Subscribe Now! National Geographic Magazine $15
Visit our Online Shops

Sign up for free

Newsletters

Once a month
get new photos
and expert tips.

Chipmunk
Tamias

Photo: A chipmunk eating
A chipmunk eating
Photograph by Michael S Quenton

Chipmunk Profile

Lively and speedy critters, chipmunks are small members of the squirrel family. Their pudgy cheeks, large, glossy eyes, stripes, and bushy tails have made them a favorite among animators, and landed them a series of starring roles in Hollywood.

Of the 25 species of chipmunks, all but one, Asia’s Tamias sibiricus, is found in North America. Ranging from Canada to Mexico, they are generally seen scampering through the undergrowth of a variety of environments from alpine forests to shrubby deserts. Some dig burrows to live in, complete with tunnels and chambers, while others make their homes in nests, bushes, or logs.

Depending on species, chipmunks can be gray to reddish-brown in color with contrasting dark and light stripes on the sides of their face and across their back and tail. They range in size from the least chipmunk, which, at 7.2 to 8.5 inches (18.5 to 21.6 centimeters) and 1.1 to 1.8 ounces (32 to 50 grams), is the smallest chipmunk, to the Eastern chipmunk, which grows up to 11 inches (28 centimeters) and weighs as much as 4.4 ounces (125 grams).

Chipmunks generally gather food on the ground in areas with underbrush, rocks, and logs, where they can hide from predators like hawks, foxes, coyotes, weasels, and snakes. They feed on insects, nuts, berries, seeds, fruit, and grain which they stuff into their generous cheek pouches and carry to their burrow or nest to store. Chipmunks hibernate, but instead of storing fat, they periodically dip into their cache of nuts and seeds throughout the winter.

Their shrill, repeated, birdlike chirp is usually made upon sensing a threat but is also thought to be used as a mating call by females. Chipmunks are solitary creatures and normally ignore one another except during the spring, when mating takes place. After a 30-day gestation, a litter of two to eight is born. The young stay with their parents for two months before they begin to gather their own provisions for the winter ahead.

For the most part, chipmunks, although susceptible to forest fragmentation, are not currently threatened. However, the Palmer’s chipmunk (Tamias palmeri) is considered a vulnerable species.

Fast Facts

Type: Mammal
Diet: Omnivore
Average lifespan in the wild: 2 to 3 years
Size: 4 to 7 in (10 to 18 cm); Tail, 3 to 5 in (8 to 13 cm)
Weight: 1 to 5 ounces (28 to 142 grams)
Did you know? Although chipmunks hibernate, they do not store fat. Instead they slowly gnaw away at their summer bounty throughout the winter.
Size relative to a tea cup:
Illustration of the animal's relative size

Multimedia

Related Rodent Features

Photo: Kinkajou

Getting the Kinks Out

Meet the reclusive, nocturnal kinkajou in its native habits of Central and South America in this multimedia feature.

Photo: Prairie dogs touching noses

Photo of the Day: The Nose Knows

See young prairie dogs performing what scientists believe is a recognition ritual, touching noses and even occasionally locking teeth.

Photo: Bison

Reefs in a Prairie Sea

Discover the beautiful buttes and endless grasslands of South Dakota's Badlands in this feature.

More Rodents

Map: Locator map for the chipmunk
 Chipmunk range

Special Advertising Sections

Photo: Pur water bottles

Interactive Quiz

Test your knowledge! See how much you know about the world's water resources.

Photo: Sand dunes

Professional Techniques

Learn tips from a NatGeo photographer to snap great photos.

Mammals Right Rail

Get the Latest Headlines

Photo: Grizzly bears

Make us your online news source.

Get Mammal Pictures

Photo: Lion yawning

Get your daily dose of photos.

For Kids!

Photo: A cartoon dog

It's no stretch to find fun facts on our Kids site!

Dog Whisperer DVDs & Books

Photo: Dog Whisperer DVD cover

Be a pack leader. Check out our newest Dog Whisperer DVDs and books.

Six Degrees Book and DVD

Image: Six Degrees DVD and book

Get an eye-opening warning of the dangers of climate change, one degree at a time.