RYAN HOANG/UC BERKELEY
Mikel Delgado
Squirrels are busy little creatures. You’ve probably seen them scampering up trees and hopping across lawns. The rodents are most active in the fall, collecting nuts to eat over the winter.
Squirrels bury their nuts in the ground. That keeps them hidden from other animals that might eat them. But squirrels have to remember where the nuts are buried so they can recover them later. “It’s an interesting problem,” says Mikel Delgado. She’s
an animal behavior expert at the University of California, Davis.
Delgado wanted to know if there’s any pattern in the way squirrels bury their nuts. She set out to investigate the question.
Squirrels are busy little creatures. You’ve likely seen them scurrying up trees. Or you’ve seen them hopping across lawns. The rodents are most active in the fall. That’s when they collect nuts to eat over the winter.
Squirrels bury their nuts in the ground. That keeps them hidden from other animals that might eat them. But squirrels have to remember where nuts are buried. Then they can recover them later. “It’s an interesting problem,” says Mikel Delgado. She’s an animal behavior expert. She works at the University of California, Davis.
Delgado wondered if there’s any pattern to how squirrels bury their nuts. She set out to investigate the question.