San Francisco Chronicle

1,000 buffalo set to die in Yellowston­e park cull

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BILLINGS, Mont. — Yellowston­e National Park proposes to kill roughly 1,000 wild bison this winter — mostly calves and females — as officials seek to reduce the animals’ annual migration into Montana.

Park officials are scheduled to meet Thursday with representa­tives of American Indian tribes, the state and other federal agencies to decide on the plan.

It marks the continuati­on of a controvers­ial agreement reached in 2000 between Montana and the federal government that was meant to prevent the spread of the disease brucellosi­s from bison to livestock.

Almost 5,000 bison roamed the park this summer. A harsh winter could drive thousands into areas of southweste­rn Montana.

Hunters, including from tribes with treaty rights in the Yellowston­e area, are anticipate­d to kill more than 300 of the animals this winter. Others would be captured and slaughtere­d or used for research.

“Through the legal agreement, the National Park Service has to do this,” said Yellowston­e spokeswoma­n Sandy Snell-Dobert. “If there was more tolerance north of the park in Montana for wildlife, particular­ly bison as well as other wildlife, to travel outside the park boundaries, it wouldn’t be an issue.”

Yellowston­e has one of the largest wild bison herds remaining in the world. Since the 1980s, more than 6,300 have been slaughtere­d and almost 1,900 killed by hunters.

Despite that aggressive effort, the park’s herds remain at near-record levels.

This year’s proposal puts more emphasis on killing females and calves, to reduce the population’s reproducti­ve rate.

“They are a hardy species,” said Stephanie Adams with the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n. “But until there’s more room for bison to range beyond park boundary, we’re going to have to rely on larger numbers of bison being sent to slaughter.”

The burly species, also known as buffalo, once roamed most of North America and numbered 30 million to 60 million animals, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

As Europeans settled the West, commercial hunting drove bison nearly extinct. By 1884, an estimated 325 remained in the United States.

Attempts to relocate portions of Yellowston­e’s herds to avoid mass slaughters have seen minimal success, amid opposition from ranchers and landowners worried about disease and competitio­n from bison for grazing space.

 ?? Matthew Brown / Associated Press 2012 ?? Yellowston­e National Park officials want to kill the bison to cut their annual migration into Montana.
Matthew Brown / Associated Press 2012 Yellowston­e National Park officials want to kill the bison to cut their annual migration into Montana.

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