NPSHistory.com

Copyright, RD Payne
BADLANDS NATIONAL PARK, South Dakota


National Park Service History Electronic Library & Archive

The NPS History Electronic Library & Archive is a portal to electronic publications covering the history of the National Park Service (NPS) and the cultural and natural history of the national parks, monuments, and historic sites of the (U.S.) National Park System. Also included are documents for national monuments managed by other federal agencies, along with a collection of U.S. Forest Service publications.

The information contained in this Website is historical in scope and is not meant as an aid for travel planning; please refer to the official NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Website for current/additional information. While we are an independent endeavor and not affiliated with the National Park Service, we gratefully acknowledge the contributions by park employees and advocates, which has enabled us to create this free digital repository.


view PARK ARCHIVES


New eLibrary Additions
Featured Publications
book cover
cover only

An Exaltation of Parks
John D. Rockefeller Jr.'s Crusade to Save America's Wonderlands
Steve Kemp
(2025)

Fort Bowie Material Culture The Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona No. 31 (Robert M. Herskovitz, 1978)

Historic Structures Report/Ruins Stabilization/Architectural Data, Fort Bowie National Historic Site, Cochise County, Arizona (John Robbins, September 1983)

Vegetation and Flora of Fort Bowie National Historic Site, Arizona NPS Technical Report NPS/WRUA/NRTR-92/43 (Peter L. Warren, Marina S. Hoy and Wilton E. Hoy, March 1992)

Historic Structures Report, Part II on The John G. Wilson Building Sometimes Called Stagecoach Inn (Building #45), Harpers Ferry National Monument: Architectural Data Section (Archie W. Franzen, April 1962)

Cultural Landscape Report, Part II: Janis-Ziegler House (Green Tree Tavern), Ste. Genevieve National Historical Park (Raths, Raths & Johnson with Liz Sargent, September 2025)

Cultural Landscape Report: Mary McLeod Bethune Council House (Meg Frisbie, Molly Lester and Faye Messner, October 2023)

Historic Structure Report: Captain Edward Penniman House, Cape Cod National Seashore, Eastham, Massachusetts (Andrea M. Gilmore, 1985)

The Archeology of Cape Cod National Seashore (Francis P. McManamon and Christopher L. Borstel, 1982, 1984 2nd rev. printing)

Historic Structure Report, Architectural Data Section: Fort Jefferson National Monument, Florida (Louis Anderson, April 1988)

Archeological Collections Management at Martin Van Buren National Historic Site, New York Archeological Collections Management Project (ACMP) Series Np. 8 (Maria Angela Capozzi, 1991)

Ranching on the Point Reyes Peninsula: A History of the Dairy and Beef Ranches Within Point Reyes National Seashore, 1834-1992 (D.S. (Dewey) Livingston, July 1993)

A Preliminary Inventory of Spanish Colonial Resources Associated with National Park Service Units and National Historic Landmarks, 1987 (Richard R. Henderson, 1987)

A Sketch of the Life and Voyage of Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo (Francis R. Holland, Jr., extract from The Western Explorer, Vol. 1 No. 1, February 1961)

A Brief Sketch of the Archeology of Santa Cruz Island, California (John A. Hussey, extract from The Western Explorer, Vol. 1 No. 2, August 1961)

A Brief Sketch of the History of Santa Cruz Island, California (John A. Hussey, extract from The Western Explorer, Vol. 1 No. 3, December 1961)

Foundation Document, Blackwell School National Historic Site, Texas (May 2025)

Archeological Investigations at Shiloh Indian Mounds National Historic Landmark (40HR7) 1999-2004: Volume 1 of 2 (David G. Anderson, John E. Cornelison, Jr. and Sarah C. Sherwood, eds., 2013)

Archeological Investigations at Shiloh Indian Mounds National Historic Landmark (40HR7) 1999-2004: Volume 2 of 2 (David G. Anderson, John E. Cornelison, Jr. and Sarah C. Sherwood, eds., 2013)

Cultural Resources in a "Natural" Park: Early Preservation Efforts at Menor's Ferry in Grand Teton National Park (©Elizabeth Engle, 2013)

