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Just how many tens of millions of years do a species need to exist in a place before you consider it native to that land?
"The earliest known North American squirrel fossil dates back to the late Eocene epoch, about 34 million years ago." source
North American grey squirrels are an invasive species... in Europe. They seem to be able to outcompete the native red squirrels here
@Shadow@lemmy.ca said "they’re not native to North America." which is incorrect. North America squirrels may be invasive on other continents but certainly not in North America.
Oh, I'm not disagreeing with you by any means. I just thought it was kinda funny that they had the direction of the invasiveness of that particular animal backwards
Yeah I caught that and edited it before I thought anyone saw it.
Only about 300 years, from your own link you kindly provided:
I think you need to read that carefully again. Squirrels have been in North America for millions of years before Europeans arrived. The part you quoted was where Europeans took a specific species of squirrel found in North America, the eastern gray squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis), back with them to England.
The rest of that quoted piece talks about that specific species of North American squirrel's spread around other parts of North American.
Yeah you're right, I totally read it backwards. 🤦
For us, they are invasive though: https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/environment/plants-animals-and-ecosystems/invasive-species/alerts/easterngreysquirrel_alert.pdf
No worries!
Don't forget the obviously non-invasive european starling and european house sparrow common at feeders. /s