Quick, clever and always on the move—meet the Eurasian red squirrel, a leafy treetop resident found across much of Europe and Asia. While it prefers the shelter of forests, this agile creature easily adapts to gardens and parks. It builds its nest, called a drey, high in the fork of a tree using twigs to form a domed structure about 25 to 30 centimetres wide. The female featured here is gathering moss—one of several soft materials, along with bark, leaves and grass, that line the nest and turn it into a snug, well-insulated retreat. These rodents may also take over tree hollows or abandoned woodpecker holes when available.
A female Eurasian red squirrel, Switzerland
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Sea lion in a kelp forest, Baja California, Mexico
-
Scottish Blackface sheep, Aberdeenshire, Scotland
-
Kalaloch Tree of Life, Olympic National Park, Washington, US
-
Vila Franca Islet, São Miguel Island, Azores, Portugal
-
Nature, art, and...math?
-
The ‘potato chip bird’
-
Lake Superior, Thunder Bay, Ontario
-
Jellies in a world of their own
-
Boreal owl
-
Vancouver International Boat Show
-
Happy Boxing Day!
-
Spring equinox
-
81st anniversary of D-Day
-
The other great barrier reef
-
Porto, Portugal
-
Is anybody home?
-
Leaf-peeping Southern style
-
Alpine Lakes Wilderness, Washington, United States
-
Lake Louise, Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada
-
Black-naped monarch
-
World Otter Day
-
Knuthöjdsmossen nature reserve, Sweden
-
Whos in this creepy copse?
-
God’s Own Country
-
Will we be ready for the ‘big one?’
-
Walking a rocky rainbow
-
Kelimutu, Flores, Indonesia
-
Chilling out on an ice floe
-
Reflecting its stylish past today
-
Happy Easter!