Classroom lesson · European souslik - the meadow squirrel · 🇷🇸 Serbia

European souslik - the meadow squirrel

A tiny ground squirrel that lives in big underground towns

A small European souslik standing upright on grassland

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The European souslik (say 'soos-lik') is a small ground squirrel that lives in the grasslands of northern Serbia. About the size of a kitten, sousliks dig long underground tunnels and live together in colonies of dozens or even hundreds of animals - a bit like a village underground.

Tell me more

Sousliks have sandy-brown fur to match the dry grasses they live in. They stand up on their back legs to look around, and if they spot a hawk, fox or stray dog, they whistle a loud warning. The whole colony hears it and dives into their burrows in a flash.

Their burrows are amazing pieces of engineering. Each souslik digs a long tunnel with several rooms - a bedroom, a food store and an emergency back door. They line their bedroom with dry grass to make it cosy, and they keep it spotlessly tidy.

Sousliks hibernate through the winter. Around October, each one curls into a tight ball deep in its burrow, slows its heart right down, and sleeps for around six months. When it finally wakes up in March, it is very, very hungry - and very, very thin.

Sousliks are food for many bigger animals: foxes, eagles, weasels and snakes. That makes them very important to the meadow ecosystem. If sousliks disappear from a meadow, lots of other animals struggle. Protecting them helps protect the whole grassland.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might it be useful for sousliks to live in big groups, even though they have to share food?
  2. 02What would six months of sleep mean for your school year - which months would you choose?
  3. 03Small animals can be very important to bigger ecosystems. Why might that be?
Try this

Classroom activity

On A3 paper, design the cross-section of a souslik burrow. Show the bedroom, food store, emergency exit and watch-tower entrance. Label what each room is for. How many corners does your design have?