Petaurista petaurista (Pallas, 1766) is a animal in the Sciuridae family, order Rodentia, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Petaurista petaurista (Pallas, 1766) (Petaurista petaurista (Pallas, 1766))
๐Ÿฆ‹ Animalia

Petaurista petaurista (Pallas, 1766)

Petaurista petaurista (Pallas, 1766)

Petaurista petaurista, the red giant flying squirrel, is a large sciurid rodent found across South, East, and Southeast Asia.

Family
Genus
Petaurista
Order
Rodentia
Class
Mammalia

About Petaurista petaurista (Pallas, 1766)

The red giant flying squirrel, also known as the common giant flying squirrel, scientific name Petaurista petaurista, is a rodent species belonging to the squirrel family Sciuridae. It inhabits a wide range of forest types, plantations, and more open habitats with scattered trees across Southeast Asia, extending north to the Himalayas and southern and central China. This is one of the largest arboreal squirrels. All populations have at least some reddish-brown fur on their upper body and pale fur on their underparts, but there is significant geographic variation in overall coloration. While the taxonomic position of populations in the Sundaic region is generally agreed upon, there is considerable uncertainty about the classification of other populations. These uncertain populations have variously been included in this species, assigned to other species, or recognized as distinct separate species. Like other flying squirrels, the red giant flying squirrel is mostly nocturnal. It cannot fly like a bat, but it is able to glide long distances between trees by spreading its patagium, the stretch of skin between its limbs. It is a herbivore. Females produce one young per litter, and two young are rarely produced. Although local populations have declined due to habitat loss, and to a lesser extent hunting, the species remains common overall and is not considered threatened. The red giant flying squirrel is among the largest flying squirrels and the longest squirrels. It has a head-and-body length of 28.5โ€“55 cm (11 in โ€“ 1 ft 9.5 in), a tail length of 34โ€“63 cm (1 ft 1.5 in โ€“ 2 ft 1 in), and weighs approximately 990โ€“3,200 g (2.2โ€“7.1 lb). Within any given region, males are generally somewhat smaller than females, at least in terms of weight. Its appearance varies considerably based on subspecies and location. Broadly, it can be divided into several subspecies groups. Some of these groups have variously been treated as part of this species, as part of other species including the Indian giant flying squirrel (P. philippensis), the red and white giant flying squirrel (P. alborufus), or the spotted giant flying squirrel (P. elegans), or recognized as separate species of their own. Up until the 1980s, some authorities even classified the Indian giant flying squirrel itself as a subspecies of the red giant flying squirrel.

Photo: (c) Christian Schwarz, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Christian Schwarz ยท cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia โ€บ Chordata โ€บ Mammalia โ€บ Rodentia โ€บ Sciuridae โ€บ Petaurista

More from Sciuridae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy ยท Disclaimer

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