{"id":497,"date":"2025-02-26T20:05:00","date_gmt":"2025-02-26T21:05:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/audiomateria.com\/?p=497"},"modified":"2025-02-28T19:14:14","modified_gmt":"2025-02-28T19:14:14","slug":"this-animal-is-on-the-edge-of-extinction-trump-just-fired-the-people-trying-to-save-it","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/audiomateria.com\/index.php\/2025\/02\/26\/this-animal-is-on-the-edge-of-extinction-trump-just-fired-the-people-trying-to-save-it\/","title":{"rendered":"This animal is on the edge of extinction. Trump just fired the people trying to save it."},"content":{"rendered":"
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Keepers at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Virginia prepare to send black-footed ferrets to the Fish and Wildlife Service\u2019s National Black-Footed Ferret Conservation Center in 2011. | Cliff Owen\/Associated Press<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

In the open grasslands of South Dakota, not far from the dramatic rock formations of Badlands National Park, lives one of the continent\u2019s cutest, fiercest, and rarest animals: the black-footed ferret. <\/p>\n

Black-footed ferrets, weasel-like animals with distinctive dark bands around their eyes and black feet, are ruthless little hunters. At night, they dive into burrows in pursuit of juicy prairie dogs, their primary food source. Without prairie dogs, these ferrets would not survive. <\/p>\n

From as many as a million ferrets in the 19th century, today there are only a few hundred of these furry predators roaming the Great Plains, the only place on Earth they live. That there are any black-footed ferrets at all is something of a miracle. In the 1970s, scientists thought black-footed ferrets were extinct, but a twist of fate, and an unprecedented breeding effort led by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, brought this critical piece of the prairie ecosystem back from the brink. <\/p>\n

This success \u2014 one of the greatest of any wildlife revival program \u2014 is now at risk. <\/p>\n

Earlier this month, as part of the Trump administration\u2019s purge of federal employees, Tina Jackson, the head of the FWS\u2019s entire black-footed ferret recovery program, was fired. FWS also fired two other permanent staffers who were involved in keeping captive ferrets alive at the National Black-Footed Ferret Conservation Center, the nation\u2019s main breeding facility. Those cuts amount to more than a quarter of the center\u2019s permanent, non-administrative staff, Jackson said. The center also has a vacant biologist position that Jackson said may not be filled. Additionally, FWS fired a staff biologist who led black-footed ferret conservation in Wyoming.<\/p>\n

The staff changes imperil the tenuous success of ferret recovery and the very existence of these animals, several experts including current and former Fish and Wildlife Service employees told Vox. Critical funding has been restricted, too: Two organizations that rely on federal money for ferret conservation on public and tribal lands told Vox that funds for this work were frozen.<\/p>\n

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Experts who have spent decades trying to save black-footed ferrets say these impacts threaten the broader prairie ecosystem. Efforts to conserve ferrets and their prey sustain this important American landscape, a home for insects that pollinate our crops, plants that store carbon in their long roots, and streams that provide us with fresh water. <\/p>\n

\u201cRight now, the recovery of the species is dependent on captive populations,\u201d said Jackson, who started her role with the Fish and Wildlife Service last spring, after more than two decades with Colorado\u2019s state wildlife agency. \u201cWithout people to take care of those captive populations, we will potentially lose the species. The hardest thing is to think about them blinking out on our watch.\u201d <\/p>\n

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Send us a tip<\/h2>\n

Do you have information to share about the US Fish and Wildlife Service or other government agencies? Reach out to Benji Jones at benji.jones@vox.com<\/a>, on Signal at benji.90, or at benjijones@protonmail.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

Job cuts impair finely tuned ferret breeding<\/strong><\/h2>\n

Few species demonstrate the power of conservation quite like the black-footed ferret. In the late 1800s, there were as many as a million<\/a> living among prairie dog colonies in the plains, as far north as Saskatchewan and as far south as northern Mexico. But in the 1900s, extermination programs bankrolled by the US and state governments started killing off prairie dogs, which were viewed as pests that competed with cattle for forage. <\/p>\n

These government-sanctioned exterminations collapsed prairie dog populations, in turn devastating black-footed ferrets. Without prairie dogs, ferrets had nothing to eat. Around the same time, fleas began spreading plague \u2014 yes, plague \u2014 in the Great Plains. That killed even more prairie dogs and ferrets, both of which are highly susceptible to the disease. <\/p>\n

By the late \u201970s, ferrets had vanished, and scientists considered them extinct. <\/p>\n

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But in the fall of 1981, a dog named Shep changed everything. Shep, a ranch dog in Wyoming, brought a carcass of a small mammal to his home near the northern town of Meeteetse. His owners didn\u2019t recognize the animal and took it to a taxidermist, who identified it as a black-footed ferret. The carcass ultimately led wildlife officials to a nearby ferret colony \u2014 the last known one on Earth, home to about 130 animals. <\/p>\n

With that, the extinct black-footed ferret was officially brought back from the dead. But just a few years after Shep\u2019s discovery, all but 18 ferrets had died from plague and other threats. So with the specter of extinction looming once again, wildlife officials took them out of the wild and into captivity. <\/p>\n

With those 18 ferrets, the Fish and Wildlife Service, along with Wyoming state wildlife officials, launched a captive breeding and recovery program in the late \u201980s, determined to keep the species alive. The goal of the program, among the first of its kind in the country, was to breed ferrets under human care before eventually releasing them back into the prairie landscape. In a way, it was the reverse of the government interventions that had initially helped push the ferrets toward extinction.<\/p>\n

The bedrock of this program is the Black-Footed Ferret Conservation Center near Fort Collins, Colorado. <\/p>\n

The center breeds most of the black-footed ferrets in the US today. It\u2019s a painstaking process that involves carefully pairing individuals to make sure their babies will boost the population\u2019s limited genetic diversity. (Officials use a genetic registry called a \u201cstudbook\u201d to figure out the best pairs.) Remarkably, the center has also led groundbreaking efforts to clone black-footed ferrets that died decades ago. The cloning program, which is the first of its kind, is another way to inject new genetic diversity into the population to ensure its survival.  <\/p>\n

The ferret center is also critical for the survival of ferrets once they\u2019ve been released. Researchers condition the animals for life in the wild \u2014 running them through what is essentially a predator bootcamp. Workers put the ferrets in outdoor pens with burrows and introduce live prairie dogs, typically once a week, for them to kill. After about 30 days, ferrets that have passed bootcamp muster get the okay to be released into the wild.<\/p>\n