U.S. Most Endangered Mammal Back From Brink of Extinction

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo

davo

Aimara
MFK Member
Jan 9, 2006
17,544
43
132
England
The black-footed ferret, North America's most endangered mammal, has made a remarkable recovery from the brink of extinction, according to a new study.

A key population of the sleek-bodied predator in Shirley Basin, Wyoming, grew from a low of five in 1997 to more than 220 in 2006, the research found.

The increase marks a rapid rise from a decade ago, when disease nearly decimated the ferrets in Shirley Basin, Wyoming's only recovery site for the animal.

Scientists measured the population by scouring thousands of acres at night using high-powered spotlights.

"We only were able to survey about 14 percent of the total [150,000-acre/60,700-hectare] habitat, so there's a chance that even more ferrets are out there than we documented," said Martin Grenier, a biologist for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department who led the study.

The researchers believe more than 400 ferrets may exist.

If their suspicions are correct, Shirley Basin would be home to the largest ferret colony in the United States, a distinction previously held by South Dakota's Conata Basin (see map of the United States).

The findings are published in tomorrow's issue of the journal Science.

more http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/08/070809-ferrets.html
 
well considering a "key population" was considered 5.... mind you that doesn't sound like its the beginning of strong genetics lol.
 
davo;1058542; said:
well considering a "key population" was considered 5.... mind you that doesn't sound like its the beginning of strong genetics lol.
can't really ***** at this point and time crappy genetics is better than extinct
 
Wouldn't they all be really inbred if they had just started out with a population of 5 ferrets? Hopefully there were more than just 5 ferrets to start with and the people just missed them, and hopefully more un-related ferrets have moved into the area since.

However i find the dramatically large rise in population suspicious...Either there were more ferrets than what people realised there were to begin with, or the peoples methods of counting the ferret population isn't that accurate etc...
 
MonsterFishKeepers.com