The following bibliography has been generated by bringing together all references provided by our content partners. There may be duplication.

References

  • Allen, J.A. 1895. On a collection of mammals from Arizona and Mexico, made by Mr. W.W. Price, with field notes by the collector. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 7:193–258.
  • Baker, R.H., and J.K. Greer. 1962. Mammals of the Mexican State of Durango. Publications of the Museum, Michigan State University, Biological Series 2:25–154.
  • Banks, R. C., R. W. McDiarmid, A. L. Gardner, and W. C. Starnes. 2003. Checklist of Vertebrates of the United States, the U.S. Territories, and Canada
  • Banks, R. C., R. W. McDiarmid, and A. L. Gardner. 1987. Checklist of Vertebrates of the United States, the U.S. Territories, and Canada. Resource Publication, no. 166. 79
  • Brown, D.E. 1984. Arizona’s tree squirrels. Arizona Game and Fish Department, Phoenix.
  • Cooper, D.J. 1987. Abert’s squirrel above treeline on the San Francisco Peaks, Arizona. Southwestern Naturalist 32:507.
  • D. I. Rasmussen, Biotic communities of Kaibab Plateau, Arizona, Ecol. Monogr. 11(3):228-275, from p. 261 (1941).
  • Davis, R., and D.E. Brown. 1988. Documentation of the transplanting of Abert’s squirrels. Southwestern Naturalist 33:490–492.
  • Davis, R., and D.E. Brown. 1989. Role of post-Pleistocene dispersal in determining the modern distribution of Abert’s squirrel. Great Basin Naturalist 49:425–434.
  • Edelman, A.J., J.L. Koprowski, and S.R. Bertelsen. 2009. Potential for nest site competition between native and exotic tree squirrels. Journal of Mammalogy 90:167-174.
  • Edelman, A.J., and J.L. Koprowski. 2005a. Selection of drey sites by Abert’s squirrels in an introduced population. Journal of Mammalogy 86:1220-1226.
  • Edelman, A.J., and J.L. Koprowski. 2005b. Diet and tree use of Abert’s squirrels (Sciurus aberti) in a mixed-conifer forest. Southwestern Naturalist 50:461-465.
  • Encyclopedia Britannica: Sciuridae (fam. of mammals). 1997. http://www.eb.com/cgi-bin.
  • Findley, J.S., A.H. Harris, D.E. Wilson, and C. Jones. 1975. Mammals of New Mexico. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
  • Hall, E. R. and K. R. Kelson. 1959. The Mammals of North America. Volume I. The Ronald Press Company, New York.
  • Hall, J.G. 1981. A field study of the Kaibab squirrel in Grand Canyon National Park. Wildlife Monographs 75:1–54.
  • Hoffmeister, D.F. 1956. Mammals of the Graham (Pinaleno) Mountains, Arizona. American Midland Naturalist 55:257–288.
  • Hutton, K.A., J.L. Koprowski, V.L. Greer, M.I. Alanen, C.A. Schauffert, and P.J. Young. 2003. Use of mixed-conifer and spruce-fir forests by an introduced population of Abert’s squirrels (Sciurus aberti). Southwestern Naturalist 48:257–260.
  • Keith, J. O. 1965. The Abert Squirrel and its Dependence on Ponderosa Pine. Ecology 46: 150-163.
  • Lange, K.I. 1960. Mammals of the Santa Catalina Mountains, Arizona. American Midland Naturalist 64:436–458.
  • Minckley, W.L. 1968. Possible extirpation of the spruce squirrel from the Pinaleno (Graham) Mountains, south-central Arizona. Journal of the Arizona Academy of Science 5:110.
  • Nash, D. J. and R. N. Seaman. 1977. Mammalian Species, No. 80, American Society of Mammalogists. pp. 1-5.
  • Nowak, R. M. and J. L. Paradiso. 1983. Walker's Mammals of the World. Fourth Edition, Volume II. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
  • Original description: Woodhouse, S.W., 1853.  Description of a new species of SciurusProceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 6:110.
  • Pederson, J.C., R.N. Hasenyager, and A.W. Heggen. 1976. Habitat requirements of the Abert squirrel (Sciurus aberti navajo) on the Monticello District, Manti-La Sal National Forest of Utah. Utah State Division of Wildlife Resources Publication 76-9, Salt Lake City.
  • Polechla, P.J., Jr. 2005. Mammals. Pages 169-195 in R. Julyan and M. Stuever, editors. Field guide to the Sandia Mountains. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.
  • Reynolds, H.G. 1966. Abert’s squirrels feeding on pinyon pine. Journal of Mammalogy 47:550–551.
  • Richard Weigl (2005) Longevity of Mammals in Captivity; from the Living Collections of the World. Kleine Senckenberg-Reihe 48: Stuttgart.
  • Wilson, Don E., and DeeAnn M. Reeder, eds. 1993. Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference, 2nd ed., 3rd printing. xviii + 1207
  • Wilson, Don E., and F. Russell Cole. 2000. Common Names of Mammals of the World. xiv + 204

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