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Small Game Animals in Arizona
    Here is detailed information on the small game animals of Arizona, click on the names for more information.

Desert Cottontail Rabbit
(Sylvilagus auduboni)
Desert Cottontail Rabbit
July, 1 2005 - June 30, 2006
Tree Squirrel (Abert’s or tassel-eared )
(Sciurus aberti)
Tree Squirrel (Abert’s or tassel-eared )
General; Oct 7 - Nov 20, 2005<br><br>
Limited Weapon-Shotgun; Oct 7 - Nov 20, 200
Tree Squirrel (chicaree or red squirrel )
(Tamiasciurus hudsonicus)
Tree Squirrel (chicaree or red squirrel )
General; Oct 7 - Nov 20, 2005<br><br>
Limited Weapon-Shotgun; Oct 7 - Nov 20, 200

Cottontail Rabbit
    Three species of cottontail occur in Arizona: the mountain cottontail, eastern cottontail, and desert cottontail. The smallest of these (22-30 ounces) is the relatively short-eared mountain cottontail, which is largely restricted to elevations above 7,500 feet from the Mogollon Rim northward. The generally larger eastern cottontail (28-52 ounces) is found in the mountains of southeastern and central Arizona where it occupies many of the same habitats as the Coues white-tailed deer. The most abundant and important rabbit by far, however, is the desert cottontail (26.5-44 ounces), which is found in every county in the state up to elevations exceeding 7,000 feet.

Tree Squirrel
    No fewer than four species and eight subspecies of tree squirrels can be found in Arizona’s forests. Of these, the Abert’s or tassel-eared squirrel is the most widespread and contributes most to the annual squirrel harvest. This squirrel, with its easily discernable ear tufts, along with its close relatives, the black-bellied and white-tailed Kaibab squirrels, are exclusively inhabitants of ponderosa pine forests and the life cycles of the squirrels and the tree are remarkably intertwined. Less well known is the also white-bellied Arizona gray squirrel and its close relative, the rustcolored Chiricahua fox squirrel, both of which inhabit riparian deciduous forests and oak woodlands south of the Mogollon Rim. Another species is the chicaree or red squirrel (actually more olive or gray than red in Arizona), which is restricted to the higher forests of spruce and fir above 8,500 feet elevation. Both the tassel-eared and gray squirrels average a little under 1.5 pounds in weight, while the diminutive red squirrel averages just over 0.5 pounds.


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