Flying Squirrel – The small gliding ghosts of the forest are in danger … and how genetics could help them out

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3–5 minutes
This Siberian flying squirrel just woke up shortly after midnight and spends some time checking out the surroundings. The picture was taken in Syöte, one of our study sites two driving hours from Oulu. (Photo credit: Angelika Kiebler)

The Siberian flying squirrel (Pteromys volans) is nocturnal and has furry glide membranes between its limbs (the patagium), allowing it to glide from tree to tree and almost never touch the ground. It is the only species of the flying squirrel family which is currently found in Europe and needs mixed old-growth forests to survive. The foliage of conifers and cavities in the trunks provide cover year around while the flying squirrel is feeding on leaves and catkins of birch and aspen. But these elusive gliders can live closer than you may think: Flying squirrels live in the backyards and parks of some cities in Finland too, such as Vaasa, Helsinki or Jyväskylä.

Distribution range of the Siberian flying squirrel across Finland and Estonia. (metsa.fi)

Over the last century, the flying squirrel went extinct in several European countries. Today, it is only found in a few sites in Estonia and throughout parts of central and south Finland. By law, they are heavily protected within the EU and given its large population size, Finland holds special conservation responsibilities. However, populations are still decreasing, mostly due to habitat loss and fragmentation through extensive forestry. Recent changes in conservation and forestry legislations made the execution of an effective protection of the small native rodent even harder.

The forest surrounding the territory of the Syöte flying squirrel has been clear cut, possibly isolating it from other flying squirrels in the area. (pictures: Angelika Kiebler)

At the same time, not much is known about the population structure of the flying squirrels in Finland. Are they too isolated from each other? How high is the genetic diversity or is there inbreeding? Can flying squirrels still find breeding mates over growing distances, across streets and through heavily used forests? Is the risk of multiple local extinction events and the eventual collapse of the Finnish population higher than ever?

To understand and eventually help this elusive but iconic species of the Finnish forests, we first will investigate the genetic landscape of the Finnish population, looking for patterns in population structure or signs of genetic erosion. At the moment we are preparing a chromosome-level reference genome as the basis for further studies nobody has done before. Road kills and museum specimens from all over the current distribution range in Finland are used to sequence as many individuals as possible. With partly historical specimens from museum collections in Helsinki, Jyväskylä and Oulu, we might get an insight of how human influence has changed the flying squirrel population until today. All those dead individuals will help to reveal the population structure and hopefully protect their living relatives in the wild.

We contributed to a TV documentary about the human-wildlife conflict in Finnish forests, in which one of the focal species is the flying squirrel. Here, we showed genetic sampling in Syöte and DNA extraction in the laboratory of flying squirrel samples (pictures: Angelika Kiebler, Stefan Prost)

With all this data we plan not only to inform stakeholders about the situation of flying squirrel to improve the legal situation, but also to develop a molecular method to carry out genetic monitoring using non-invasive sampled droppings in the future. With a more detailed resolution of the genetic patterns in individuals we hope to identify the exact barriers in both urban and natural landscapes which hinder dispersal, but also find connections that successfully allow for free movement.

Sampling of flying squirrel droppings in our Syöte trip. Droppings can usually be found at the base of trees used for feeding or resting. They are yellowish brown and a bit bigger than a grain of rice. (pictures: Angelika Kiebler)

We can only effectively protect this elusive species, if we increase our knowledge about it. Modern genomics can provide such crucial information. Let’s hope it is not too late for the small ghosts gliding through the Finnish forests…

We’ve searched different sites in the Syöte area, Finland, for signs of Siberian flying squirrel. Here, we’ve found some droppings at the base of a tree. (picture: Angelika Kiebler)

Repost from the 5th September 2023


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Gerrit Wehrenberg
Gerrit Wehrenberg
Flying Squirrel
Flying Squirrel

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One response to “Flying Squirrel – The small gliding ghosts of the forest are in danger … and how genetics could help them out”

  1. Martin Grethlein Avatar
    Martin Grethlein

    Hallooo

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