National Register Amendment: Pine Creek Historic District (Alexandra Fuente-Navarro and R. Brooks Jeffrey, March 19, 2012)

John Day Fossil Beds: A State Park of the Yesterdays (W.A. Langille, May 12, 1948)

Fulfilling Destinies, Sustaining Lives: The Landscape of the Waterpocket Fold — An Ethnographic Overview and Assessment of American Indian Histories and Resource Uses within Capitol Reef National Park, Utah and on Lands Surrounding It (Rosemary Sucec, 2006)

Further Archeological Investigations at Lincoln Home National Historic Site, Springfield, Illinois 1987 Restoration Project Midwest Archeological Center Occasional Studies in Anthropology No. 22 (Vergil E. Noble, 1988)

Locational Reconnaissance at the James A. Garfield National Historic Site Mentor, Lake County, Ohio Midwest Archeological Center Technical Report No. 30 (Alfred M. Lee, 1994)

Archeological Tests at the Hoover Birthplace Cottage (HS-1) and Shovel-Test Survey Along the Route of a New Waterline to the Hoover Library Addition, Herbert Hoover National Historic Site, West Branch, Iowa Midwest Archeological Center Technical Report No. 48 (William J. Hunt, Jr., 1996)

Archeological Inventory at Two Historic Farms at Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area, Bath and Northhampton Townships, Summit County, Ohio, 1994 Midwest Archeological Center Technical Report No. 56 (Jeffrey J. Richner, 1997)

River, Port & Capital: The Architectural and Natural Landmarks of Washington (Connie Foley, 1965)

A Report on the Manufacture and Use of Concrete Shingles in Shenandoah National Park (Edward D. Freeland, Date Unknown)

Eight Squares A Day: The Handmade Cement Shingle (Thomas A. Vitanza, extract from The Roofing Handbook for Historic Buildings, 1999)

Rehabilitating Historic Office Buildings: Two Projects Using Federal Tax Incentives (The Physicians Building, Fresno, California; The Wyandotte Building, Columbus, Ohio) (William G. MacRostie, 1984)

Energy Conserving Features Inherent In Older Homes (John A. Burns, 1982)

Masonry Products for Historic Buildings: Technical Preservation Database (September 1988)

The Window Handbook: Successful Strategies for Rehabilitating Windows in Historic Buildings (Charles E. Fisher, III, ed. 1986)

Plastic-Free National Parks Trashblitz: 2025 (©5GYRES, 2025)

The Integrity of America's National Parks Depends on the Land and Water Conservation Fund (Lisa W. Foderaro, December 2025, ©Trust for Public Land)

National Register of Historic Places: Urban Renewal-era Resources in the United States (Mason Martel, Amanda Loughlin and Elizabeth Rosin, May 2025)

Hempstead House National Monument, CT (proposed) (1940)

Preliminary Wildlife Report with Faunal List of the Proposed Mount Holyoke Park Area (1935)

Clinton Schoolhouse National Historic Site, NY (proposed) (1937)

Grover Cleveland National Monument, NJ (proposed) (1913-1937)

NPS National Transit Inventory and Performance Report, 2024 (July 2025)


Rocks of the John Day Valley (Thomas Condon, extract from The Overland Monthly, Vol. 6 No. 5, May 1871)

Unusual success, future uncertainty, and science needs for adaptive management of invasive plants in a US national park (Kyle A. Lima, Jesse S. Wheeler, Judith Hazen Connery, Abraham J. Miller-Rushing and Nicholas A. Fisichelli, extract from Journal of Applied Ecology, Vol. 62 No. 1, January 2025)

Ice Age Floods: Landmarks Left Behind (Date Unknown)

Death at a 19 Million Year-old Waterhole: The Bonebed at Agate Fossil Beds National Monument, Western Nebraska (Robert Hunt, Jr., Museum Notes, University of Nebraska State Museum, No. 83, November 1992)

Preliminary Geographical Survey of the Kongakut-Firth River Area, Alaska-Canada (William G. Carnes, ed., April 1956)

