Developing a monitoring strategy for red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) across the UK
(2007)
John Gurnell et al
Final report for JNCC and PTES
This report concerns survey and monitoring methods for squirrels in the UK and was commissioned by the Joint Nature Conservation Committee and the People's Trust for Endangered Species.

Executive Summary

 

(a)develop protocols to assess and validate known methods of surveying and monitoring that differentiate between red and grey squirrels and where possible reveal population trends;

(b) investigate possible new survey and monitoring methods and, if feasible and effective, develop protocols as above;

(c) make recommendations on the design of survey and monitoring programmes in the UK.

(a) Overall, detection rates using visual transects (baited or unbaited), hair tubes and trapping were low, variable and uncorrelated, and the data, although providing information on presence of red or grey squirrels, were insufficient to provide confidence that they represented estimates of abundance indices.

(b) Trapping. Trapping success was low with less than half the sites trapped yielding 3 or more trapped squirrels over the two years,

(c) Hair tubes - Year 1. These were not deployed in red squirrel/grey squirrels sites because of the potential for transmitting squirrelpox virus (SQPV). 20 tubes placed in a grid layout were examined twice a week for two weeks at an interval of 4 weeks in 8 sites. The proportion of tubes visited varied between 0% and 50% and improved through time. On average, 2% of tubes were visited on visit 1-week 1, 14% visit 2-week 1, 12% visit 2-week 2 and 23% visit 2-week 2. The method of using hair tubes is more labour intensive than visual counts and requires laboratory equipment and expertise at identifying hairs to species.

(d) Visual transects - Year 1. At each site, 500 m transects were walked at dawn on 5 consecutive days in each of 2 weeks, 4 weeks apart. Sightings were few with no squirrels seen at 7 out of the 12 sites on either of the two weeks. The return on effort was low.

(e) Baited visual transects - Year 2. There was a very slight increase in numbers of sightings following baiting, but numbers were very low and of no significance (2 sightings on 11 lines before baiting, 6 sightings after).

(f) Visual transects - both years. There were significant negative relationships between the number of squirrels seen and the proportion of Sitka spruce and between the number of squirrels seen and the nearest neighbour (NN) distance between trees. Thus, Sitka spruce, especially at high density, is particularly poor habitat to carry out visual surveys.

(g) Volunteer surveys. Provided clear and significant evidence that baiting transects increased the number of squirrel sightings (mean numbers of sightings per transect +/- SD: unbaited 0.73+/-0.72, baited 1.73+/-1.82. Most squirrels were seen in deciduous woodland and least in Sitka spruce, although this was not significant.

 

 

 
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Please cite as: John Gurnell et al, (2007), Developing a monitoring strategy for red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) across the UK, Final report for JNCC and PTES