel #Pteromyini #Petauristini #SitaMataAbhyaran #UdanGilhari #ApnaPratapgarh www.apnapratapgarh.com (at Pratapgarh, Rajasthan) https://www.instagram.com/p/CBFfqDXJnEd/?igshid=1uc43lk2c3wy3
Welp, I finally saw my first flying squirrel. Right here in my fireplace. #flyingsquirrel #gloucomysvolans #pteromyini https://www.instagram.com/p/BqEOQePA2tc/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=17bus9r8crlv2

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LATE BIRTHDAY GIFT FOR pteromyini !! her one hand is too small but i didnt realize until it was too late...also please drag & drop this if u can, tumblr made it super blurry :[
more fr adoptables!! (sorry i keep posting these, this is just the best way for me to give out the links to them to people and also advertise since im too scared to make a forum...) [basic info here]
top two are for pteromyini, middle two are for gruntsmom, left bottom is aeranthes, and bottom right is mine!
pteromyini replied to your post: “doin’ oc asks for myself to help myself get out of my weird “talking...”:
I love reading stuff like this youre so gay for ocs it makes me so happy! !??!? Im so happy aww also u included leaf in the answer thing IM EVEN HAPPIER
II JUST REALLY LOVE MY CHILDREN??? A LOT????? IT’S A PROBLEM
also leaf is v important........... u need to draw him again