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What Animal Will Shred The Bark On The Bottom Of Trees

I am almost certain this is caused by Sciuris niger or the Fox squirrel. In south Georgia they are by and large calorie-free gray with black and white, yet where I am at slightly above the fall line in Georgia they have more red and orange tones mixed in their grey. They are much larger than the common Eastern grayness squirrel. I have many acres of sometime growth hardwoods, and ride information technology ofttimes (at occasionally see Trick squirrels on my property. I had a tree stripped exactly like that two years ago in the hardwood bottoms, and it was washed over the course of a calendar week or 2 at nearly. Some other tree I had on my property was recently dead, just not at a point where the bawl was easily removable. I'one thousand watching this i to see how it gets worked over. The wood is not rotted, it was diddled over in a storm at the base.

The width and depth of the cut ruled out woodpeckers and smaller squirrels such every bit Sciurus carolinensis. The grooves await similar to trees I've seen with beaver cuttings but due to the tiptop this goes to on both that epitome and the tree I had observed it on (8 foot or and so), we can rule out beaver.

I have seen Pull a fast one on Squirrels on my trail cam stripping the bawl on a recently fallen 80+ twelvemonth old oak tree, and hope to watch this tree I've included to see if information technology gets marked up the aforementioned fashion the other one did. I know from first hand feel that squirrels will employ whatever to sharpen their teeth. Seen photos of them using rocks, I know when I was in the military machine they'd sharpen their teeth on interruption cables/wires (I had to fix them quite often every bit a result) and information technology would make sense that they observe a recently dead (therefore difficult) tree but non rotten, to sharpen their teeth. The tree I had looked like a corn cob chewed clean.


Edited on 12.31.2017 to add the post-obit data:

Okay, I'm dorsum to edit this post. I apologize to the forum users & moderators for adding a new post below, I didn't realize I could edit (many of the other forums I employ that isn't immune) ... anyways I would have responded to my own mail service only apparently you need 50 something reputation or whatever to do that.

Interestingly enough, yesterday (12/xxx/2017) I had spent some fourth dimension burning some brush and today (12/31/2017) I noticed this freshly stripped/gnawed Dead sweetgum about 40 yards from where I was clearing castor this afternoon.

Deer incisoforms are almost the correct size to crusade this damage although the appearance of the horizontal stripping/gnawing is still somewhat strange to me. This surface area where this is happening is a hotbed of deer though. My trailcams are all on other belongings in south Georgia correct now, I wish I had it here to put up tonight. Since this happened overnight, I think that is pretty good show it might NOT exist squirrels ... fox squirrels or otherwise despite how they chew on everything. Squirrels are generally diurnal. If information technology IS a deer, I'thou intrigued. I know unequivocally though it cannot be a porcupine for their range doesn't extend into central Georgia. We do take bears, I leave adjacent to a WMA only they aren't very common and this isn't due to clawing in my stance.

Showtime picture show is to show calibration, 2d to show the height that this has occurred at. 3rd is to show tracks (bottom) that I was able to follow all the manner straight to the tree (shown around 12 oclock) and 4th photo is very fresh deer scat and a couple of tracks at the base of operations of the tree.

Upclose view to show scale Height of damage View from a distance with deer tracks Deer scat and deer tracks


Back again. Whatever started on this newer tree on 12/30/17 came dorsum with a vengeance between 9pm on 1/two/2018 and 5pm on 1/iii/2018.

https://imgur.com/a/raKjl

I've linked a number of photos in the gallery merely any information technology is completely girdled the tree. I put up a trail cam and no changes on the tree, and no pictures in the last 24 hours. If I become some evidence captured on the trail cam I will share back here. Hopefully that site will be active at to the lowest degree one more time, but it really got chewed up in less than 24 hours.

Source: https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/questions/14789/what-animal-could-strip-all-the-bark-off-the-lower-7-feet-of-this-tree

Posted by: walstoncoulut.blogspot.com

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