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16 August 2011 Black-footed ferret areas of activity during late summer and fall at Meeteetse, Wyoming
Kathleen A. Fagerstone, Dean E. Biggins
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Abstract

Radiotelemetry was used during 1983 and 1984 to collect information on short-term areas of activity for black-footed ferrets (Mustela nigripes) near Meeteetse, Wyoming. This population ultimately provided ferrets for the captive-breeding program that bred and released offspring into the wild since 1991. We fitted 5 adult ferrets and 13 juveniles with radiotransmitters and followed their movements during late summer and fall. Adult males had 7-day areas of activity that were >6 times as large as those of adult females. Activity areas of adult males varied little in coverage or location on a weekly basis, but females sequentially shifted their areas. Unlike juvenile females, juvenile males tended to leave their natal colonies.

American Society of Mammalogists
Kathleen A. Fagerstone and Dean E. Biggins "Black-footed ferret areas of activity during late summer and fall at Meeteetse, Wyoming," Journal of Mammalogy 92(4), 705-709, (16 August 2011). https://doi.org/10.1644/10-MAMM-S-140.1
Published: 16 August 2011
KEYWORDS
center of activity
dispersal
movement
Mustela nigripes
radiotelemetry
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