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Research

Biologist Studies Plague and Prairie Dogs

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BY DAVE REID
From Dateline (April 8, 2004)

Paul Stapp

Paul Stapp, a biologist who studies small mammals, has received a $472,633 National Science Foundation grant to study prairie dogs and the bubonic plague, which is wiping out prairie dog towns in northern Colorado.

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What does Paul Stapp, a 21st-century biologist specializing in small mammals, have in common with Daniel Defoe, an 18th-century author and journalist?

Both are concerned with bubonic plague.

Defoe gave a famous account of the Black Death that felled thousands of people in England during the summer and fall of 1665 in A Journal of the Plague Year.

Stapp, with colleagues from Colorado State University, is conducting research on the plague – which has killed thousands of black-tailed prairie dogs in northern Colorado – thanks to a $472,633 National Science Foundation grant.

“Prairie dogs are particularly susceptible to the bubonic plague, which is spread mainly by fleas,” said Stapp, assistant professor of biological science. “Fleas can wipe out entire prairie dog colonies, which in some of the largest colonies, may contain thousands of animals over hundreds of acres.”

Prairie dogs are highly social animals and also can spread the disease orally, through “kissing” one another.

Main goals of the five-year grant are to find out what becomes of plague-causing bacteria when a prairie dog colony is decimated, and how plague moves from an infected to an uninfected colony. Does the bacteria remain in the soil or migrate via fleas to other animals that may be resistant to the disease? Is it spread by infected prairie dogs leaving colonies or do other animals carry the disease from one place to another?

Stapp also is investigating the relationship of climate and plague outbreaks.


“There appears to be a correlation between the appearance of El Niño climatic events and the incidence of plague,” he said. “El Niño brings milder and wetter weather to the Great Plains, which can influence the survival and numbers of rodents and fleas.”

El Niño made an appearance two years ago and may occur during the grant period, which would allow Stapp’s team to study the entire plague cycle.

Because of their grass diet and burrow digging, prairie dogs have been the bane of farmers and ranchers. In the 1800s and 1900s, there were intense efforts to get rid of prairie dogs, using poisoning, shooting and other means, noted Stapp.

Previously unknown in North America, plague appeared in Colorado around 1948. Human eradication efforts, combined with plague and habitat loss due to agriculture and development, resulted in declines in prairie dog populations. Recent protection given to the creatures is expected to increase their numbers, which will benefit a number of threatened species, such as the black-footed ferret that depend on prairie dogs for food or habitat.

Several prairie dog towns are located north of Denver, the general area of Stapp’s research. The animals, which can weigh up to three pounds, have a normal life span of about five years.

Stapp, who earned his doctorate at Colorado State University, was a postdoctoral researcher with UC Davis and  a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Wyoming.


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