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A black-footed ferret cloned from DNA of a ferret that lived in the 1980s has birthed two healthy kits, the first successful live births from a cloned endangered species and another win for a federal ferret recovery program based in northern Colorado.

Two black-footed ferret kits are held by a person wearing dark blue surgical gloves. The kits are only starting to grow hair.
The 3-month old black-footed ferret kits that are the offspring of Antonia, a cloned black-footed ferret, mark the first time a cloned U.S. endangered species has produced offspring. (Photo by the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute)

Antonia, cloned from , is helping raise her now 3-month-old kits as part of an effort to expand the gene pool of ferrets being reintroduced in Colorado and other states. While thousands of conventionally bred ferrets have been dropped into prairie dog colonies in Western states, they all descend from just seven of the . 

Antonia’s descendants have three times the genetic diversity of any other living ferrets derived from the original seven parents. An expanded genetic stock could help the highly endangered species — researchers believe only a few hundred reintroduced ferrets survive in North America — speed up recovery from ongoing sylvatic plague and canine distemper. 

Black-footed ferrets were also decimated by development and farming expansion wiping out prairie dogs, which make up 90% of a ferret’s diet. 

A tan-colored ferret with black feet, a dark brown mask and black whiskers pokes its head up through a hole in the base of a wire enclosure
Antonia, a black-footed ferret cloned from frozen DNA of the highly endangered species, is the first cloned ferret to give birth to surviving baby kits, in a Virginia facility. (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)

Paul Marinari, senior curator at the Smithsonian National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute in Virginia, said the births are a “major milestone†and will help endangered species partners “continue their innovative and inspirational efforts to save this species.â€

The cloning program is overseen by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s National Black-footed Ferret Recovery Program in Wellington. Two of the three ferrets cloned so far from Willa’s DNA live at the Colorado facility. 

Antonia is at the Smithsonian facility in Front Royal, Virginia. She mated with a conventionally bred 3-year-old male ferret, Urchin. One of Antonia’s new kits died just after birth. The others, one male and one female, are healthy and will stay with Antonia at the Virginia facility, with no plans for wild release. 

Another cloned ferret, Noreen, is also a potential mom in the cloning-breeding program. The original cloned ferret, Elizabeth Ann, is in Colorado, but does not have healthy that would allow for breeding. Elizabeth Ann is healthy, the wildlife service has said previously, and her condition did not appear to be attributed to the cloning process. 

Black-footed ferrets were thought extinct for years before a dog dropped a recently-deceased ferret on a home doorstep in Wyoming in 1981. Scientists fanned out to find the elusive remaining colony, and about 24 ferrets considered to be the last in the world. Eighteen of those survived to enter a captive reproduction program set up at the Wellington facility, which also has 40 acres of open space to “train” kits for the wild.

Of those 18, seven ferrets eventually reproduced in captivity. Willa died before producing, but was among those with DNA preserved at the San Diego Zoo; adding her genetic material back into the ferret pool could signal great progress.

“So by doing this, we’ve actually added an eight founder,” said Tina Jackson, black-footed ferret recovery coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in an April interview. “And in some ways that may not sound like a lot, but in this genetic world, that is huge.”

A small ferret peeks over a dirt mound in a dry, grassy field.
A black-footed ferret looks out from a prairie dog burrow after its release at May Ranch, near Lamar, Colo., in 2022. Black-footed ferrets were assumed to be extinct until 1981 when a dog discovered one in Wyoming. Ferrets are released in autumn months to simulate when kits usually leave their mothers. (Olivia Sun, ¶º±ÆÖ±²¥ via Report for America)

In September, Colorado wildlife officials were enthusiastic about reports of at least two healthy litters of wild-born black-footed ferrets at May Ranch in southeastern Colorado. More than 50 of the endangered ferrets bred in captivity in Wellington have been reintroduced at May Ranch near Lamar in the past few years, but survival is tricky, and spotting the elusive nocturnal critters once released has been an extra challenge. 

Systematic state surveys of ferret release sites including May Ranch, employing everything from night spotlights to pet-chip readers, have this year produced proof of surviving released ferrets and new offspring.

Type of Story: News

Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.

Michael Booth is The Sun’s environment writer, and co-author of The Sun’s weekly climate and health newsletter The Temperature. He and John Ingold host the weekly SunUp podcast on The Temperature topics every Thursday. He is co-author...