Montana activists ramp up campaign
against culling Yellowstone bison
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[March 04, 2017]
By Laura Zuckerman
SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) - Wildlife
advocates are ramping up their campaign against the annual culling of
bison that roam onto state lands in Montana each winter from Yellowstone
National Park, erecting dramatic billboards showing buffalo bleeding in
the snow.
The billboards are the latest effort in an ongoing campaign by opponents
of a years-long practice aimed at reducing the number of Yellowstone’s
bison to protect against disease transmission and lessen the damage to
land in and around the park, which spans parts of Montana, Wyoming and
Idaho. This year, wildlife managers aim to reduce the herd by up to
1,300 animals, the largest amount in nearly a decade.
“We’re fine with bison being hunted," Michael Garrity, executive
director of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies, the Montana-based
conservation group behind the billboard campaign, said in a telephone
interview on Friday. "But this is mass slaughter.”
His group is urging the state’s Democratic governor, Steve Bullock, to
stop bison destined for slaughter from being trucked through the state.
The outsized road signs, painted by a Montana artist and bison activist,
depict fallen bison with blood drenching snow and the words, in capital
letters, “Stop the Yellowstone massacre!” Two billboards went up this
week and two more are slated to go up later this month.
Wildlife advocates have also held rallies and a candlelight vigil
against the severe cull.
The bison targeted for hunting and slaughter are among those that
migrate into Montana each winter from Yellowstone. This year, the herd,
the last remaining wild purebred bison in the United States, has swelled
to 5,500, much higher than the target of 3,000 sought by wildlife
managers.
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A bison walks in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, U.S. on
August 10, 2011. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
When the herd gets too big, wildlife managers say, it can damage
land through over-grazing. And Montana ranchers fear bison will
transmit to cows a disease that causes them to miscarry.
In December, federal, state and tribal agencies responsible for
managing the herd said they would cull between 900 and 1,300 bison,
one of the largest amounts in the history of the park.
Jay Bodner, natural resource director for the Montana Stockgrowers
Association, said the push to cull the herd is linked to the impacts
on the landscape by too many animals.
“There needs to be management protocols in place to make sure bison
aren’t over-utilizing and destroying the range,” Bodner said.
Bullock spokeswoman Ronja Abel described bison management as “a
difficult and challenging issue.” She added: “The state recognizes
culling efforts are not everyone’s preferred approach."
(Editing by Sharon Bernstein and Matthew Lewis)
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