Cave Biota of Great Basin National Park, White Pine County, Nevada Illinois Natural History Survey Technical Report 2008(25) (Steven J. Taylor, Jean K. Krejca and Michael E. Slay, 2008)

Survey of Native Freshwater Mussel Diversity and Survivorship After Reintroduction in Cub Creek, Homestead National Historical Park: 2020-2024 NPS Science Report SR-2025/365 (Alexis P. Oetterer and Jesse M. Bolli, December 2025)

Vegetation Inventory, Mapping, and Characterization Report, Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument: Volume I, Main Report NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2025/359 (Sarah E. Studd, Jeffrey B. Galvin, Joseph S. Black and J. Andy Hubbard, November 2025)

Vegetation Inventory, Mapping, and Characterization Report, Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument: Volume II, Type Descriptions NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2025/366 (Sarah E. Studd, Jeffrey B. Galvin, Joseph S. Black and J. Andy Hubbard, December 2025)

Paleontological Resource Inventory (Public Version): Camp Nelson National Monument NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2025/369 (Emily E. Jackson, Justin S. Tweet and Vincent L. Santucci, December 2025)

A Brief Hydrologic and Geologic Reconnaissance of Pinto Basin, Joshua Tree National Monument, Riverside County, California (Fred Kunkel, 1956)

Coastal Dynamics Monitoring at Padre Island National Seashore, Texas: 2017-2025 Data Summary NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2025/370 (Jeff Bracewell and Jane Carlson, December 2025)

Colorado River Insights, 2025: Dancing With Deadpool (Colorado River Research Group, December 2025)

Ecological Studies of Wolves on Isle Royale: Annual Report 2024-2025 (Sarah R. Hoy, Rolf O. Peterson and Carolyn C. Peterson, April 2025)

Distribution of water chemistry, trace metals, and Chironomidae in coastal freshwater rock pools (Alexander Egan, David R.L. Burge, Mark B. Edlund, Tobin Lafrancois and Leonard C. Ferrington, Jr., extract from Freshwater Science, Vol. 43 Iss. 2, June 2024)

Climate Sensitivities of National Parks in the Rocky Mountains NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2025/368 (Anna L. LoPresti, John Gross and Wylie Carr, December 2025)


Mountain Views/Mountain Views Chronicle (The Newsletter of the Consortium for Integrated Climate Research in Western Mountains, CIRMOUNT) (2007-2024)

Variation in Estimates of Fire Intervals: A Closer Look at Fire History of the Bitterroot National Forest USDA Forest Service Research Report INT-301 (Stephen F. Arno and Terry D. petersen, January 1983)

Archaeological Investigations at Yaquina Head, Central Oregon Coast Oregon BLM Cultural Resource Series No. 1 (Rick Minor, Kathryn Anne Toepel and Ruth Greenspan, June 30, 1987)

Ruins of a World: Chinese Gold Mining at the Mon-Tung Site in the Snake River Canyon Idaho BLM Cultural Resource Series No. 4 (Ronald L. James, John C. Lytle, tech. ed., October 1995)




NPS Reflections



Vincent L. Santucci (NPS photo)


Late Oligocene Biostratigraphy at Badlands National Park
By Vincent L. Santucci

Badlands NP in southwestern South Dakota preserves one of the most complete sequences of fossil mammals. Since Dr. Hiram Prout first described a fossilized titanothere |aw fragment (Prout, 1846), paleontologists have searched extensively the Oligocene sediments. Research in the White River Badlands continues to reveal new information related to the geology and paleontology. Paleontologists working in Badlands' fossil rich sediments have established a comprehensive biochronology based upon fossil mammal assemblages. The stratigraphic sequence includes the basal Chadron Formation, overlain by the Brule Formation and then topped by the Sharps Formation. The Brule is subdivided into two members in South Dakota — the lower Scenic Member and the upper Poleslide Member. The Sharps Formation base is defined by the Rockyford Ash Member. which is widespread throughout southwestern South Dakota.

