A bison stands tall in Yellowstone National Park.

Sixty-three bison sit in limbo just outside Yellowstone National Park, waiting for a new place to call home.

The Yellowstone bison are some of the only genetically pure bison remaining in the United States, a small remnant of the historic herds that thundered across the Great Plains by the millions just a few centuries ago. More importantly, they could be the key to restoring vast tracts of prairie ecosystem to its former glory.

But first, these bison must clear a lingering political hurdle that has left them out in the cold. (Read the full story in the Bozeman Chronicle, which quotes Defenders’ prairie species expert Jonathan Proctor).

Bison that leave the safety of Yellowstone are routinely captured, quarantined and tested for brucellosis—an infectious disease first brought to the region by cattle and now found in both bison and elk in and around the park. Ranchers just outside the park boundaries fear that infected animals will transmit brucellosis to their livestock (even though there is no evidence transmission from bison is a real risk) and have effectively lobbied to keep bison from roaming freely outside the park.

During particularly harsh winters when bison are forced to leave the park in search of food, they are hazed back into the park by federal agents using helicopters, snowmobiles, horses and vehicles, or they’re simply killed. In the winter of 2007-2008, a record 1,600 bison were killed–the largest number since the 1800s. Unless something is done to accommodate bison during tough winters, the same thing is bound to happen again.

In 2005, the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks (FWP) began an experiment to quarantine bison that migrate outside the park, with  the goal of providing brucellosis-free bison to start new conservation herds elsewhere. Once given a clean bill of health, bison would be transported to tribal, federal or state public lands to establish new, wild herds.

In the winter of 2007-2008, a record 1,600 bison were killed–the largest number since the 1800s. Unless something is done to accommodate bison during tough winters, the same thing is bound to happen again.

However, when the first batch of 87 quarantined Yellowstone bison were available in February 2010, no tribal, federal or state land managers were quite ready to accept them.  It was then that media mogul-turned-bison rancher Ted Turner stepped up. He agreed to house the bison on his land just west of Bozeman for 5 years in exchange for keeping 75 percent of their offspring to offset the estimated $480,000 cost. The original 87 bison and 25 percent of the offspring would go back to the state to start new conservation herds.

Defenders of Wildlife supported this move as the best outcome for wild bison conservation over the long term. But some conservation groups didn’t like the idea and are currently suing FWP for trying to “privatize wildlife management.”

Bison and their calves graze in Custer State Park, South Dakota.

Meanwhile, Defenders has been working with Native American tribes at Fort Peck and Fort Belknap Indian Reservations in eastern Montana for several years to make room for bison herds. Tribes at both reservations have been busy setting aside large parcels to accommodate bison, which were once an integral part of life on the plains. The tribes have made repeated requests to house some or all of the remaining quarantined Yellowstone bison so they can start new genetically pure bison herds.

But FWP has not yet responded to their requests, and the 63 bison still in quarantine remain homeless.

FWP claims they cannot move the remaining disease-free bison until the lawsuit over the Turner deal is resolved, even though the tribes’ proposal is independent of ongoing litigation. In addition, the tribes have already agreed to manage the bison as a tribal public resource, not for private profit.

Montana’s Assiniboine, Gros Ventre and Sioux tribes stand ready to help, but the question remains: will they be given a chance?

(*From special guest blogger Mike Leahy, Rocky Mountain region director for Defenders of Wildlife. This blog post first appeared on High Country News.)

Watch the trailer below for Facing the Storm from High Plains Films to learn more about the plight of American bison.

Adopt a Bison NowGive a Gift that Helps Save Bison

Bison adoptions are a great way to share your appreciation for this keystone species while helping to support Defenders’ work on their behalf.

Save Something Wild!

Visit our Wildlife Adoption Center to adopt a bison or one of our 26 other imperiled animals today!

Author

Image
Get Updates and Alerts