His Winter Cache Bloomed 32,000 Years Later

Arctic ground squirrel with stuffed cheeks, Russia (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

17 December 2024. Old news from 2012 with a recent update.

Food is scarce in the arctic during winter and early spring, so arctic ground squirrels (Urocitellus parryii) fatten up for hibernation and cache food for later use.

Arctic ground squirrel in Russia, eating flowers and seeds (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

When they wake up in April they have seeds in their cache to fall back on before the arctic blooms.

32,000 years ago, during the Ice Age, a ground squirrel stored food in his midden that he never ate. If everything had remained frozen no one would have known about his cache, but climate change is melting glaciers and ancient ice. Eventually the squirrel’s cache was exposed.

Melting glacier (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Twelve years ago Russian scientists collected the squirrel’s cache and found intact seeds within so they cultivated them in the lab. The fertile seeds grew into a 32,000 year old plant, the oldest on Earth.

After they published their findings they continued their research and cultivated more seeds, identifying them as Silene linnaeana in 2021. This is the same genus as bladder campion.

screenshot from Molecular taxonomic identification of a Silene plant regenerated
from Late Pleistocene fruit material at researchgate.net

Here’s a sample blooming in the Sahka Republic of Russia in June 2023 (from iNaturalist).

Silene linnaeana (photo from iNaturalist.lu)

What will happen to this squirrel’s cache 32,000 years from now?

Arctic ground squirrel (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

2 thoughts on “His Winter Cache Bloomed 32,000 Years Later

  1. My son spotted a very large group of crows close to 279 heading south in the late afternoon. He was on Highland Ave. in West View.

  2. Look at those cheeks!!! An amazing post, Kate, and that should have been said first, but that sweet face up there, spoke to me! Have a great Tuesday.

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