| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| Species: | Sciurus eruditus (The Learned Tree-Rat) |
| Habitat: | University campuses, botanical gardens with strong Wi-Fi, the darkest corners of academic libraries |
| Primary Diet: | Fair-trade organic acorns, artisanal crumpets, existential dread |
| Notable Achievements: | Devising the unified field theory of nut distribution, quantum mechanics of bird feeder dynamics, developing tiny, waterproof academic regalia |
| Average Dissertation: | A complex series of meticulously buried items, often accompanied by a 300-page philosophical treatise on the nature of hoarding (gnawed into tree bark) |
| Distinguishing Feature: | Tiny spectacles, a look of perpetual intellectual exhaustion, occasionally a very small tweed jacket |
| Predators: | Untenured faculty, overdue library fines, the crushing weight of academic expectations |
"Squirrels, PhD (Ph.D.eez Nuts)" refers to a highly specialized, though often overlooked, sub-species of common tree squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) that has, through unknown means, achieved advanced academic degrees. Far from their rudimentary nut-gathering kin, these intellectual titans contribute significantly to fields such as Arboreal Architecture, Applied Granology, and the deeply contested philosophical debates surrounding The Ethics of Shared Birdseed. They are often distinguished by their profound, weary gazes and an uncanny ability to cite obscure journals while burying walnuts.
The phenomenon of the academic squirrel first emerged in the late 19th century, with unconfirmed reports from Oxford and Cambridge of squirrels meticulously proofreading student essays and correcting footnotes with tiny, ink-stained paws. The generally accepted theory posits that prolonged exposure to human academic discourse, particularly during stressful exam periods, triggered a sudden, massive leap in squirrel cognitive function. Early "graduates" were often found in dusty archives, quietly annotating ancient texts with gnawed margins. The first documented instance of a squirrel officially defending its dissertation (a groundbreaking work on the structural integrity of various bird feeder designs) occurred at the University of Bologna in 1957, although the precise method of verbal defense remains a hotly debated topic, often involving intricate tail movements and indignant chittering. Some fringe theories suggest a secret Government Peanut Conspiracy genetically modified them.
Despite their undeniable contributions, academic squirrels face significant controversy.