Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

death on the range

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Where the Buffalo Roam a Sore Topic in Montana

 

May 30, 2006 — By Laura Zuckerman, Reuters

WISDOM, Montana — Buffalo once thundered across this vast river valley in

southwest Montana but now the only evidence of the animal that symbolizes the

untamed American West is its image on a national park sign.

 

By the late 19th century, the systematic hunting of American buffalo, or bison,

had cut their numbers from the millions to the dozens. Today, domesticated

buffalo are commercially ranched throughout the West, but the nation's only wild

herd of purebred bison is at Yellowstone National Park.

 

Now the herd is again at the center of a controversy because it harbors

brucellosis, a disease that can cause stillbirths in cows. Nearly one in five --

947 -- of the bison herd were sent to slaughter this winter for fleeing

Yellowstone's snow-covered high country for food outside the park in Montana

where cattle graze.

 

Bison advocates are outraged by the slaughter, which is authorized under an

agreement between Yellowstone National Park and Montana's Department of

Livestock. But Montana ranchers say the buffalo endanger the state's prized

brucellosis-free status, which allows producers to ship their cattle across

state lines without testing.

 

Fresh on the heels of Montana's first bison hunt in 15 years, Gov. Brian

Schweitzer has charged into the debate, aiming to broker a deal between ranchers

and buffalo admirers.

 

Schweitzer wants to expand the range the herd may roam outside Yellowstone

National Park and would pay ranchers not to graze their cattle on the same land.

He also has proposed increasing hunting permits for buffalo to up to 500

annually from 50 to help cull a Yellowstone herd that last year numbered 4,900,

a record high since it was established in the early 1900s.

 

" I'm trying to come up with a solution that actually makes sense, " Schweitzer

said.

 

The rancher-turned-governor is promoting his plan even as a government operation

last week to push buffalo back into the park using a helicopter and ATVs stirred

fresh discord.

 

COWBOYS VS NATURALISTS

 

There is no documented case of brucellosis transmission in the wild from bison

to cattle, and most of the animals killed this winter were not tested for the

disease. Elk in the Yellowstone area also carry brucellosis, but the popular

game animal has not evoked the same ire in Montana's $1 billion livestock

industry.

 

Ranchers want to see bison confined within Yellowstone's unfenced boundaries

whatever the cost.

 

" We need to do whatever it takes in the state of Montana to make sure those

(brucellosis) transmissions don't occur, " said Jay Bodner of the Montana

Stockgrowers Association.

 

By contrast, the activist Buffalo Field Campaign says Yellowstone's bison herd

has already suffered " carnage. "

 

" People should be very disturbed when the government comes in and starts

executing wildlife, " said Buffalo Field Campaign board member Scott Frazier.

 

The debate in America is mirrored in Canada, where officials are toying with

killing off the 4,500 free-ranging bison at Wood Buffalo National Park because

of the beef industry's fears about brucellosis.

 

Underlying the dispute about the Yellowstone herd is a perennial debate in the

American West about public lands, pitting its cowboy culture against nature

lovers.

 

The conflict is heightening even as tourism is eclipsing ranching as a leading

economic engine and newcomers are flocking to the Big Sky State for its scenic

beauty and abundant wildlife.

 

Cattle graze near Yellowstone mostly on federal acreage and Montana's ranchers

fear the push to protect the park's bison is a thinly veiled attempt to drive

them from that land.

 

" Some advocacy groups would like to see cattle off public lands and have it only

used for wildlife, " said Montana Department of Livestock Director Marc Bridges.

 

Bison advocates say the country's last wild herd cannot afford to be lost.

 

" But maybe the public would rather have snowmobiles in the park rather than

bison, " said wildlife biologist Mary Meagher, a critic of the bison-management

plan who worked with the Yellowstone herd for 35 years.

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 

What's gonna happen when the buses don't run

and what's gonna happen when the, winter comes

what are you gonna do,

what are you gonna do

when the oil runs out?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...