The lower portion of the Sharps Formation has yielded a significantly less diverse assemblage of fossil vertebrates by comparison to the other stratigraphic zones within the White River Group (MacDonald, 1963: MacDonald. 1970). An abundantly rich mammalian assemblage is known from the stratigraphic zones directly above and below the Lower Sharps. Furthermore, faunal assemblages from the strata above and below the Lower Sharps exhibit distinct taxonomic differences. Thus the rarity of described paleontological material from the Lower Sharps limits biostratgraphic zonation at the Whitneyan/Arikareean Land Mammal Age (LMA) boundary and warrants further investigation of this intermediate zone.

Extensive field surveys of the well exposed portions of the Lower Sharps throughout southwestern South Dakota during the 1985 and 1986 field seasons confirmed a poorly fossiliferous horizon.

A series of channel sandstone units in the Cedar Pass Area of Badlands NP was examined closely during an independent survey. The channel deposits contained an abundance of fossil vertebrate material. Detailed study of these sandstone deposits indicated that the channels had downcut through the Rockyford Ash Member of the Sharps Formation into the Poleslide Member of the Brule Formation. Therefore, the assemblage of fossils contained within the sandstones represent a Lower Sharps fauna.


Figure 1. Lower Sharps channel sandstones downcut into the Poleslide Member of the Brule Formation in the Cedar Pass Area. Badlands NP. (NPS photo)

A paleomagnetic study of the lower portion of the Sharps Formation and the upper portion of the Poleslide Member of the Brule Formation was undertaken in order to further demonstrate a post-Rockyford Ash age of the downcutting channels at Cedar Pass (Fig. 1). Previous Oligocene paleomagnetic studies performed by Donald Prothero have yielded consistent data, and a well defined magnetic polarity time scale has been established (Prothero. et at, 1983). The magnetostratigraphic patterns recorded can be utilized with other lithologic and paleontologic data to more precisely correlate geochronologically equivalent zones.

Regional paleomagnetic sampling indicates that the upper portion of the Poleslide Member, to the base of the Rockyford Ash, is a zone of reversed polarity (reversed magnetozone): whereas, from the base of the Rockyford Ash through the lower half of the Sharps Formation is a zone of normal polarity (normal magnetozone). The magnetic polarity boundary at the base of the Rockyford Ash provided the opportunity to test whether the paleomagnetic character of the downcutting channel sandstones reflects a pre- (reversed) or post- (normal) Rockyford Ash correlation.

Paleomagnetic samples were collected within the Poleslide Member of the Brule Formation and the Sharps Formation at Cedar Pass. Samples were obtained from both the channel sequences downcutting through the Rockyford Ash and in adjacent areas where the Brule-Sharps sequence and contact still were preserved.


Badlands National Park


Figure 2. Zijderveld vector demagnetization diagrams. (A) Sample obtained from below the Rockyford Ash in the Upper Brule, showing a reversed polarity; (B) sample collected abover the Rockyford Ash in the Sharps, indicating a normal polarity; and (C) sample taken from the channel sediments downcutting through the Rockyford Ash, displaying a normal polarity.

Natural Remnant Magnetization (NRM) was measured for each sample through the use of a large bore ScT cryogenic magnetometer at the University of Pittsburgh. Two orientations were measured on each sample. Thermal demagnetization treatment was performed at a range of temperatures and each sample measurement was recorded after each thermal treatment. Zijderveld vector demagnetization diagrams (Fig. 2) were plotted for each sample (Zijderveld, 1967).

All samples obtained from the upper portions of the Brule Formation, where channelling did not interrupt the sequence, exhibit a reverse polarity. The samples obtained from the sequence above the base of the Rockyford Ash in the Sharps Formation, where channelling did not interrupt the sequence, show a normal polarity. The last set of samples was obtained directly from the downcutting channel sequence in areas where the Rockyford Ash was cut through and no longer present. These samples all were collected at elevations that were both above and below the level of the Rockyford Ash at Cedar Pass. Each of these samples exhibits a normal polarity, regardless of the elevation at which it was collected.

The paleomagnetic polarity pattern determined from the measurements obtained at Cedar Pass strongly supports that the downcutting channel sequences were developed during a post-Rockyford Ash event within the Lower Sharps Formation. Therefore, the fossil material collected from the channels provides a significant contribution to the previously scanty record.

