Yellowstone
seeks to cull 900 bison from famed herd
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[September 17, 2014] By
Laura Zuckerman
(Reuters) - Yellowstone
National Park plans to reduce its bison population this
winter by as many as 900 head, or a fifth of the herd,
by killing off those animals that stray from the park in
what would be the largest such culling in seven years,
the park's wildlife chief said on Tuesday. |
The plan was unveiled a day after conservationists filed a legal
petition demanding the Obama administration end annual culling
exercises that have resulted in thousands of Yellowstone bison being
shipped off to American Indian tribes for slaughter during the past
decade.
In recent years, wayward bison have been removed through a
combination of special round-ups and hunting.
The latest quota would cut the size of the country's last pure-bred
band of free-ranging bison, also known as buffalo, to 4,000 animals
from an estimated 4,900.
Millions of the iconic, hump-shouldered animals once roamed the
plains west of the Mississippi until systematic hunting drove their
numbers to the fewer than 50 that found refuge in Yellowstone in the
early 20th century.
The new push to cull the herd is tied to a long-standing management
plan hammered out among federal and state wildlife and agricultural
agencies that sets the target population at between 3,000 and 3,500
bison.
The animals are prized by visitors to a park that stretches across
parts of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho. But buffalo that migrate each
winter from Yellowstone to historic grazing grounds in Montana raise
fears among ranchers about the spread of the bacterial disease
brucellosis.
Roughly half of Yellowstone's bison have been exposed to the
disease, likely brought to the park by cattle that once grazed
there.
The disease, which can cause miscarriages in cows, has been
virtually eradicated from Montana livestock, and the state's
brucellosis-free status allows ranchers to sell and ship cattle
across state lines without tests, quarantine and vaccination.
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David Hallac, chief of Yellowstone's science and research branch,
said the removal of 900 bison would help meet a population target
determined by wildlife ecology as well as cultural, social and
economic factors.
"It will not get us close to the goal of 3,000, but it will
stabilize the population and bring it down somewhat," he said.
The number of bison culled from Yellowstone has varied widely from
year to year. In the winter of 2011-2012, fewer than 40 wandered
from the park because of relatively mild conditions. The winter of
2007-2008 saw more than 1,600 bison killed.
(Reporting by Laura Zuckerman in Salmon, Idaho; Editing by Cynthia
Johnston and Peter Cooney)
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