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Gray Squirrel perched on a Limb in Williamsburg, Virginia.
Squirrel eating a nut on a tree branch
Squirrel in a tree looking cute.
Squirrel eating  on tree close up
A Bald Eagle nictitating membrane is a whitish or translucent membrane that forms an inner eyelid. The eyelid is used to protect and moisten the eye while maintaining vision.
An eastern gray squirrel eating food from its paws, side view.
Squirrel on the tree
The Brevard white squirrels, with dark eyes and sometimes gray streaked fur, are not albinos but a white variant of the eastern gray squirrel, and make up almost a third of Brevard's squirrel population. In addition to Brevard, white squirrels have been spotted in Olney, IL; Versailles, IL; Hodgenville, KY; Marionville, MO; Trenton, NJ; Bloomfield, NY; Greenwood, SC; and Kenton, TN.
Red squirrel posing with a hazelnut on a dull day
Squirrel on a tree branch looking at the camera.
Eastern gray squirrel, Sciurus carolinensis, closeup standing with paws together with a curious look for wildlife, wildlife control, funny animals
Squirrel sitting on a branch looking down towards the viewer.
squirrel eating a pinecone
A Bald Eagle nictitating membrane is a whitish or translucent membrane that forms an inner eyelid. The eyelid is used to protect and moisten the eye while maintaining vision.
A red squirrel sits on a ponderosa pine tree branch that has some bright green lichen on it
A Red Squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) in Scotland, UK
Eurasian red squirrelRed squirrel eating a nutEurasian red squirrelEurasian red squirrel
A pine squirrel is sitting on a branch in the forest munching on a pine cone.
Squirrel on the grassland
A gray squirrel eats berries in a shrub of Viburnum obier.
Eastern Grey Squirrel on a tree branch
Alaskan Bald Eagle perched or diving in water for salmon near Haines
Eastern Gray Squirrel
Possible hybrid between easstern grey and red squirrel, feasts on maple flowers with tongue out, in spring
Black Squirrel gathers nuts for the winter ahead in Cowichan Valley
Close-up of a wild grey squirrel on a branch, eating.
A cute squirrel sits on a snow covered branch in a pine tree in north Idaho.
Squirrel holding and peeling a walnut in front of fallen autumn leaves.
A gray squirrel holding a peanut.
The Abert's Squirrel (Sciurus aberti woodhouse) is commonly found anywhere in the American Southwest where there are enough Ponderosa pine trees to supply the squirrel’s nutritional needs. Identified by their dark gray backs with a red-brown patch, the most distinctive feature of Abert's squirrels are their big tufted ears. The hair on the ears actually grows longer in the fall and winter.  Abert's squirrels feed on the cones, buds, and twigs of Ponderosa pine trees as well as fungus and tree sap. They find their food high in the trees by jumping from branch to branch with no apparent fear of heights.  The favorite food of the Abert’s squirrel is the cones of the Ponderosa Pine.  The relationship between the squirrel and pine tree is very interesting and complex.  The tree provides the squirrel with the nutrition it needs while the squirrel helps the tree by spreading ectomycorrhizal fungi spores which are beneficial to the survival of the Ponderosa Pine.  This Abert’s Squirrel, with its short tufted ears, was photographed while gathering nesting material near Walnut Canyon Lakes in Flagstaff, Arizona, USA.
Free Images: "bestof:Haliaeetus leucocephalus - Southern Vermont Natural History Museum - DSC08542.JPG en Exhibit in the Southern Vermont Natural History Museum Marlboro Vermont USA"
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