The biostratigraphic range under investigation in this study lies at a stage overlapping two biochronological zones of North American Land Mammals. The Whitneyan/Arikareean Land Mammal Age boundary lacks an associated lithostratigraphic marker and has not been firmly established. The assemblage of fossil mammals collected from the channel deposits provides integral information that supports the establishment of the Whitneyan/Arikeean boundary in the Lower Sharps. The Lower Sharps can be characterized as a concurrent range zone for the last appearance of numerous representative Whitneyan fossils and the first appearance of many Arikareean mammals.

The fossils collected from the Cedar Pass channels provide a broader window into the poorly understood lower Sharps fauna. This enigmatic biozone clearly displays a pivotal assemblage of fossil mammals. Given 150 years of study in the White River Badlands, much work remains. Mammalian biochronology augmented with paleomagnetic data will prove instrumental to greater understanding of the depositional history of the continental Tertiary and the evolution of mammls.


NPS Staff and Consulting Paleontologists meet in San Diego at the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology meetings: (l to r) Rachel Benton, Fossil Butte NM; Elizabeth Barnosky, Yellowstone NP; Neil King, Hagerman Fossil Beds NM; Mary Thompson, Idaho Museum of Natural History; Ted Fremd, John Day Fossil Beds NM; Dale Hanson, BLM, Montana; Laurie Bryant, BLM, Idaho; Ann Elder, Dinosaur NM; Vince Santucci, Petrified Forest NP; Dan Chure, Dinosaur NM, and William Akersten, Idaho Museum of Natural History. (NPS photo)

Literature Cited

MacDonald. JR. 1970. Review of the Miocene Wounded Knee faunas of southwestern South Dakota. Bull. Los Angeles County Mus. Nat. Hist. 8:1-82.

MacDonald. J.R. 1963 The Miocene faunas from the Wounded Knee area of Western South Dakota Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. 125:141-238.

Prothero, D., C. Denham and H. Farmer. 1983 Magnetostratigraphy of the While River Group and its implications for Oligocene geochronology. Paleogeog., Paleoclim., Paleoecol. 42:151-166.

Prout, H. 1846. Gigantic Palaeothenum. Amer. J. Sci. 2d ser.. 2:24-25.

Zijderveld. J.D. 1967. Demagnetization of rocks: analysis of results in "Methods in Paleomagnetism," edited by Collinson, Greer & Runcorn Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp 254-286.

Vincent L. Santucci is Paleontologist/Curator at Petrified Forest NP.

            Text from Park Science, Volume 12, Number 3, Summer 1992.




Glenn Plumb and Nicole Brandt. (GSA photo)

REOPENING A NICHE AT BADLANDS NATIONAL PARK:
THE BLACK-FOOTED FERRET
Prairie dog conservation, not complex biology, holds the key to recovering this Great Plains predator
BY GLENN E. PLUMB, BRUCE BESSKEN AND PAUL MARINARI

DO YOU REMEMBER when your science teacher brought out the "mystery" box, the one with the hole in the side, and asked you to stick your hand inside and identify an item only by-touch? You had no idea what might be encountered. Yet, once you grasped the object, your curiosity peaked and the challenge became an exciting opportunity! Likewise, biologists and resource managers in Badlands National Park, South Dakota, had been groping for years to find a way to restore one of North America's most endangered terrestrial mammals to its prairie habitat. Finally, after 6 years of preparing for reintroduction, our moment of discovery and triumph came last fall with the arrival of the first black-footed ferrets (Mustela nigripes) to be seen in the park in over 25 years (fig. 1).


Figure 1. The first black-footed ferret to be set free in the 1994 Badlands National Park reintroduction eyes the open door of its release cage moments before leaving to freedom. (NPS photo)

BACKGROUND

The black-footed ferret's nocturnal habits do not lend the species to ready study. For an animal first described in 1851 by Audubon and Bachman, and which once ranged from southern Saskatchewan to northern Mexico, practically all ecological information comes from two small populations in South Dakota and Wyoming that went locally extinct after intense, but limited, study. This animal is a highly specialized predator that depends on a single type of habitat-prairie dog (Cynomys ludovicianus) colonies. A member of the Mustelid family, the black-footed ferret uses prairie dog burrows for shelter, family rearing, escape from predators, and access to its primary prey, the prairie dog.

