Work at the National Black-Footed Ferret Conservation Center in northern Colorado is helping save one of the most endangered ...
The black-footed ferret could also be called the black-eyed ferret because of the distinctive “stick-em up” mask that adorns its face. The tan ferrets also have black markings on their feet ...
Work at the National Black-Footed Ferret Conservation Center in northern Colorado is helping save one of the most endangered species.
Cutting-edge technology designed to track and understand the secret, underground lives and behavior of the elusive black-footed ferret has been deployed in the wild for the first time. Believed to be ...
Wildlife conservationists are celebrating a big milestone reached by a little black-footed ferret and her offspring, born at ...
Picture of black-hooded ferret running in the snow. Image rights belong to Charles G. Summers, Jr. Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to ...
The black-footed ferret could be coming back to New Mexico. The animal is the country's only native ferret species and historically lived in parts of the southwest including New Mexico and Arizona.
Wildlife biologists are sharing "a lot of good news coming out of ferret world" in the fight to save North America's critically endangered black-footed ferret. In Pueblo County, there's evidence of at ...
Presently, ferrets survive at 14 of those sites. Currently there are 340 black-footed ferrets in the wild and 301 in captivity. For decades the Center has been defending this species from threats like ...
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