I found the clip about language especially interesting.
So cool!! :thumb:
About Prairie Dogs..
There are 5 species of prairie dogs; the Black-tailed prairie dogs and the Mexican prairie dogs are the black-tailed group who have black tail tips, and the Gunnison's prairie dogs, the White-tailed prairie dogs, and the Utah prairie dogs are the white-tailed group who have white tail tips.
All prairie dogs live in the grasslands of western central North America, and all are social. They live in relative harmony within their social groups. All of the species are similar in their social behavior, although the black-tails are somewhat more social than the white-tails. Learn about a type of hibernation called Torpor that prairie dogs employ. See pups before they emerge from their natal burrows as well as in different stages of life (an average prairie dog lives 3-4 years), rare above ground mating, a lot of greet-kissing, territorial behavior from fighting and aggressive chases to social structure based on plant food sources on each territory, mutual grooming, and prairie dog personalities!
Prairie dogs are considered Keystone Species of their grassland ecosystems -- some 200 vertebrate species and a number of invertebrate species of animals depend on them for food or for their burrows. Prairie dogs survive in 1-2% of their historic range of habitat. Their numbers have declined drastically over the past 100 years to 1-2% of the number of animals there were historically. Agriculture, land development, target shooting and disease are the primary reasons for their continuing decline.
A number of prairie animals are at risk of extinction (as well as prairie dogs themselves) because prairie dog numbers are so low. Five animals that are dependent on prairie dogs and are at highest risk are Black-Footed Ferrets, Swift Foxes, Mountain Plovers, Burrowing Owls and Ferruginous Hawks.
Language
This program discusses Prairie Dog Language -- the most sophisticated animal language decoded so far. Con Slobodchikoff, Ph.D., and his students at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, researched the Gunnison's prairie dogs Alarm Calls for over 30 years to decode their language. Sonograms of all 5 species of prairie dogs suggest that they would not understand each other and each species has their own language. Each species also has Regional and Local Dialects.
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Social Life
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Ecology
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Conservation
This program discusses Prairie Dog Conservation. All five species are decreasing at an alarming rate. Since 1900, more than 98% of prairie dog habitat has been lost, so that today we have 1- 2% of prairie dog habitat left on our grasslands.
Four primary reasons for this ongoing drastic decline in prairie dog numbers and habitat are POISONING, TARGET SHOOTING, DEVELOPMENT and DISEASE.
Groups and individuals are working to protect and preserve prairie dogs. They are making progress to gain more legal protections with the US Fish and Wildlife Service, acquiring land to preserve prairie ecosystems, educating the public, initiating conservation strategies, and relocating prairie dogs from areas where they are not wanted to safe preserves. Please help prevent prairie dogs from going extinct by supporting these efforts.
The five species of prairie dogs are all found only in North America. All of the prairie dogs are very social animals, living in colonies call towns. They have a social system similar to our own, and a complicated language, just like us.
See pups before they emerge from their natal burrows as well as in different stages of life (an average prairie dog lives 3-4 years), rare above ground mating, greet-kissing, prairie dog chatter and jump-yips!
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