Getting to Know North America’s Rarest Mammal: The Black-footed Ferret (2024)

Fun facts about an endangered species success story

  • Roger Di Silvestro
  • Feb 10, 2011

Getting to Know North America’s Rarest Mammal: The Black-footed Ferret (1)
The black-footed ferret is North America’s rarest mammal and one of its most elusive, a small predator that feeds on animals nearly its own size. Found nowhere else in the world, the species is an American original. Here are 13 ferret facts you may want to know.

1. The black-footed ferret (BFF), a member of the weasel family (which includes otters and wolverines), grows up to 30 inches long, including its tail, and weighs up to two-and-a-half pounds.

2. Ferrets probably got their start 3 or 4 million years ago in Europe and came to North America at least 100,000 years ago via the Bering Land Bridge, which connected Siberia to Alaska during the most recent ice age.

3. Once established in North America, the BFF ranged from the prairies of southern Canada to Texas (perhaps even into northern Mexico), and from the Rockies east into the Dakotas, living in a dozen states and two Canadian provinces.

4. In North America, the ferret became a specialist in preying on prairie dogs. It lives in prairie dog towns,coming out at night to hunt. A family of four can pack away an average of some 760 prairie dogs yearly.
Getting to Know North America’s Rarest Mammal: The Black-footed Ferret (2)

5. The grasslands favored by North America’s three prairie dog species once covered 100 million of the 500 million acres of western rangeland.

6. Travelers in the 19th-century West passed through prairie dogs up to 50 miles wide and 250 miles long.

7. Agriculture and poisoning of prairie dogs (because settlers saw them as competitors for livestock forage and were feared their burrows as a source of broken legs for cattle and horses) have reduced occupied ferret range to less than 2 percent of its their original extent. Today, the BFF is one of the world’s most endangered mammals.

8. Black-footed ferrets have always been rare for as long as they’ve been known. Between 1851, when the species was first recognized by naturalists, and 1896, only six specimens (all skins) accounted for everything known about the animals.

9. BFFs have been declared extinct several times in the recent past, including in the 1960s and 1970s.

10. In 1981, on a ranch near the town of Meetee*tse in northwest Wyoming, a dog named Shep came home carrying a dead ferret. This discovery caused quite a to-do among biologists, who had suspect the species was extinct. Researchers soon located a population of about 130 ferrets near Meetee*tse. Eighteen of these ferrets were taken into captivity between 1985 and 1987 for captive breeding.

11.More than 7,000 young—called kits—have been born in captivity since 1985, including 310 in 2010, as of August 2 (most are born in May). Since 1987, more than 2,300 kits have been released into the wild.

12. According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the captive breeding program keeps a core population of at least 240 adults (90 males, 150 females; the current total is around 290) housed in six locations across the United States and Canada.

13. Since 2000, the Lakota people of the 2.8-million-acre Cheyenne River Reservation, working with NWF, have released 201 captive-bred ferrets in the reservation’s prairie dog colonies. These ferrets have produced nearly 600 young, and the population is now self-sustaining. The Cheyenne River Reservation harbors about 7 percent of remaining U.S. prairie dog habitat.

RELATED RESOURCES

More information on black-footed ferrets
Hear a ferret chatter
Find black-footed ferrets in their native home in 10 western states.
Have fun with ferrets
NWF and the Cheyenne River Reservation Ferret-Release Program
Another NWF project helping black-footed ferrets and other prairie life

Getting to Know North America’s Rarest Mammal: The Black-footed Ferret (2024)

FAQs

Getting to Know North America’s Rarest Mammal: The Black-footed Ferret? ›

Black-footed ferrets are one of the most endangered mammals in North America and are the only ferret species native to the continent. Their recovery in the wild signifies the health of the grassland ecosystem which they depend on to survive.

How many black-footed ferrets are left in 2024? ›

Around 350 black-footed ferrets are left in the wild. Black-footed ferrets spend about 90 percent of their time underground, where they eat, sleep and raise their young in prairie dog burrows.

Why are the black-footed ferrets becoming rare? ›

Black-footed Ferrets are endangered because much of the shortgrass prairie habitat on which the ferrets depend has been plowed for crops. Prairie dogs, which are the ferrets' main food, have been reduced in number due to habitat loss and disease.

What is the rarest mammal in North America? ›

The black-footed ferret is North America's rarest mammal and one of its most elusive, a small predator that feeds on animals nearly its own size. Found nowhere else in the world, the species is an American original.

What is the lifespan of a black-footed ferret? ›

Black-footed ferret females and males in the wild live to 5 and 4 years of age, respectively.

How did black-footed ferrets almost go extinct? ›

The black-footed ferret diet is 90% prairie dog. In fact, a single ferret can eat over 100 prairie dogs in a year! The near-eradication of prairie dogs almost wiped out the ferrets. Then, in 1981, a rancher's dog in Wyoming brought home a ferret it had killed.

What is the rarest type of ferret? ›

LARIMER COUNTY, Colo. (KDVR) — The black-footed ferret is widely regarded as the most endangered animal in North America, with fewer than 500 in the wild today.

Can black-footed ferrets be pets? ›

Ferrets aren't allowed in California as pets.

How many babies do black-footed ferrets have? ›

Black-Footed Ferrets have a gestation period of 41-43 days and commonly produce litters of around 3-5 kits, but extreme litter sizes can range from 1-7 kits.

Can you adopt a black-footed ferret? ›

Adopt a Black-footed Ferret

Make a symbolic black-footed ferret adoption to help save some of the world's most endangered animals from extinction and support WWF's conservation efforts.

What would happen if there were no black-footed ferrets? ›

Without black-footed ferret conservation efforts, prairie dogs and other associated species such as burrowing owls, swift fox, mountain plovers, ferruginous hawks, prairie rattlesnakes, and many others could easily succumb to current threats.

How much are black-footed ferrets are left? ›

There are approximately 300 Black-footed ferrets living in the wild today. The many reintroductions represent a major success for the BFFRIT, which is working toward a goal of 3,000 wild Black-footed ferrets.

What is the top 1 rarest animal in the world? ›

The vaquita is the rarest animal in the world and the rarest marine mammal. These porpoises swim in the Gulf of California and were only discovered in 1958, according to the World Wildlife Fund.

What is the rarest mammal ever? ›

The vaquita is the world's rarest marine mammal. The vaquita (Phocoena sinus) is a porpoise from the Gulf of California, a strip of water that separates Baja California from mainland Mexico.

What are fun facts about black-footed ferrets? ›

Black-footed ferrets are long, slender animals, enabling them to easily move through prairie dog burrows. They weigh between 1.5 and 2.5 pounds and can grow up to 24 inches long. A strip of dark fur across their eyes gives them the appearance of wearing a mask.

Are black-footed ferrets making a comeback? ›

One of the first on the endangered list the black footed ferret, North America's rarest animal. It was once thought to be extinct. But thanks to the dedicated work of conservationists, it's making its way back.

When was the black-footed ferret last seen? ›

Black-Footed Ferrets were listed as endangered in 1967, and by 1974, the last known wild ferret population (located in Mellett County, SD, just 81 miles away from Badlands National Park) vanished. Just four years later in 1980, the last captive Black-Footed Ferret died, and the species was thought to be extinct… …

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