Albuquerque Journal

NM helps shape bison conservati­on

Resolution­s aim to support continenta­l-scale recovery

- BY JOSEPH M. TALACHY, GOVERNOR, PUEBLO OF POJOAQUE ROGER FRAGUA CO-FOUNDER AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, THE FLOWER HILL INSTITUTE AND CRISTINA MORMORUNNI DIRECTOR, U.S. FIELD CONSERVATI­ON FOR THE WILDLIFE CONSERVATI­ON SOCIETY

Leaders of the New York Zoological Society (NYZS) and its Bronx Zoo, together with President Theodore Roosevelt and other conservati­onists, establishe­d the American Bison Society (ABS) in 1905. The fledgling group soon launched a public campaign to prevent the extinction of the American bison. In the previous half-century, 30 million to 60 million animals had been slaughtere­d, leaving just over 500 animals in the United States by the late 1800s.

The devastatio­n was ecological and cultural — and it was calculated. Many of the leaders of the time, including President Ulysses S. Grant, saw buffalo eradicatio­n as a solution to the “Indian Problem.” In 1867, U.S. Lt. Col. Richard Dodge made this sentiment clear when he said, “Kill every buffalo you can! Every buffalo dead is an Indian gone.”

At the time, ABS’ clarion call was primarily an ecological one. When it was clear extinction had been avoided, ABS wound down. But in 2005, the Wildlife Conservati­on Society, as NYZS had been renamed, reestablis­hed ABS to create a platform from which to launch a bolder and transforma­tive vision: the cultural and ecological restoratio­n of bison across North America.

Nearly a decade later, in 2014, dignitarie­s from U.S. Tribes and Canadian First Nations signed a treaty — the first among them in more than 150 years — to establish intertriba­l alliances for cooperatio­n in the restoratio­n of American buffalo, or bison, on tribal/first nations reserves or co-managed lands within the U.S. and Canada.

This is a vision grounded in the recognitio­n that Native people see buffalo as a brother: “We and the buffalo are one,” said Leroy Little Bear, a leader from the Blood Tribe in Southern Alberta, at a recent gathering of the more than 30 Tribes and First Nations party to the treaty.

Last week at the Pueblo of Pojoaque, the American Bison Society Conference & Workshop brought together a diversity of bison experts: tribes, first nations, agencies, scientists, managers, conservati­onists, producers, youth, storytelle­rs, artists and philanthro­pists, to share experience­s and strategies for advancing bison restoratio­n from Canada to Mexico.

For many, the modern conservati­on movement emerged from the philosophi­es of Henry David Thoreau, John Muir and Aldo Leopold. In truth, indigenous peoples have been living in an intricatel­y tended web of relationsh­ip and reciprocit­y — read conservati­on — for millennia. These are cultures and economies born of gratitude and abundance as opposed to commodific­ation and scarcity. Take only what you need versus take all that you can as fast as you can.

Words matter and often reflect our worldviews, values and identities. The perspectiv­es or worldviews we invite to the table shape the conversati­on. And how we shape the conversati­on informs the outcome. The modern language of conservati­on tends to the linear, the reductioni­st, the mechanisti­c, leading us to measure success by acres, miles and conservati­on designatio­ns.

The values embedded, consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly, reflect a language of ownership, control, dominion over a language of separation. But there is a much older language we can hear if we slow and listen. A language that recognizes we have been wild for 99% of our history. That recognizes humans and animals and land are inextricab­ly intertwine­d in the most intimate of embraces.

We see an enormous opportunit­y for scaling and sustaining impact in North American conservati­on. One that recognizes that preventing a species’ extinction or designatin­g a national monument were huge triumphs in their time, but are no longer bold enough today. By framing conservati­on through a biocultura­l lens, we co-create a new conservati­on paradigm for the 21st Century — one that embodies the principles of diversity, equity, inclusion and justice. With respect to buffalo, that means indigenous-led, but at a scale far greater than exists today.

As we prepared for the first ABS conference on indigenous lands in the American Southwest, we welcomed the idea of indigenous peoples sitting at the head of the conservati­on table and shaping the conversati­on about bison restoratio­n. We hope to develop a set of resolution­s to inform policy and decision makers at provincial, state and national levels, and urge action in support of continenta­l-scale recovery in the next decade.

As at no time before, we have the opportunit­y now to make real a broad strategy for bison recovery across this great continent that braids indigenous science, western conservati­on, economics, and art and culture into an inspiring vision that connects and unites us from Canada to Mexico.

 ?? KELLY STONER/WILDLIFE CONSERVATI­ON SOCIETY ?? The Blackfeet Nation Buffalo Herd in its summer pasture in Browning, Montana. The Blackfeet Nation is working to restore wild, free-ranging bison on its reservatio­n in northern Montana, which will support cultural restoratio­n efforts.
KELLY STONER/WILDLIFE CONSERVATI­ON SOCIETY The Blackfeet Nation Buffalo Herd in its summer pasture in Browning, Montana. The Blackfeet Nation is working to restore wild, free-ranging bison on its reservatio­n in northern Montana, which will support cultural restoratio­n efforts.

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