The Black-Footed Ferrets History

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The Black-Footed Ferrets Live

Black footed ferrets live on large prairie dog colonies they are small predators. Which are nocturnal, sleep in prairie dog burrows and during the night they hunt prairie dogs. They are the only native species from North America. The closest relatives to the Black-footed ferret are polecats.

The Black-footed ferrets have a almost symbiotic relationship with the prairie dogs. The prairie dog was their primary source of food for over thousands of years. The black-footed ferrets first appearance is uncertain, but it is speculated by scientists that they probably have been present for at least 100,000 years in North America.

Once in the tens of thousands, Black-footed ferrets enhabitated large colonies of prairie dog throughout the Plains 12 of the states, 2 Canadian provinces, and possibly portions of northern Mexico. The black-footed ferret range covered the ranges of three different prairie dog species: the black-tailed, white-tailed and Gunnison's prairie dogs. I guess this could classified as chicken, beef or pork I had to lighten this article up somehow.

Due to Humans population of a widespread area where their lived, all three of these species of prairie dogs are now just a fraction of what they once were, this had a drmatic effect on the ferret habitat. Routinely Prairie dogs are poisoned on both private and public lands (taxpayers often foot the bill) they are also used for target practice combined this caused the decline of all three species of prairie dog. Although many people believe that livestock injured stepping into prairie dog holes this is untrue. Prairie dogs eat grass that could be eaten by livestock this aggravates many ranchers dislike.

Exotic diseases in the 1900's and widespread destruction of the prairie dog colonies brought black-footed ferrets close to extinction. By the 1960s, the only known population was a small colony in southwestern South Dakota. The only remaining colony in southwest South Dakota disappeared in 1974 for reasons unknown. Unfortunately the black-footed ferrets species was declared extinct but amazingly the black-footed ferrets were rediscovered in 1981 on prairie dog colonies near Meeteetse, Wyoming and offering a ray of hope for the black-footed ferrets. Four years later Tragedy would strike, a disease nearly killed all of the Meeteetse ferret population. In 1985-1987 the last remaining 18 ferrets were taken into captivity in an effort to save the species.

Successful in captive-breeding program initiated in 1987 that still continues today. Federal, state, tribal agencies, private landowners, conservation groups and the North American zoo community have been actively reintroducing these captive-bred ferrets into the wild since 1991. This started in Shirley Basin, Wyoming, reintroduction efforts have grown and now include sites in Montana, South Dakota, Arizona, Colorado, Utah, Chihuahua, and Mexico.

It will take a while but biologist are hoping by 2010 to have enough ferrets introduced back into the wild remove this species from the endangered list to the threatened status. But to succeed it will take a lot of land and many more introduction sites. As of a year ago there were as many as 750 ferrets in 15 locations across the plainsand 250 in captivity. Now the job is to restore there prey. This would bring back one of the most if not thee most endangered mammals ever.

The Black-Footed Ferret Territory

Picture And Information From Defenders of Wildlife Website

Mustela nigripes

The endangered black-footed ferret is endangered and a member of the weasel family. Different from the domestic ferret the Black-Footed ferret is the only ferret native to North America, and has a tan body, a black mask with black legs and feet and a black tip on the tail. It legs are short and has large front paws and claws which are developed for digging. As a carnivore it has a strong jaw and teeth with a large skull.

· Height 6 inches
· Length 18-24 inches (including a 5-6 inch tail)
· Weight 1.5-2.5 lbs; males slightly larger than females
· Lifespan 3-4 years in the wild; 8-9 years in captivity

Diet
Their primary food source - prairie dogs are 90% of a their diet. A ferret may eat over 1 prairie dogs every 3.33 days.

They are also known to eat ground squirrels, small rodents, rabbits and birds some owners even hunt with their domestic ferret
Population

Black-footed ferrets once numbering in the tens of thousands, now only have about 1,600 which is up from the mier 18 that were left after disease and loss of natural food source. They have been reintroduced to locations in Wyoming, South Dakota, Montana, Arizona, Colorado, Utah, Kansas and Chihuahua, Mexico (2008).
Behavior

Black-footed ferrets spend about 90% of their time underground; they eat, sleep and raise their young in prairie dog burrows. They are nocturnal mammals hunting prairie dogs by night.

· Reproduction Mating Season March-April.
· Gestation 41-43 days. Kits are born in May-June.
· Litter size 3-4 kits average; ranges from 1-7 kits.

Kits are born and stay below ground until they are about 2 months old they are born blind and helpless. At two month the jills begins to take her kits on hunting excursions and also separates the kits into different prairie dog burrows. Completely independent by October, the young will find their own territories.

