Very cool observations.

Donna quoted me pretty well.  Wanna-be-predators is what crows are.  They 
definitely don’t have the tools to make it happen often.

Actually, eastern chipmunks are substantially larger than meadow voles.  I 
trapped hundreds of meadow voles, Microtus pennsylvanicus, for my master’s 
research (“Small mammal populations on Ohio strip‑mined lands reclaimed with 
herbaceous vegetation under old and new reclamation laws”).  Some big bulls and 
pregnant females would be over 50 grams, but I only had a few get over 60 g.  
Chipmunks, on the other hand, start at 80 g and can get to be 150 g.  I’ve 
handled both (and skinned both), and chipmunks are much tougher customers than 
meadow voles.  It would be one crafty crow that could kill a chipmunk.

Crows eat small mammals when they can, but by far the most common prey is the 
short-tailed shrew, Blarina brevicauda.  Blarina have short tails and short 
gray fur very much like meadow voles and can easily be mistaken for them.  The 
pointy shrew nose is the characteristic to watch for.

Best,

Kevin



From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Donna Scott
Sent: Wednesday, November 27, 2013 2:34 PM
To: Susan Fast; CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Crow-chipmunk

As Kevin McGowan recently wrote, Crows are wanna-be predators and don't quite 
have all the equipment or know how to be a consistent bird of prey (I 
paraphrased here; sorry if I got it a bit wrong).
--Donna Scott
----- Original Message -----
From: Susan Fast<mailto:[email protected]>
To: 'CAYUGABIRDS-L'<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, November 27, 2013 2:04 PM
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Crow-chipmunk

I’ve spent much of this morning watching red squirrel interactions in our yard; 
stuff I haven’t seen before. Anyway, on to birds.  We also have still one 
CHIPMUNK which has daily been filling its cheeks with seeds (yesterday it had a 
tail; today no tail, but that is a rodent-rodent interaction most likely).  It 
was busy foraging when our 3 yard CROWS arrived and also started feeding on 
seeds.  2 of the crows soon flew off to the compost; the third remained and 
began sidling closer to the chipmunk.  It got within 6”, the chipmunk turned 
its back, and the crow reached down and grabbed it by the skin in the center of 
the back.  Chipmunk twisted away and shot under a bush, the crow jumped back, 
then flew off.  5 minutes later, they were both back to the same spot under the 
feeders, about a foot apart, but this time the chipmunk watched the crow like a 
hawk and no interaction occurred.  Several years ago, I watched a crow this 
close to a meadow vole (same size as chipmunk) and the crow hammered the vole 
twice with its beak and killed it.  Why the difference?


Steve Fast
Brooktondale
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