Montana
to give bison from Yellowstone to tribes instead of zoos
Send a link to a friend
[October 18, 2014]
By Laura Zuckerman
(Reuters) - An Indian reservation in Montana will
receive 145 bison from Yellowstone National Park that
were quarantined to create a herd free of a disease that
threatens ranchers' cattle, according to a government
plan approved on Thursday.
|
The Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission agreed unanimously
to give the bison to the Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes of the
Fort Peck Indian Reservation to further the conservation of the
country's last herd of wild, purebred buffalo.
The tribe was chosen instead of a proposal to distribute the
iconic, hump-shouldered creatures to six organizations across
five states, including New York's Bronx and Queens zoos.
"It would be a great celebration at Fort Peck to make this
happen," said Becky Dockter, chief legal counsel for Montana's
wildlife agency.
The bison, now in confinement at a Montana ranch owned by media
mogul Ted Turner, were part of a government experiment that
quarantined the animals to produce a band free of the cattle
disease brucellosis, which is carried by roughly half of
Yellowstone's buffalo.
The success of the experiment, documented in a scientific study
issued earlier this year, gave Montana assurance that relocating
the bison would not pose a risk of transmitting brucellosis to
commercial livestock. The ailment can cause cows to miscarry.
Commissioners adopted the revised plan after calls by buffalo
advocates not to send the animals out of state when Indian lands
in Montana were suitable and where tribal biologists have
already proven they can manage bison, said Andrea Jones,
spokeswoman for Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.
[to top of second column] |
In 2012, the Fort Peck tribes saw the historic return of 63
Yellowstone buffalo to their reservation under a plan crafted by
state, federal and tribal bison managers.
Montana Fish and Wildlife Commissioner Lawrence Wetsit said the
tribes would be open to working with the state on possibly
distributing offspring of the brucellosis-free bison to zoos and
other proposed recipients like the Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma.
“I'm sure the tribes would be willing to work closely with the state
for a percentage of the offspring to go and replenish other herds,”
he said.
The New York zoos could not immediately be reached for comment on
the plan, which must be approved by the head of the state's wildlife
agency. It is also subject to review for adverse environmental
impacts.
The agreement with the Turner ranch requires the bison be relocated
by the end of the year.
(Reporting by Laura Zuckerman in Salmon, Idaho; Editing by Cynthia
Johnston and Peter Cooney)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|