Advice
Themes
For detailed information on specific areas covered by this website as well as a list of further reading please see the following advice notes that have been published and approved by the UK Red Squirrel Group.
A. Policy and Legislation
- Red Squirrels and the Law (UKRSG 2004, PDF 41kb)
Please note a recent Act has come into force in Scotland, The Nature Conservation (Scotland) Act 2004, the details of which have not yet been incorporated into this advice note. For further information on Scottish law protecting red squirrels please see the Scottish Natural Heritage and Scottish Government websites. - Release of red squirrels Sciurus vulgaris into the wild in Britain (UKRSG 2004 revised, PDF 44kb)
- UK Strategy for Red Squirrel Conservation, Implementation plan (
UKRSG 2004,
PDF 15kb)
(Note that grey squirrel legislation is covered in FCPN4 Advice Note detailed below.)
B. Site and Species Management
- UK Priorities site selection paper (PDF 583kb)
- Controlling Grey Squirrel Damage to Woodlands (Forestry Commission FCPN4 revised 2004,PDF 569kb).
- Red Squirrel Conservation (Forestry Commission FCPN5, 2001 revised, PDF 251kb)
- Urban grey squirrels (Defra 2001 PDF 67kb)
- Habitat Use by red and grey squirrels: results of two recent studies and implications for management. Forestry Commission Practice Note 076
C. Practical Support of Local Red Squirrels
The UKRSG does not recommend supplementary feeding for red squirrels as feeding station pose many possible risks. Grey squirrels may be attracted into the area; feeding stations act as a focal point to spread disease; they entice squirrels to cross exposed route and roads (putting them in the paths of cars and cats) and artificially boost the population.
An alternative would be to encourage the growth of their preferred food plants in your garden. However, if red squirrels are already coming to your garden and bird feeders or you wish to attract them please read the following guidance.
- Supplementary Feeding in Gardens (UKRSG 2004, PDF 55kb).
- Supplementary feeding in private woodlands - To come
D. Research and Monitoring
- Practical Techniques for Surveying and Monitoring Squirrels (Forestry Commission FCPN11, PDF 2.93Mb)
- 2. UK BAP 2002 reporting round information on red squirrels - UK BAP red squirrel
- Developing a monitoring strategy for red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) across the UK. (JNCC report)
E. Disease
- Poxvirus - general information (UKRSG 2004 amended, PDF 35kb)
- Poxvirus research, Thomas et al. (2003) (Journal of General Virology, 84: 3337-3341, PDF 126 kb)
- Adenovirus infection, Duff et al (2007) Enteric adenovirus infection in a red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris). The Veterinary Record March 17, 2007: 384.
- Modelling squirrelpox threat, Gurnell et al (2006) Squirrel poxvirus; landscape scale strategies for managing disease threat. Biological Conservation 131: 287-295.
- Squirrelpx genetics, McInnes et al (2006) Genomic characterisation of a novel poxvirus contributing to the decline of the red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) in the UK. Journal General Virology 87: 2115-2125.
- Squirrelpox impact Rushton et al, (2006) Disease threats posed by alien species: the role of a poxvirus in the decline of the native red squirrel in Britain. Epidemiology and Infection 134: 521-533.
F. Education, Advisory and Further Reading
For additional information on red squirrel natural history, distribution and international news and research please go to the following links:
- Save our Squirrels
- The Red Squirrel South Scotland Project has further information and guidance: RSSS Information
- The Mammal Society Red Squirrel Fact Sheet