Rare snow-white squirrel spotted in Yukon - Action News
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Rare snow-white squirrel spotted in Yukon

Steve Buyck and Elizabeth Blair were out for a drive near Stewart Crossing, Yukon, this week when they spotted what they thought was a weasel. It was actually a red squirrel completely white.

'It'd be pretty hard to camouflage yourself,' says biologist

'An animal never sits there and poses for you for too long. And so you're really lucky to get that one shot,' said Elizabeth Blair, who spotted this white-coloured squirrel near Stewart Crossing, Yukon. (Elizabeth Blair)

Steve Buycksays when he first caught a glimpse of a little bright-white critter, he thought it was a weasel. Then he saw the bushy tail.

"I knew it was a squirrel right away," he said.

He and his wife, Elizabeth Blair, were out for a driveTuesday near Gravel Lake, north of their home in Stewart Crossing, Yukon, when they saw the oddball rodent.

Blair, an amateur photographer, managed to snap a couple of quick photos before the animal disappeared.

"You like to zoom in, but an animal never sits there and poses for you for too long. And so you're really lucky to get that one shot," Blair said.

"It was really quick. It just took right off," said Buyck.

Neither of them had ever seen anything like it. When they started showing their photos around, people told them they ought to go buy a lottery ticket.

Can you see it? Blair was able to snap just two pictures of the critter before it zipped away. (Elizabeth Blair)

Blair, who is from the White River First Nation, said her aunt told her a white squirrel would be called dlak degayin Northern Tutchone.

"Steve has been in the bush all his life. He's never encountered one and although we see stuff on TV, I've never thought to ask the elders about it," Blair said.

Not an albino

Meghan Larivee, a wildlife harvest specialist with the Yukon government, agrees it is a rare sight.

"It's pretty cool, and it's a really neat photo to see," she said.

She figures it's a red squirrel common in Yukon with a leucistic gene.Leucismresults ina partial loss of pigmentation. The squirrel's dark-coloured eye indicates that it's not an albino.

"[With leucism],the skin is a whiter colour, the hair is a whiter colour, but it doesn't actually affect the eyes. Whereas in albinism, it's a complete loss of pigmentation,and that's why you get that kind of pinky colour in the eye," she said.

Larivee says leucismdoesn't have any known health risks associated with it, but it would make the critter an easy target for, say, a hungry goshawk especially this time of year, when squirrels are up in the treetops, hoarding cones.

"So you can imagine a little white squirrel as a flagalmost, moving around. It'd be pretty hard to camouflage yourself."

Buyck says he's glad he saw it while he could.

"It's just cool to see a squirrel and, you know, just to kind of record it and make sure that people do know about it," he said.

"Hopefully there won't be awhole bunch of people running aroundGravel Lake,looking around for this one."

Written by Paul Tukker, with files from Dave White