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  2. Eastern chipmunk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_chipmunk

    Description. [edit] A small species, it reaches about 30 cm (12 in) in length including the tail, and a weight of 66–150 g (2.3–5.3 oz). [ 15 ] It has reddish-brown fur on its upper body and five dark brown stripes contrasting with light brown stripes along its back, ending in a dark tail. It has lighter fur on the lower part of its body.

  3. Cliff chipmunk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cliff_chipmunk

    The cliff chipmunk (Neotamias dorsalis) is a small, bushy- tailed squirrel that typically lives along cliff walls or boulder fields bordering Pinyon-juniper woodlands in the Western United States and Mexico (commonly spotted in northern Arizona to Colorado). Cliff chipmunks are very agile, and can often be seen scaling steep cliff walls.

  4. Chipmunk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chipmunk

    An eastern chipmunk placing food in its cheek pouch. Chipmunks have an omnivorous diet primarily consisting of seeds, nuts and other fruits, and buds. [9] [10] They also commonly eat grass, shoots, and many other forms of plant matter, as well as fungi, insects and other arthropods, small frogs, worms, and bird eggs. They will also occasionally ...

  5. Townsend's chipmunk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Townsend's_Chipmunk

    Townsend's chipmunk (Neotamias townsendii) is a species of rodent in the squirrel family, Sciuridae. It lives in the forests of the Pacific Northwest of North America, from extreme southwestern British Columbia through western Washington and western Oregon. Townsend's chipmunk is named after John Kirk Townsend, an early 19th-century ornithologist.

  6. Gray-footed chipmunk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gray-footed_Chipmunk

    Gray-footed chipmunk. The gray-footed chipmunk (Neotamias canipes) is a terrestrial and forest-dwelling species of chipmunk and rodent in the family Sciuridae. [3] It is endemic to New Mexico and in the Sierra Diablo and Guadalupe Mountains in the Trans-Pecos region of Texas in the United States. [3][4] Its natural habitat are coniferous ...

  7. Ezo chipmunk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezo_chipmunk

    Omnivorous, the diet of the Ezo chipmunk includes the seeds, fruit, flowers, shoots, leaves, and sap of over thirty-five species of trees and grasses, insects, snails, and the eggs of small birds; in particular, changing with the seasons, in early spring, sasa shoots and young maple leaves, and as these grow and become tougher, the seeds, cones ...

  8. Red-tailed chipmunk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-tailed_chipmunk

    Description. The red-tailed chipmunk is a large species with a total length of about 230 mm (9 in) including a bushy tail of 105 mm (4 in). The mass varies from about 54 g (1.9 oz) in the spring to 60 g (2.1 oz) in the fall. Females are marginally larger than males. The head is mottled grayish-brown with dark stripes above, through and below ...

  9. Siberian chipmunk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siberian_chipmunk

    Even though the Siberian chipmunk normally grows to 50–150 g (1.8–5.3 oz). [3] [5] The Siberian chipmunk does not exhibit sexual dimorphism, and size and body proportions are the only way to distinguish younger chipmunks from older ones. [4] Its small size may contribute to its relatively short life from two to five years in the wild.