Special thanks to:
http://www.defenders.org/wildlife_and_habitat/wildlife/black-footed_ferret.php

Stay Clean and Go Green

Green Tip of the Day

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Brandon

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Our story

Hi I am Brandon Caster,

My story starts around ten years ago. That is when I received my first ferret, Blu. From there it was all over, see I adore kitten but unfortunately kittens grow to become cats. Well, I am not a cat person (except Siamese they are cool). I tell you what, if you get a ferret they are like kittens for the 6-8 hours they are awake and they are better mousers then cats. I don't know if you can tell but I really dig ferrets!

This is what led me too setting up this amazing web site. If you are one of my friends you know how I feel about my ferrets. Well, I took my love of ferrets to the next level. You guys haven't seen me much in the last gees I guess it's been around four-month and I apologize but this is why. I spent all of my spare time writing this e-book it is called Ferret Care Made Easy. Which is also the name of the web site. I have loaded it with all kinds of interesting articles, and we are even giving away a free email Mini-Course on Ferrets Care Made Easy. If you don't want to spend the $18.77 don't, that is fine. But I do suggest you sign up for the Mini-Course anyway, did I mention it is free. I am a ferret enthusiast and did this for the coolest pet around, here is a bit of trivia for you, ferrets are the third most popular pet in the United States. Anyway, the only reason I charge the $18.77 is to help recoup the money I paid out for a researcher that helped with the e-Book.

Brandon Caster
Author: Ferret Care Made Easy
---> www.ferretcaremadeeasy.com <---

More Great Stuff On Black-Footed Ferrets

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This Is a cool Informative Video On The Repopulation Of The Black-Footed Ferret

The Black-Footed Ferret Back From Near Extinction

It is hard to believe that at one point there were only 18 of these creatures left on the planet. Thanks to the hard work of many, although still endangered, they should make a slow but wonderful recovery
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I love my family member

Do you have no time during the day to take care of a pet? Do you hate the thought of taking a dog for a walk, and the walk dosen't bother you it's being draged around the block that hurts. Try walking a ferret simple and easy.

Great Black-Footed Ferret

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thought you might need these

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Wikipedia was messing up the picture

So this is a wiki article

The Black-footed Ferret (Mustela nigripes) is a small carnivorous North American prairie animal mammal closely related to the Steppe Polecat also known as Giant Mouse from Russia, and a member of the diverse family Mustelidae which also includes weasels, mink, polecats, martens, otters, and badgers. It should not be confused with the domesticated ferret.

The Black-footed Ferret is an endangered mammal in North America, according to the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). They became extirpated in the wild in Canada in 1937, and were classified as endangered in the U.S. in 1967. The last known wild population was taken into captivity in 1985, a few years after its accidental discovery in Meeteetse, Wyoming. Release of captive animals has successfully re-introduced the species to parts of its former habitat, and currently these populations have made what has been called an "astonishing comeback".

Contents

1 Physical description
2 Ecology and behavior
3 Conservation status
4 References
5 External links

Physical description

Black-footed Ferrets are about 45 cm (18 in) long, with a furry 15-cm (6 in) tail, and they weigh roughly 1 kg (2 lbs). Like most members of the family, they are very low to the ground with an elongated body and very short legs. Their fur is white at the base but darkens at the tips, making them appear yellowish-brown overall, with black feet that start at the hip a black tail-tip, and a distinctive black face mask. These blend in well with the prairie ecosystem in which they live.
[edit]Ecology and behavior

They are nocturnal hunters that require a plentiful supply of prairie dogs for prey. Though they will also eat other small mammals, birds, and insects, a single Black-footed ferret eats about 100 prarie dogs a year and cannot survive without access to large colonies of them. Typically a prairie dog colony 125 acres (50 ha) in size will provide a sufficiently stable prey population for one adult ferret. The ferrets are mainly dependent on the prairie dogs for their survival, and even shelter in prairie dog burrows during the day.Sometimes ferrets eat small animals like mice. Ferret mating seasons last from March-April. Gestation of the kits commonly lasts 41-43 days. The number of kits born ranges from 1 to 7, but most commonly only 3-4 are born.

Conservation status

The loss of their prairie grassland habitat, the drastic reduction of prairie dog numbers (through both habitat loss and poisoning), and the effects of canine distemper and sylvatic plague (similar to bubonic plague) have all contributed to the near-extinction of the species during the 19th and 20th centuries. Even before their numbers declined, Black-footed Ferrets were rarely seen: they weren't officially recognized as a species by scientists until 1851, following publication of a book by naturalist John James Audubon and Rev. John Bachman. Even then, their existence was questioned since no other Black-footed Ferrets were reported for over twenty years.

