Utah prairie dog Cynomys parvidens ESA status: threatened

Utah prairie dogs, as their name implies, are found only in Utah and have the smallest range of any prairie dog species. They are true hibernators, sleeping through the coldest winter months. When they emerge in the spring, if they want to pass on their genes they have to work fast – females are only interested in mating for a few hours, one day out of every year. This smallest of prairie dogs shares the role of keystone species with its larger cousins the black-tailed prairie dog and Gunnison’s prairie dog – they are food for predators including the kit fox, the golden eagle, and the ferruginous hawk, and their burrows are home to snakes, cottontail rabbits, burrowing owls, beetles, and salamanders, to name a few. More than 150 wildlife species benefit from the rich habitat prairie dog colonies create.
There are less than 10,000 adult Utah prairie dogs left out of a population that numbered nearly 100,000 in the 1920s, before control programs ran their course. They occupy less than 15 percent of their historic range, and their decline is mainly due to intensive poisoning efforts. Utah prairie dogs continue to suffer from habitat destruction for residential and agricultural development, plague outbreaks, and deliberate poisoning and shooting. Despite the fact that the Utah prairie dog is listed as "threatened" under the Endangered Species Act, there is a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) special rule on the books that allows up to 6,000 Utah prairie dogs to be shot every year – more than half of the entire remaining adult population!
The recovery program for this species focuses on relocating prairie dog colonies out of the way of destructive human activities. The problem is, fewer than 10 percent of these critically imperiled mammals survive the move.
The Utah prairie dog’s listing as "threatened", though powerful, is clearly not enough to protect a species that faces not only habitat destruction but also active human persecution. WildEarth Guardians launched an effort in 2003 to secure upgraded protections for this species by petitioning FWS to reclassify it to "endangered" status and throw out the shooting rule. WildEarth Guardians will not rest until the Utah prairie dog gets the full protection it needs and deserves.
- Significant Actions
- Press Releases
- February 22, 2007 - “Feds Refuse to Reclassify Utah Prairie Dog as Endangered”
- October 30, 2007 - “One of Largest Remaining Utah Prairie Dog Populations in Jeopardy”
- March 18, 2008 - “Feds Pressured To Protect Declining Prairie Dogs”
- September 22, 2008 - “Feds Pushing Utah Prairie Dog Toward Extinction”
- February 2, 2010 - "WildEarth Guardians Grades Government on Prairie Dog Protection"
- September 29, 2010 - "Utah Prairie Dog Court Victory"
- February 2, 2011 - “Government Agencies Are Failing the Prairie Dog Test”
- June 2, 2011 - “Service Shies Away from Meaningful Protections for Rarest U.S. Prairie Dog”
- June 15, 2011 - “Interior Withdraws Appeals on Prairie Dog Cases”
- February 2, 2012 – “State and Federal Agencies Score Poorly on Prairie Dog Report Card”
- August 2, 2012 – “Protections for Imperiled Utah Prairie Dogs Improved, but still Lacking”
- Species Factsheet
- Related Campaigns
photo credit: Jess Alford
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