The ferret was listed in 1967 as a federal endangered species and in 1978 as a South Dakota endangered species. The proximate cause of decline is habitat loss due to prairie dog control programs, diseases, and land use changes over the past century. Biologists estimate that prairie dog distribution today is less than 5% of its historic levels. During the early 1970s, attempts at captive breeding with animals from the dwindling South Dakota population failed and the last captive animal from that population died in 1979. As such, biologists considered the black-footed ferret extinct until 1981 when another population was discovered near Meeteetse, Wyoming. Following outbreaks of sylvatic plague and canine distemper in 1985-86, biologists removed the final remaining 18 individuals from the wild to attempt another captive breeding program.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1988 National Black-Footed Ferret Recovery Plan adopted goals to increase the captive breeding population to 240 breeding adults and to establish a prebreeding population of 1,500 free-ranging adults in 10 or more populations with no fewer than 30 breeding adults in any population. The plan also encouraged the widest possible distribution for reintroduced populations. Subsequently, an intensely successful breeding program at seven facilities in the United States and Canada increased the captive population in excess of 240, the number expected to retain 80% of the genetic diversity of the founders for 200 years. From 1991-93, biologists released 187 ferrets under a nonessential experimental population designation in Shirley Basin, Wyoming. This designation provides flexibility by allowing biological manipulation of the population for recovery purposes.

In 1994, the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service suggested reintroducing the ferret into the Conata Basin-Badlands prairie dog complex of southwestern South Dakota in an interagency environmental impact statement. The Fish and Wildlife Service published a final rule on August 18, 1994, designating a nonessential experimental population area. Subsequently, each agency signed a separate record of decision to implement the preferred alternative to reintroduce black-footed ferrets in Badlands National Park in the fall of 1994. Our goal for South Dakota is to reintroduce 40 black-footed ferrets each year for 5 years beginning in 1994.


Figure 2. Black-footed ferret reintroduction sites within Badlands National Park, South Dakota. (NPS photo)

REINTRODUCTION

Site Selection and Preparation

During spring 1994, we selected three black-tailed prairie dog colonies (415 park hectares or 1,025 acres), also known as towns, as locales for fall ferret release (fig. 2). Altogether, approximately 3,726 ha (hectares, or 9,200 acres) of suitable prairie dog colonies exist in or adjacent to the park and lie within the prescribed 17,010 ha (42,000 acre) reintroduction area. We chose the release towns based on habitat quality, juxtaposition within the overall complex, remoteness from visitors, and field crew accessibility. A subtle complication was the reintroduction site location within the Badlands Wilderness Area where mechanical transport is prohibited and approximately 550 bison range freely!

We stratified release sites across the three colonies based on topography, level of prairie dog activity, and potential impact to cultural resources. We used a helicopter to airlift over 4 tons of supplies used in constructing 28 release cages-bison exclosures several months before the ferrets arrived. From June through August 1994, we were busy live-trapping and quarantining, for a 10-day minimum, 675 black-tailed prairie dogs. Following veterinary inspection, we sent prairie dogs to captive breeding facilities to give ferrets an opportunity to imprint on (become familiar with) them. In the park, we posted advisory signs telling visitors of the impending reintroduction activities.


