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Survey finds gain in endangered red squirrel population

The Mount Graham red squirrel’s population is stabilizing, with a 4% increase recorded in September during an annual survey.
Credit: AP
File - This undated file photo provided by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service shows a Mount Graham red squirrel in the Pinaleno Mountains of Arizona. Wildlife officials say an endangered squirrel subspecies in southeastern Arizona is fighting its way back after much of its mountain habitat was burned by a 2017 wildfire. The Arizona Game and Fish Department says the Mount Graham red squirrel population is stabilizing, with a 4 percent increase recorded in September during an annual survey that produced an estimate of 78 squirrels, up from 75 in 2018. (Marit Alanen/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service via AP, File)

PHOENIX, Arizona — Wildlife officials say an endangered squirrel subspecies in southeastern Arizona is fighting its way back after much of its mountain habitat was burned by a 2017 wildfire.

The Arizona Game and Fish Department says the Mount Graham red squirrel’s population is stabilizing, with a 4% increase recorded in September during an annual survey that produced an estimate of 78 squirrels, up from 75 in 2018.

According to the department, the population peaked at about 550 in the late 1990s. Before the 2017 wildfire, the population ranged between 200 and 300.

Terrestrial wildlife specialist Tim Snow says the results are encouraging though much work remains to help protect the squirrel population.

The squirrel is found only in upper elevation conifer forests of the Pinaleño Mountains.

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