Black-footed ferret kits
In 1981, a very small population of about 130 animals was discovered near Meeteetse, Wyoming. Soon after discovery, the population began a rapid decline due to disease. By 1986, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department led a cooperative program to capture the 18 remaining animals and begin an intensive captive breeding program. At that time, the entire world population amounted to about 50 individuals in captivity.

US federal and state agencies in cooperation with private landowners, conservation groups, Native Americans, and North American zoos, have been actively reintroducing ferrets back into the wild since 1991. Beginning in Wyoming, reintroduction efforts have since expanded to sites in Montana, South Dakota, Arizona, Utah, Colorado and Chihuahua, Mexico. The Toronto Zoo has bred hundreds, most of which were released into the wild. Several episodes of Zoo Diaries show aspects of the tightly controlled breeding. Proposed reintroduction sites have been identified in Canada. However, in May 2000, the Canadian Species at Risk Act listed the black-footed ferret as being an extirpated species in Canada.

Ferret in the wild, July 2008

As of 2007, the total wild population of black-footed ferrets was well over 750 individuals (plus 250 in captivity) in the US. In 2008, the IUCN classified the species as globally endangered, a substantial improvement since the 1996-assessment when it was considered extinct in the wild, since at that time the species was indeed only surviving in captivity (Mustelid Specialist Group, 1996). The Black-footed Ferret is listed as "Endangered" under the Endangered Species Act since September 20, 2005. An April 2006 report in The New York Times puts South Dakota's Conata Basin population at around 250. Arizona's Aubrey Valley population is well over 100 and they have started a second reintroduction site using around 50 animals. An August 2007 report by Wyoming researchers in the journal Science counted a population of 223 in one area of the state (the original number of reintroduced ferrets, most of which died, was 228), and an annual growth rate of 35% from 2003-2006 was estimated. This rate of recovery is much faster than for many endangered species, and the ferret seems to have prevailed over the previous problems of disease and prey shortage that hampered its improvement.

The recovery plan calls for the establishment of ten or more separate, self-sustaining wild populations. Biologists hope to have 1500 Black-footed Ferrets established in the wild by 2010, with at least 30 breeding adults in each population. Meeting this objective would allow the conservation status of the species to be downgraded to threatened

Awesome toys

Just some more great ferret stuf
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Ferrets Are From The Weasle Family?

I never would have thought that

I think the people who don't know and just assume that they are rodents. They never would even think of them being in the weasle family. Where as a ferret lover (like Me) thinks everyone should know this. There for I can't really hold it against them, although I do let the truth be known. So don't get mad just educate those who don't know. About this and other things that I find intersting about ferrets. My other tid-bit I talk about is this that unlike the pet ferrets, the black-footed ferrets feed on small rodents, rabbits, and the prairie dogs. This kinda trips them out, they think that ferrets should eat carrots and lettuce

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With The Green Tip Of The Day

Black-footed ferrets will pose for the camera ... lol 

Okay these are some great flickr pics

They rotate I have no control over them though and can not control there greatness

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Save The Black footed Ferrets Natutral Habitat

Donate $1, $5, $10, $20 or more

Ferrets Unlimited is a non-profit, no kill ferret shelter in Cleveland, Ohio.

Ferrets get a Halfway House

This has helped with their re-introduction of the Black Footed ferret into its natural habitat. This is a well-produced mini documentary. It is a little over 8 minutes long so if you have a few minutes take a look
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How do you like my lens so far?

Let me know your comments on this page leave me some feed back I plan on adding some more articles.

Black-Footed Ferret labled Extinct

------------------------------------------People ask me Brandon why The Black-Footed Ferret? I always reply why not, they were almost exterminated and actually were prematurely listed as extinct.

Great Treats for your fuzy

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Reader Feedback

  • ElizabethJeanAllen May 28, 2009 @ 7:29 pm | delete
    Very informative!
    Thanks for sharing
    Lizzy
  • ineedahouse5 May 25, 2009 @ 3:00 am | delete
    Wow, nice lens and articles. It is amazing how they have come back from 18 total
  • joe slack May 23, 2009 @ 12:44 pm | delete
    this lens is very informative and i like the way it was made the video and pictures are good good job.
  • dmongking May 23, 2009 @ 12:49 am | delete
    Great page... I didn't actually know that ferrets can be great pets until I now! :) funny huh? Well, I think it's because the country where I am from will not be a good place to raise ferrets.. Too bad!

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eagleassets

Hi Brandon Caster here,
My story starts around ten years ago. That is when I received my first ferret, Blu. From there it was all over, see I adore k...
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