Figure 3. With ears just large enough to hold a radio collar in position around its neck, a briefly anesthetized ferret, kept warm by a blanket, gets a custom fit from park staff in a surgical team at a Badlands reintroduction site. Other ferrets were outfitted with collars at zoos before their arrival at the park. (NPS photo)

Ferret Allocation

Project biologists recommended that a minimum of 20 male and 20 female juveniles be released initially, based on known ferret survivorship data from Wyoming and South Dakota. In July 1994, the Fish and Wildlife Service allocated 38 juveniles and four adults with unknown sex ratios and we subsequently received 32 juveniles (20 male:12 female) and four three-year-old adults (2 male:2 female). Of these, 17 were imprinted on live prairie dogs and burrow systems at Sybille Wildlife Conservation and Education Center and 19 were unfamiliar (naive) with prairie dogs, having been cage-reared at Metro Toronto, Phoenix, and Henry Doorly Zoos. Project biologists worked with NBS scientists and veterinarians at the two zoos and the education center to fit radiotelemetry collars on 16 ferrets (fig. 3). Upon arrival at the park, staff backpacked ferrets directly to their preselected release cages (fig. 4). The park encouraged local media to cover the arrival of the ferrets.


Figure 4. Reintroduction staff, carrying ferrets and other supplies, begin a 3-mile hike to the release sites. A minor complication of the reintroduction was the prohibited use of mechanical transport means in delivering materials to the wilderness area release site. (NPS photo)

Ferret Husbandry

The captive-bred ferrets used in the reintroduction came from two different backgrounds relative to their familiarity with prairie dogs, and this necessitated that we use two different release strategies accordingly. We held the naive animals in release cages for a minimum of 10 days with a minimum 5-day post release cage-attending period (soft release) to permit them to return to the cages for provided meals. We held preconditioned or imprinted animals in a release cage for a maximum of 48 hours with no post-release cage attending (semihard release). All cages included a single nest box (aboveground), food tube, water bowl, and double-sided nest box located in an underground vault and connected to the aboveground cage by 4-in diameter corrugated plastic tubing (fig. 5). Staff examined the ferrets, attended the cages, and collected data on food consumption, ferret and radio collar condition, vault and ground temperature, and weather (temperature, precipitation, air pressure, wind speed). We fed the ferrets approximately 150 g (grams, or 0.4 lb) of black-tailed prairie dog daily.

Cage attendants released the ferrets near sunset by placing a length of 4-in diameter plastic tubing between the cage and nearest active prairie dog burrow (fig. 1). Although they immediately left the site, attendants reported seeing two ferrets exit the release tube and go directly down a burrow.


Figure 5. Inside a bison exclosure, staff prepare a typical nest box, including food tube and underground vault (not shown), for black-footed ferret habitation. Corrugated tubing simulated prairie dog burrows and connected the underground vault to the cage above. (NPS photo)

Monitoring

Late-summer and early-fall ground temperatures in the Conata Basin-Badlands were hot, reaching over 100° F and averaging 90° F during September. Belowground vaults averaged 75° F during September afternoons and greatly improved conditions for the ferrets during the prerelease phase. In October, the underground vault and aboveground nest box temperatures dropped to a 52° F average.

Badlands National Park operated nighttime aerial telemetric missions along with NBS assistance in telemetry use, training, and study design. Altogether, staff conducted six missions, 3-5 hours each, in parallel with ground telemetry over a 21-day period following release. We detected a total of 62 individual locations, 97% of which occurred within the three release colonies. A majority of telemetric locations (70%) were collected during the first week following release. We noticed that animals moved freely among the three release colonies, but believed their movements within the first 3 weeks after release to be limited to less than 8 km (5 mi). During this time, one radiocollared animal dispersed approximately 8 km (5 mi) and then shed its collar. We also retrieved two other radio collars, but detected no mortalities.

Project staff and volunteers conducted spotlight ground surveys on 21 colonies or focal areas within the reintroduction area (including snowtracking in outlying colonies) over 11 nights from November 28-December 10 (fig. 6). We detected eight ferrets by spotlighting, representing a minimum 22% survivorship 26 days after the last ferret was released; although low, this percentage exceeds the 30-day postrelease survivorship goal of 20%. Before release, we had implanted very tiny transponders (equipped with unique numeric codes) subcutaneously in each ferret to facilitate subsequent identification. After trapping seven of the eight animals and weighing them, we electromagnetically scanned each transponder to identity each ferret. Postrelease survival for the identified ferrets ranged from 21 to 82 days, with 71% being preconditioned. Movements of five animals were limited to the three release colonies, while the three other animals moved up to 8 km (5 mi) into adjacent active prairie dog colonies. Subsequently, snowtracking efforts detected several ferrets.


