Las Vegas Review-Journal

Two more endangered ferrets cloned

Remains frozen since ’80s adds to diversity

- By Mead Gruver

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Two more black-footed ferrets have been cloned from the genes used for the first clone of an endangered species in the U.S., bringing to three the number of slinky predators geneticall­y identical to one of the last such animals found in the wild, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced Wednesday.

Efforts to breed the first clone, a female named Elizabeth Ann born in 2021, have failed, but the recent births of two more cloned females, named Noreen and Antonia, in combinatio­n with a captive breeding program launched in the 1980s, is boosting hopes of diversifyi­ng the endangered species. Genetic diversity can improve a species’ ability to adapt and survive despite disease outbreaks and changing environmen­tal conditions.

Energetic and curious, black-footed ferrets are a nocturnal type of weasel with dark eye markings resembling a robber’s mask. Their prey is prairie dogs, and the ferrets hunt the rodents in often vast burrow colonies on the plains.

Black-footed ferrets are now a conservati­on success story — after being all but wiped out in the wild, thousands of them have been bred in captivity and reintroduc­ed at dozens of sites in the western U.S., Canada and Mexico since the 1990s.

Because they feed exclusivel­y on prairie dogs, they have been victims of farmer and rancher efforts to poison and shoot the land-churning rodents — so much so that they were thought to be extinct, until a ranch dog named Shep brought a dead one home in western Wyoming in 1981. Conservati­onists then managed to capture seven more, and establish a breeding program.

But their gene pool is small — all known black-footed ferrets today are descendant­s of those seven animals — so diversifyi­ng the species is critically important.

Noreen and Antonia, like Elizabeth Ann, are geneticall­y identical to Willa, one of the original seven. Willa’s remains — frozen back in the 1980s and kept at the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance’s Frozen Zoo — could help conservati­on efforts because her genes contain roughly three times more unique variations than are currently found among black-footed ferrets, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service.

 ?? Kika Tuff Revive & Restore ?? A cloned black-footed ferret named Noreen is seen in February in Carr, Colo.
Kika Tuff Revive & Restore A cloned black-footed ferret named Noreen is seen in February in Carr, Colo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States