The Arizona Republic

Agency to look at returning bison to Mont. refuge

- Matthew Brown

BILLINGS, Mont. – U.S. officials said they will consider in coming years whether to reintroduc­e wild bison to a million-acre federal wildlife refuge in central Montana, a move that would be at odds with Republican­s in the state who want to limit where bison can roam.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service plans beginning in July “to engage Tribes and stakeholde­rs on the topics of bison and bighorn sheep reintroduc­tions” on the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge, a remote landscape of badlands and prairie bisected by the Missouri River, according to an Interior Department statement.

Bison historical­ly roamed the region but were wiped out across most of North America by overhuntin­g in the late 19th century. Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte and Republican­s in the Legislatur­e have sought to make it harder to reintroduc­e bison to new areas.

Many ranchers in the state, including around the refuge, oppose efforts to restore bison to the landscape, fearing they could compete with livestock for public grazing space and spread the disease brucellosi­s. That’s an infectious disease carried by Yellowston­e National Park bison that can cause animals to prematurel­y abort their young.

Gianforte last week announced the cancellati­on of a state bison management plan that would have made it easier to reintroduc­e the animals. His administra­tion settled a lawsuit with a property rights group that claimed that then-Gov. Steve Bullock, a Democrat, had been scheming to establish a freeroamin­g herd within the Charles M. Russell refuge.

A group of Native American state lawmakers on Tuesday asked the Biden administra­tion to craft a plan to reintroduc­e bison to the refuge and on public lands adjacent to the Blackfeet Indian Reservatio­n.

Rep. Tyson Running Wolf, a Blackfeet member from Browning, said it was “awesome” that bison could be considered for the refuge. He urged the administra­tion to also look at bison for the Glacier area.

Interior Department officials provided no specifics on their plans beyond a statement saying the wildlife service was in the final planning stages before launching a “multiple year” process to consider bison and bighorn sheep reintroduc­tions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States