Figure 6. A ferret pokes its head out of a prairie dog burrow at night several days after release and is briefly caught in the light of a researcher trying to assess reintroduction success. Nighttime spotlighting and snowtracking techniques indicate that, although not high, ferret survival is above project goals. (NPS photo)

SUMMARY

Recovering the black-footed ferret to a point of delisting is a daunting task. Reintroduction requires maintenance of partnerships and a large contribution of time and resources. At the regional scale, the probability for recovery is a function of available habitat, and habitat lost during the last century is not likely to be recovered. Since 1900, the historic range of the prairie dog has been reduced by approximately 95%, due to disease, agricultural practices, and urban development. Compared with 1870, prairie dogs now occupy only 2% of their historic range (Anderson et al. 1986, in Great Basin Naturalist). If the prairie dog ecosystem of the Great Plains is further eroded and fragmented, ferret recovery will become more desperate.

While reintroduction efforts like this help tremendously to recover the ferret, a basic question still remains. Can the black-footed ferret persist in the wild today and in the future under regional land use practices that rendered it nearly extinct? Hope for its recovery lies in the continuation of a strong, but flexible, Endangered Species Act and a prevailing commitment to the conservation of regional prairie dog ecosystems.

EPILOGUE

Ferret reintroductions continue this year in South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. However, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recently released budget priorities for fiscal year 1996 and beyond that jeopardize the captive ferret population, the future availability of reintroduction animals, and the national recovery program.

REFERENCES

Clark, T.W. 1989. Conservation biology of the black-footed ferret (Mustela nigripes). Wildlife Preservation Trust. Special Scientific Report No. 3. 175 pp.

Plumb, G.E., P. McDonald, and D. Searls. 1994. Black-footed ferret reintroduction in South Dakota: Project description and 1994 protocol. Unpublished Manuscript. Badlands National Park Division of Resource Management Files. 60 pp.

Great Basin Naturalist. 1986. The blacktooled ferret. Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs No. 8. Brigham Young University, Utah. 208 pp.

Seal, U.S., E.T. Thorne, M.A, Bogan, and S.H.Anderson. 1989. Conservation biology and the black-footed ferret. Yale University Press. 302 pp.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 1994. Environmental impact statement. Black-footed ferret reintroduction, Conata Basin/Badlands, South Dakota USFWS. 420 South Garfield. #400. Pierre, SD, 57501. 350 pp.

Dr. Glenn E. Plumb, former Assistant Director of the NPS-University of Wyoming Research Center (CPSU), is a Badlands National Park Wildlife Biologist. Bruce Bessken, winner of a 1994 regional natural resource management award for his role in facilitating the ferret reintroduction process at the park, is Chief of Resource Management at Badlands. Paul Marinari, Biotechnician, served as field coordinator-data manager during the project and has been involved with ferret management since 1989. Final results of this study will he presented in an April report.

            Text from Park Science, Volume 15, Number 2, Spring 1995.


Badlands National Park






Archives Search


Our Companion Website

Parks Canada History


External Archives



National Park Friends


National Parks Traveler Association of National Park Rangers The Coalition to Protect America's National Parks National Parks Conservation Association National Park Travelers Club George Wright Society

Eastern National
National Park Foundation
Western National Parks


Please Note: NPSHistory.com is an independent effort; we are not an official partner of the National Park Service (NPS), though a huge debt of gratitude is extended to all NPS employees (current and former) and other park supporters who have graciously contributed their personal collections, thus enabling us to present these rather scarce documents for free public use. Due diligence has been employed in scanning these documents in an attempt to ensure the accuracy of the materials presented, however, we make no representations or warranties of any kind about these digital documents. While most of the content contained herein is in the public domain, the Website also contains copyrighted works (permission to host this content is on file); please respect the reserved rights of these copyright-holders. Use of this Website is done so at your own risk; we are not responsible for any loss or damage arising from information or links contained within this site. Enjoy!

 
Our National Parks — North America's Best Idea
NPSHISTORY.COM ❖ DIGITAL HOARDING SINCE 2013