The Denver Post

More endangered ferrets are being born in the wild

- By Judith Kohler

Efforts to rebuild the population of North America’s most endangered mammal are gaining traction right on Denver’s doorstep.

A crew of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologists, other employees and seasonal workers so far have found 16 black-footed ferret kits — babies — during nightly searches this week at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge in Commerce City.

The crew will go out again next week in the early morning with spotlights to count the nocturnal animals, which prey on prairie dogs and also use burrows dug by prairie dogs. Since captive-bred ferrets were first released at the refuge in 2015, nearly 50 kits have been born in the wild. The total of newborns last year was 30.

At least 60 ferrets are roaming on about 3,000 acres of the 15,000-acre wildlife refuge.

“We feel like the whole reintroduc­tion at refuge is going better than we expected. We were given the expected percentage­s of survival and we’ve exceeded that,” said Dave Lucas, project leader at the wildlife refuge.

It’s going so well that the Arsenal might ship some of its ferrets to a site in Arizona to get more of the animals out on the landscape, improving chances that the creature once thought extinct makes a comeback. Lucas and the others will venture out again after dark in September to wrangle the wily weasels, give them follow-up vaccinatio­ns and possibly get some ready to go to a new home.

The lithe, little ferret was thought to be extinct until a ranch dog named Shep carried a dead ferret to his home near Meeteetse, Wyo., in 1981. Wildlife biologists found a small colony of live ferrets in the area and launched a captivebre­eding and restoratio­n program. Hundreds of the animals are living in the wild. They have been released at nearly 30 sites in eight states and in Canada and Mexico, according to the National Black-Footed Ferret Conservati­on Center in Fort Collins.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has released the ferrets on public lands and is working with private landowners, including a ranch family in the Pueblo area, to expand the available areas.

While the black-footed ferret captive breeding program has been successful, keeping the animals alive once they’re released has been a much tougher challenge. One of the biggest problems is sylvatic plague, known as the bubonic plague in humans. Both prairie dogs, the ferrets’ main prey, and ferrets are highly susceptibl­e to the disease, carried by infected fleas. An outbreak can ravage prairie dog colonies and then wipe out ferrets.

Biologists are working on vaccines for prairie dogs, including peanut butterflav­ored pellets.

At the Arsenal, the crews who capture the ferrets hand them over to a team that vaccinates the animals against the plague, rabies and canine distemper, which is “99.9 percent fatal to ferrets,” Lucas said. In September, the ferrets will get a booster to increase their chances of survival.

Arsenal employees time the ferret inventorie­s so that any newborn ferrets will be old enough to be vaccinated.

“There’s a bit of reservatio­n, hesitation the first night we go out. We haven’t gone out in a year and you wonder if they’re doing well. And then you start seeing the first few and you know they are doing well,” Lucas said. “It’s awesome.”

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