Yellowstone Wild Bison Herd Is Stable, Healthy And Genetically Diverse, Latest Research Study Shows

Readers are probably aware of the near extinction of the American Bison, aka buffalo. The shaggy beasts roamed much of the now United States in the tens of millions, estimates suggest. But a concentrated effort ending in the late 19th Century killed about 99.9 percent of the animals. One of the last wild herds lived in Yellowstone National Park. Just before 1900 the Yellowstone wild bison had been reduced to 23 in number.

Photo by Aenic Visuals on Pexels.com. American bison (Bison bison) once roamed North America in the millions. Today, about 30,000 wild bison remain along with several hundred thousand in private hands

According to reports the near miracle survival of that herd has resulted in a healthy, stable and genetically diverse mega herd of pure wild bison.

Although the bison were near extinction in most of the United States there were a few other pockets besides Yellowstone. Other bison had been partly domesticated and cross-bred with cattle. Today there are several hundred thousand bison, but a high proportion are not pure bred.

Because the Yellowstone bison ar pure bred their population is extremely important for future conservation efforts.

The reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone has reignited the age-old battle between the two animals. Healthy adult bison can usually stand off wolves. But juvenile, aged, infirm or injured animals have less of chance.

The Yellowstone herd is big enough that it is overcrowding the park. Limited hunting and transfers to other herds are among the tools used to keep the animals numbers in check.

Although there have been successes, bison face challenges even in Yellowstone. Harsh winters can be deadly. The importation of wolves into the park has reintroduced natural predation into their lives. All big game world wide faces the risk of illegal trophy hunting or poaching. Another threat is disease as bison ae susceptible to illnesses spread if they get too close to domestic cattle.

A small herd of bison. Once, herds stretched from horizon to horizon. Today, wild and private herds are expanding under careful stewardship

As many as 30,000 wild bison live in the United States today, about 6,000 in Yellowstone. The others are scattered into smaller herds shepherded by Native Americans and other agencies and conservators. Bison remains a popular specialty meat and more than 400,000 bison are held in private hands, many of them those of ranchers.

Published by ursusrising

long time writer and editor living in Los Angeles

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